Judge Dee

Judge Dee (also, Judge Di) is a semi-fictional character based on the historical figure Di Renjie, magistrate and statesman of the Tang court. The character first appeared in the 18th-century Chinese detective and gong'an crime novel Di Gong An. After Robert van Gulik came across it in a second-hand book store in Tokyo, he translated the novel into English and then used the style and characters to write his own original Judge Dee historical mystery stories.

The series is set in Tang Dynasty China and deals with various criminal cases solved by the upright Judge Dee (judges in ancient China were investigating magistrates).

Dee Goong An

The Judge Dee character is based on the historical figure Di Renjie (c. 630c. 700), magistrate and statesman of the Tang court. During the Ming Dynasty (13681644) in China, a "folk novel" was written set in former times, but filled with anachronisms. Van Gulik found in the 18th century Di Gong An (Chinese:狄公案 Pinyin: dí gōng àn, lit. "Cases of Judge Dee") an original tale dealing with three cases simultaneously, and, which was unusual among Chinese mystery tales, a plot that for the most part lacked an overbearing supernatural element which could alienate Western readers.[1] He translated it into English and had it published in 1949 under the title Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee.

Van Gulik's stories

This gave van Gulik the idea of writing his own novels, set with the similar Ming anachronisms, but using the historical character. Van Gulik was careful in writing the main novels to deal with cases wherein Dee was newly appointed to a city, thereby isolating him from the existing lifestyle and enabling him to maintain an objective role in the books. Van Gulik's novels and stories made no direct reference to the original Chinese work, and so Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee is not considered to be part of the Judge Dee series.

Initially Dee is assisted only by his faithful clerk, Sergeant Hoong, an old family retainer. However, in The Chinese Gold Murders, which describes Dee's initial appointment and first criminal cases, the judge encounters two highwaymen, euphemistically called "men of the greenwood", Ma Joong and Chiao Tai, who attempt to rob him but are so impressed with his character that they give up their criminal careers and join his retinue on the spot. A little later, in The Chinese Lake Murders, a third criminal, Tao Gan, an itinerant confidence trickster and swindler, similarly joins. Judge Dee ends his career being promoted to the position of senior Metropolitan Judge in the capital, and his assistants obtain official ranks in the Army and civil service.

Van Gulik also wrote series of newspaper comics about Judge Dee in 1964-1967, which totalled 19 adventures. The first four were regular balloon strips, but the later 15 had the more typically Dutch textblock under the pictures.

Judge Dee, naturally, is responsible for deciding sentences as well as assessing guilt or innocence, although van Gulik notes in the stories that all capital punishments must be referred to and decided by officials in the capital. One of the sentences he frequently has to deal with is slow slicing; if he is inclined to mercy, he orders the final, fatal, cut to be made first, thus rendering the ceremony anticlimactic.

Other authors

Several other authors have created stories based on Van Gulik's Judge Dee character.

Bibliography

By van Gulik

The following novels and short stories were published in English by van Gulik. The short story collection Judge Dee at Work (published in 1967) contains a "Judge Dee Chronology" detailing Dee's various posts in specific years and stories set in these times. Van Gulik's last two books, Poets and Murder and Necklace and Calabash, were not listed in the chronology, as they were written after Judge Dee at Work, but they are both set in the time when Judge Dee was the magistrate in Poo-yang.

Year Title Setting Notes
1949 Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee An "early phase of Judge Dee's career." Translated from Chinese (originally, Dee Goong An); not part of the later continuity. Three stories: "The Case of the Double Murder at Dawn," "The Case of the Strange Corpse", and "The Case of the Poisoned Bride". Dee is the newly appointed Magistrate of Chang-ping in the Province of Shantung. He has all four lieutenants on staff: Sgt. Hoong, Chiao Tai, Ma Joong, and Tao Gan.[3]
1957 The Chinese Maze Murders 670, Lan-fang Written in 1950, published in Japanese in 1951; Lan-fang is a fictional district at the western frontier of Tang China.
1958 The Chinese Bell Murders 668, Poo-yang Written between 1953 and 1956; Poo-yang is a fictional wealthy district on the shores of the Grand Canal of China (part of modern-day Jiangsu province).
1959 The Chinese Gold Murders 663, Penglai
1960 The Chinese Lake Murders 666, Han-yuan Han-yuan is a fictional district on a lakeshore near the capital of Chang-An.
1961 The Chinese Nail Murders 676, Pei-chow Pei-chow is a fictional district in the far north of Tang China.
1961 The Haunted Monastery 667, Han-yuan Judge Dee is traveling and forced to take shelter in a monastery.
1961 The Red Pavilion 668, Poo-yang
1962 The Lacquer Screen 664, Penglai
1963 The Emperor's Pearl 669, Poo-yang
1965 The Morning of the Monkey 667, Han-yuan A short novel from The Monkey and the Tiger
1965 The Night of the Tiger 676, Pei-chow A short novel from The Monkey and the Tiger
1965 The Willow Pattern 677, Chang-An Judge Dee is the Lord Chief Justice in the Imperial capital of Chang-An.
1966 Murder in Canton 681, Guangzhou Judge Dee is the Lord Chief Justice for all of China.
1966 The Phantom of the Temple 670, Lan-fang
1967 "Five Auspicious Clouds" 663, Penglai A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "The Red Tape Murders" 663, Penglai A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "He came with the Rain" 663, Penglai A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "The Murder on the Lotus Pond" 666, Han-yuan A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "The Two Beggers" 668, Poo-yang A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "The Wrong Sword" 668, Poo-yang A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "The Coffins of the Emperor" 670, Lan-fang A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 "Murder on New Year's Eve" 670, Lan-fang A short story from Judge Dee at Work
1967 Necklace and Calabash 668, Poo-yang
1968 Poets and Murder 669, Poo-yang

By other authors

By the author Frédéric Lenormand (not yet translated into English)

By the author Zhu Xiao Di

By the author Sven Roussel

By authors Eleanor Cooney & Daniel Alteri

By Lin Qianyu (林千羽)

Filmography

Judge Dee has been adapted for television twice in English.

Some of Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee stories have been adapted for Chinese TV by CCTV. As of 2012, four different DVD series are available with one series so far with English subtitles. CCTV produced series in 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2010. The series from 2010, entitled "Detective Di Renjie" has been produced on DVD by Tai Seng entertainment with English subtitles.

2010 saw the release of the film Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, directed by Tsui Hark. In 2013, Tsui Hark followed up with Young Detective Dee: Rise of the Sea Dragon, a prequel set in Luoyang when Dee first secures a post with the Da Lisi and attracts the notice of the Empress Wu Zetian.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Wright, Daniel Franklin (2004). Chinoiserie in the novels of Robert Hans van Gulik (M.A. thesis) Wilfrid Laurier University
  2. Roussel, Sven. La dernière enquête du Juge Ti (in French). ISBN 978-2-9532206-0-5.
  3. Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (Dee Goong An): An Authentic Eighteenth-Century Chinese Detective Novel. Dover Publications, 1976. Copyright notes, "an unabridged, slightly corrected version of the work first published privately in Tokyo in 1949 under the title Dee Goong An: Three Murder Cases Solved by Judge Dee.
  4. "Judge Dee". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
  5. "Judge Dee and the Monastery Murders". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-05-10.

External links

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