Guliang Chi

Writer of the Guliang Zhuan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Guliang Chi was an educator and philosopher of the State of Lu and disciple of Confucius and Bu Shang. He transmitted the Spring and Autumn Annals to his students,[1] from which his notes then became the Guliang Zhuan.[2]

OccupationsPhilosopher
Educator
InfluencesBu Shang
School or traditionConfucianism
Quick facts Born, Occupations ...
Guliang Chi
穀梁赤
Yuan dynasty portrait.
Born
OccupationsPhilosopher
Educator
Academic background
InfluencesBu Shang
Academic work
School or traditionConfucianism
Main interestsSpring and Autumn Annals
Notable worksGuliang Zhuan
InfluencedEmperor Xuan of Han
Cai Qianqiu
Duke Jiang of Xiaqu
Close
Chinese穀梁赤
Hanyu PinyinGǔliáng Chì
Hanyu PinyinGǔliáng Chì
Bopomofoㄍㄨˇ ㄌㄧㄤˊ ㄔˋ
Quick facts Chinese, Transcriptions ...
Guliang Chi
Chinese穀梁赤
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinGǔliáng Chì
Bopomofoㄍㄨˇ ㄌㄧㄤˊ ㄔˋ
Wade–Gilesku3liang2 ch'ih4
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingguk1loeng4 cek3
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinesekuwkljang tsyhek
Old Chinese
Baxter–Sagart (2014)/*[k]ˤokraŋ [t-qʰ](r)Ak/
Zhengzhang/*kloːɡraŋ kʰljaɡ/
Close

Names

Guliang Chi's name was a subject of debate for scholars. The name Chi 赤 comes from the Anthology of Cai Zhonglang [3] and the Book of Han.[4] Yan Shigu said that Guliang's personal name was Xi 喜, Ruan Xiaoxu said that his name was Shu 淑 or Chu 俶, and Wang Chong said that his name was Zhi 寘 in Lunheng.[1][2]

Influence

Little is known about Guliang's life outside of him transmitting the Spring and Autumn Annals as an educator.[1] Classical texts show that his commentary enjoyed considerable favour with the literati, with emperors such as Emperor Xuan of Han heavily promoting the text, and later educators, particularly from Guliang's home state of Lu teaching the thought within. The Book of Han mentions Duke Jiang of Xiaqu as studying the Guliang tradition,[5] who debated interpretation of the Spring and Autumn Annals with Dong Zhongshu, who studied the Gongyang tradition before Emperor Xuan of Han. Another individual, Cai Qianqiu, did the same, and was promoted. It was from these debates that the Guliang commentary was established and promoted by the Han dynasty.[4]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI