Zhang Juzheng

Zhang Juzheng
Zhang Juzheng
47th Chancellor of the Ming Dynasty
In office
1572-1582
Monarch Longqing Emperor
Wanli Emperor
Preceded by Gao Gong
Succeeded by Zhang Siwei
Personal details
Born 1525
Died 1582 (aged 57)

Zhang Juzheng (simplified Chinese: 张居正; traditional Chinese: 張居正; pinyin: Zhāng Jūzhèng; Wade–Giles: Chang Chü-cheng) (1525–1582), courtesy name: Shuda (叔大), pseudonym: Taiyue (太岳), was a powerful Grand Secretary in the Ming Dynasty under the Longqing and Wanli emperors. Zhang was born in Jiangling, Hubei province, China and died in Beijing.

Zhang Juzheng was embroiled in a deep political turmoil from the very start. He assisted his mentor Xu Jie in defeating Yan Song and his son Yan Shifan who in turn defeated Xia Yan who defeated Zhang Song who defeated Yang Shouhe. He formed a temporary alliance with Gao Gong before allying himself to the eunuch Feng Bao to overtake Gao Gong as Chief Pricy Councillor with the support of the Emperor, enacting perhaps one of the most sophisticated political struggles in recorded history.

His benevolent rule and strong foreign and economic policies are considered to have brought the Ming Dynasty to its peak. He is credited with centralizing government, limiting special privileges, and reclaiming tax-exempt land. Zhang also played a very important role as mentor and regent during the early years of the reign of Emperor Wanli. He strongly influenced the young emperor and guided Wanli through his teenage years. However after Zhang died in 1582, many of his reforms and policies were ignored which slowly led to the disintegration of the dynasty in the years ahead. After his death, his family was purged and his wealth and estate confiscated on the Emperor's order. Zhang's reputation would only be rehabilitated more than half a century later, just before the downfall of the Ming dynasty.

Contents

Zhang's commentary on the "Four Books"

In 1573, Zhang presented the young Wanli Emperor with a commentary on the Four Books of the Confucian canon, entitled "Colloquial Commentary on the Four Books" ("四书直解", Si Shu Zhijie). It was published some time between 1573 and 1584. The book was not destroyed during the posthumous disgrace of Zhang, and enjoyed a measure or renown among the Chinese literati almost a century later, during the early decades of the Qing Dynasty, when several editions of it appeared between 1651 and 1683. [1]

In the 17th century, Zhang's commentary became popular with Jesuit missionaries in China, perhaps because, being originally written for the child emperor, it was using a simpler language than the commentary by the Neo-Confucianist Zhu Xi, favored by the late-Ming establishment. Although in the assessment of modern scholars (e.g. D.E. Mungello), Zhang's commentary was, in its content and meaning, not that different from Zhu's, the Jesuits rejected the Neo-Confucianism but found Zhang's book more consonant with their view of Confucius' teaching. As a result, there are numerous references to Zhang's work in Confucius Sinarum philosophus, the pioneering Latin translation and commentary of the Confucian classics, which had been gradually created by a large group of Jesuits over several decades and published in Paris in 1687.[2]

In literature

Zhang Juzheng (Wade-Giles: Chang Chü-cheng) is an important character in Ray Huang's 1587: A Year of No Significance, a well-known documentary book on the period. A popular book by mainland Chinese Internet writer "Dang Nian Ming Yue", called "The Ming Dynasty's Events", also featured Zhang Juzheng as a main character.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Mungello, David E. (1989). Curious Land: Jesuit Accommodation and the Origins of Sinology. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 268–269. ISBN 0-8248-1219-0. http://books.google.com/books?id=wb4yPw4ZgZQC. 
  2. ^ Mungello, p. 270
Political offices
Preceded by
Gao Gong
Chancellor of the Ming Dynasty
1572 – 1582
Succeeded by
Zhang Siwei


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