Han Yu

For the Spring and Autumn Period head of the House of Han, see Ziyu of Han.
Han Yu
Born 768
Died 824 (aged 5556)
Full name
Family name: Hán 韓
Given name: Yù 愈
Courtesy name: Tuìzhī 退之
Posthumous name
Duke Wen of Han 韓文公
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Han.
Han Yu
Traditional Chinese 韓愈
Simplified Chinese 韩愈

Han Yu (traditional Chinese: 韓愈; simplified Chinese: 韩愈; 768–824) was an essayist and poet from the Tang dynasty who had a strong influence on the development of Neo-Confucianism. He has been described as "comparable in stature to Dante, Shakespeare or Goethe" for his influence on the Chinese literary tradition.[1] He stood for strong central authority in politics and orthodoxy in cultural matters. He was also considered to be among China's finest prose writers, second only to Sima Guang(司馬光), and was ranked first among the "Eight Great Prose Masters of the Tang and Song" in a list compiled by Ming Dynasty scholar Mao Kun (茅坤).[2]

Biography

Han Yu was born in Heyang (河陽, present day Mengzhou) in Henan to a family of noble lineage.[3] His father worked as a minor official but died when Han Yu was two, who was then raised in the family of his older brother, Han Hui (韓會).[1] He was a student of philosophical writings and confucian thought. His family moved to Chang'an in 774 but was banished to Southern China in 777 because of its association with disgraced minister Yuan Zai. Han Hui died in 781 while serving as a prefect in Guangdong province.[3] In 792, after four attempts, Han Yu passed the jinshi imperial examination. In 796, after failing to secure a position in the civil service at the capital, he went into the service of the provincial military governor of Bianzhou until 799,[1] and then of the military governor of Xuzhou.[4] He gained his first central government position in 802 on the recommendation of the military governor. However, he was soon exiled, seemingly for failing to support the heir apparent's faction (other possible reasons are because of his criticism of the misbehaviour of the emperor's servants or his request for reduction of taxes during a famine).

From 807 to 819 he held a series of posts first in Luoyang and then in Chang'an. During these years, he was strong advocate of reimposing central control over the separatist provinces of the north-east. This period of service came to an end when he wrote his famous Memorial on Bone-relics of the Buddha (諫迎佛骨表) presented to Emperor Xianzong. The memorial is a strongly worded protest against Buddhist influence on the country. The Emperor, offended by Han Yu's criticism, ordered his execution. He was however saved by his friends at the court, and he was demoted and exiled to Chaozhou instead.[5] After Han Yu offered a formal apology to the Emperor a few months later, he was transferred to a province nearer to the capital. Emperor Xianzong died within a year, and his successor Emperor Muzong brought Han Yu back to the capital where he worked in the War Office.[6] He was then appointed to a high-ranking position after he successfully completed a mission to persuade a rebellious military commander to return to the fold.[3]

Han Yu held a number of their distinguished government posts such as the rector of the Imperial university. At the age of fifty-six, Han Yu died in Chang'an on December 25, 824 and was buried on April 21, 825 in the ancestral cemetery at Heyang.[4][7]

Thoughts and Beliefs

Han Yu was an important Confucian intellectual who influenced later generations of Confucian thinkers. He also served to sponsor many literary figures of the turn of the ninth century. He led a revolt in prose style against the formal ornamentation style of pianwen (駢文) that was then popular to return to a classical style that is simple, logical, and exact.[4] This classical style of writing or guwen (古文) he believed would be appropriate for the restoration of Confucianism.[8] To him literature and ethics were intertwined, and he advocated the personal assimilation of Confucian values through the Classics, making them part of one's life.[9]

Han Yu promoted Confucianism but was also deeply opposed to Buddhism, a religion that was then popular at the Tang court. In 819, he sent a letter, "Memorial on Bone-relics of the Buddha", to the emperor in which he denounced "the elaborate preparations being made by the state to receive the Buddha's fingerbone, which he called 'a filthy object' and which he said should be 'handed over to the proper officials for destruction by water and fire to eradicate forever its origin'.[5] Han Yu contrasted the Chinese civilization and barbarism where people were "like birds and wild beast or like the barbarians". He considered Buddhism to be of barbarian (夷狄) origin, therefore an unsuitable religion for the Chinese people.[10][11]

Han Yu was also critical of Daoism which he considered to be a harmful accretion to Chinese culture, he nevertheless made the distinction between Daoism which is a home-grown religion and Buddhism as a foreign faith.[10] In "The Origin of Dao" (原道, Yuandao), he argued that the monasticism of both Buddhism and Daoism to be economically non-productive, creating economic and social dislocation. He also considered Confucianism to be distinct from both Buddhism and Daoism in that it links the private, moral life of the individual with the public welfare of the state. His concept of the expression of Confucian spirituality through political action would later form the intellectual basis for neo-Confucianism.[12]

Literary works

Prose

Han Yu is often considered the greatest master of classical prose in the Tang. He was listed first among the "Eight Great Prose Masters of the Tang and Song" by Ming Dynasty scholar Mao Kun. Together with Liu Zongyuan he headed the Classical Prose Movement to return to the unornamented prose of the Han Dynasty.[13] He considered the classical "old style prose" or guwen to be the kind of writing more suited to argumentation and the expression of ideas.[4] Han Yu's guwen however was not an imitation of ancient prose, but a new style based on the ancient ideals of clarity, concision, and utility.[1] Han Yu wrote in many modes, often with discursiveness and experimental daring.

Amongst his best known essays are his polemics against Buddhism and Daoism and support for Confucianism, such as "Buddhism Memorial on Bone-relics of the Buddha" and "The Origin of Dao". Other notable works include "Text for the Crocodiles" (鱷魚文) in which he declares that crocodiles be formally banished from Chaozhou,[14] and "Goodby to Penury" (送窮文) that describes his failed attempt to rid himself of the ghost of poverty.[15]

Poetry

Han Yu also wrote poetry, however, while Han Yu's essays are highly regarded, his poetry is not considered the finest. According to A History of Chinese Literature by Herbert Giles, Han Yu "wrote a large quantity of verse, frequently playful, on an immense variety of subjects, and under his touch the commonplace was often transmuted into wit. Among other pieces there is one on his teeth, which seemed to drop out at regular intervals, so that he could calculate roughly what span of life remained to him. Altogether, his poetry cannot be classed with that of the highest order, unlike his prose writings".[16]

Significance and assessment

Han Yu ranks among the most important personalities in the history of traditional Chinese culture. His works not only become classics in Chinese literature, but his writings redefined and changed the course of the tradition itself. He was a stylistic innovator in the many genres he wrote in, and was a major influence on the literary and intellectual life of his time as well as later dynasties.[1] The writings of Han Yu would become influential to Song Dynasty writers and poets, in particular Ouyang Xiu who popularized the use of guwen as advocated by Han Yu, a style that would stay as the model for Chinese prose until the revolution in Chinese literature of modern China.[17] In an inscription for a shrine to Han Yu, Song Dynasty poet Su Shi praised Han Yu:[18]

His prose reversed the literary decline of eight dynasties, his teachings aided the misguided throughout the world, his loyalty led him to risk the wrath of his master, his courage surpassed the generals of three armies.
Su Shi, Inscription on Stele for Han Yu's Temple in Chaozhou

All the major accounts of Han Yu's life agree that he had an open and forthright character, which manifested itself in his unswerving loyalty to his friends. According to Li Ao, Han Yu was a great conversationalist and an inspired teacher: "His teaching and his efforts to mold his students were unrelenting, fearing they would not be perfect. Yet he amused them with jokes and with the chanting of poems, so that they were enraptured with his teaching and forgot about returning home".[19] The sense of humor that is so obvious in his writing was also important in his life. According to Herbert Giles, it is 'due to his calm and dignified patriotism that the Chinese still keep his memory green".[16]

Han Yu led a defense of Confucianism at a time when Confucian doctrine was in decline, and attacked both Buddhism and Daoism which were then the dominant belief systems. His writings would have significant influence on Neo-Confucianism of later dynasties, although he was criticized by Sung Confucians for being much more of a stylist than a moralist.[20] Most modern scholarship, although content to assign to Han Yu a secure place in the history of Chinese literature, has been embarrassed by the violence of his Confucian passions.[21]

Studies

Erwin von Zach wrote Han Yüs poetische Werke, a German language study. The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yü, a book by Stephen Owen published by the Yale University Press, was the first substantial English-language study of Han Yu. It was published 13 years after Zach's book.[22]

Modern references

In an essay on Kafka, the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges, in making the argument that "each writer creates his own precursors", placed Han Yu as one of the antecedents of Kafka due to some resemblance between them.[23]

Descendants

Han Yu's offspring held the title of Wujing Boshi (五经博士; 五經博士; Wǔjīng Bóshì).[24][25]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 William H. Nienhauser Jr., ed. (1986). The Indiana Companion to Traditional Chinese Literature. Indiana University Press. pp. 397–399. ISBN 0253329833.
  2. Sigfried J. de Laet (ed.). History of Humanity: From the seventh to the sixteenth century. p. 1083.
  3. 1 2 3 David E. Pollard, ed. (28 June 2000). The Chinese Essay. C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd. p. 31. ISBN 978-1850655374.
  4. 1 2 3 4 by Tony Barnstone, Chou Pin, ed. (2005). The Anchor Book of Chinese Poetry: From Ancient to Contemporary, The Full 3000-Year Tradition. Anchor. pp. 157–158. ISBN 978-0385721981.
  5. 1 2 Liu Wu-Chi (1990). An Introduction to Chinese Literature. Praeger. pp. 126–127. ISBN 978-0313267031.
  6. Tansen Sen (2004). Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade: The Realignment of Sino-Indian Relations, 600-1400. Manohar Publishers and Distributors. p. 73. ISBN 978-8173045813.
  7. Charles Hartman (2014). Han Yu and the T'ang Search for Unity. Princeton University Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0691610931.
  8. Stephen Owen (1996). The End of the Chinese 'Middle Ages': Essays in Mid-Tang Literary Culture. Stanford University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0804726672.
  9. Wu, David; Harrison, Tanya (9 October 2014). "Han Yu: Founder of the 'Classical Prose Movement'" (PDF). The Epoch Times. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  10. 1 2 Marc S. Abramson (2007). Ethnic Identity in Tang China. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 65–68. ISBN 978-0812240528.
  11. "Chinese Cultural Studies: Han Yu - Memorial on Buddhism (819 CE)".
  12. William Theodore De Bary (2008). Sources of East Asian Tradition: Premodern Asia, Volume 1. Columbia University Press. pp. 301–305. ISBN 978-0231143059.| Here "Origin of Dao" is translated as "Essentials of the Moral Way"
  13. Sigfried J. de Laet (ed.). History of Humanity: From the seventh to the sixteenth century. p. 1082.
  14. Stephen Owen (1996). The End of the Chinese 'Middle Ages': Essays in Mid-Tang Literary Culture. Stanford University Press. pp. 57–60. ISBN 978-0804726672.
  15. David E. Pollard, ed. (28 June 2000). The Chinese Essay. C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd. pp. 35–37. ISBN 978-1850655374.
  16. 1 2 H. A. Giles. A History of Chinese Literature (facsimile reprint of 1923 ed.). pp. 161–162.
  17. Sigfried J. de Laet, ed. (1994). History of Humanity: From the seventh to the sixteenth century. Routledge. p. 1083.
  18. "潮州韩文公庙碑". Original text: 文起八代之衰,而道济天下之溺;忠犯人主之怒,而勇夺三军之帅
  19. Charles Hartman (2014). Han Yu and the T'ang Search for Unity. Princeton University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0691610931.
  20. David E. Pollard, ed. (28 June 2000). The Chinese Essay. C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd. p. 34. ISBN 978-1850655374.
  21. Charles Hartman (2014). Han Yu and the T'ang Search for Unity. Princeton University Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0691610931.
  22. Leung, p. 715.
  23. Floyd Merrell Purdue University Press (December 31, 1991). Unthinking Thinking: Jorge Luis Borges, Mathematics, and the New Physics. ISBN 978-1557530110.
  24. H.S. Brunnert; V.V. Hagelstrom (15 April 2013). Present Day Political Organization of China. Routledge. pp. 494–. ISBN 978-1-135-79795-9.
  25. Brunnert, I. S. (Ippolit Semenovich); Gagelstrom, V. V; Kolesov, N. F. (Nikolai Fedorovich); Bielchenko, Andrei Terentevich; Moran, Edward Eugene (1911). "Present day political organization of China". Paragon Books.

Sources

External links

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