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Yang Shoujing

faberpach

Member
Yang_Shoujing


Yang Shoujing (Chinese: 楊守敬; Wade–Giles: Yang Shou-ching; 1839 – 9 January 1915) was a late-Qing dynasty historical geographer, calligrapher, antiquarian, bibliophile, and diplomat. He is best known for the historical atlas of China Lidai yudi tu, commonly called the Yangtu ("Yang's atlas"), the most complete and scholarly historical atlas of China produced during the Qing dynasty. He devoted most of his life to the annotation of the 6th-century geographic work Shui jing zhu, which was completed by his disciple Xiong Huizhen and published as the Shui jing zhu shu.

As a Qing diplomat posted in Japan, Yang purchased tens of thousands of ancient Chinese books from Japanese libraries and archives, many of which had become rare or lost in China. After his death, the government of the Republic of China purchased his collection and preserved most of the books in the National Palace Museum.

Yang was an accomplished calligrapher of the Stele School and became highly influential in Japan. The introduction of his art was said to have "offered virtually an unprecedented aesthetic style" to Japan and "revolutionized" Japanese calligraphy.

Yang's former residence and tomb in Yidu, Hubei are now protected as a Major National Historical and Cultural Site of China.

Yang was born in 1839, during the Qing dynasty, in Lucheng Town, Yidu County, Hubei Province. His courtesy name was Xingwu (惺吾). After passing the provincial examination and earning the juren degree in 1862 (first year of the Tongzhi reign),[1] He lived for ten years in Beijing trying to pass the imperial examination for the highest jinshi degree, without success.[2] Although he failed the examinations, he became friends with the prominent officials Pan Zuyin and Zhang Zhidong, who shared his passion for antiques. He attended Pan's lavish parties and shopped for antiques in Beijing's Liulichang with Zhang.[2]

From a young age Yang was interested in geography, and spent much of his life annotating Li Daoyuan's 6th-century work Commentary on the Water Classic (Shui Jing Zhu).[3] His knowledge in geography earned him a diplomatic post to Japan, despite his repeated examination failure.[2] In Tokyo he worked under the career diplomat Li Shuchang, an abrasive superior who nevertheless appreciated Yang's knowledge in antiques. As Japan was quickly westernizing during the Meiji Restoration, traditional Chinese and Japanese publications became out of fashion and were sold cheaply. Working with Li as well as Japanese antiquarians, Yang purchased tens of thousands of old Chinese books preserved in Japanese collections, many of which had become rare or even lost in China.[3] They were later published as Guyi congshu (古逸丛书).[3] After Yang's death, the Republic of China government purchased his collection and preserved most of his books in the National Palace Museum.[4]

Yang was posted in Japan from 1880 to 1884. After returning to China, he taught at the Lianghu Academy (两湖书院) in Wuchang and then became dean of the Qincheng School (勤成学堂), later renamed as Cungu School (存古学堂). In 1909 he served as an advisory official of the Ministry of Rites. He died in Beijing on 9 January 1915, and was buried in his hometown Yidu.[1]
 

Bill O'Rights

Seldom posts. Always delivers.
Staff Member
Expand on your post. There are interesting articles on Wikipedia that we can all access. I'm locking the other ones as spam until you provide context or opinion on what you're posting. If you post another you will be given a break from the site.
 

faberpach

Member
Expand on your post. There are interesting articles on Wikipedia that we can all access. I'm locking the other ones as spam until you provide context or opinion on what you're posting. If you post another you will be given a break from the site.

I was so happy to try to bring some topics to the site as it was a very stale morning :( you know have some things to talk about :(
 
I would like more stuff going on here as well man, but just putting random stuff without context won't help much. even if mods don't step in on this most people won't really want to talk about something like this. at the very least, try to tell us why you feel this person is interesting and what you find fascinating about him.

on the topic, a lot of Chinese historical figures were more or less buried in the history books, especially after the Culture Revolution. China had some seriously interesting history with all the different dynasties and the huge territory. people usually only focus on the Qin for the Great Wall, Yuan for being more or less the throne of the Mogolian empire, or Qing for it's 200+ years of prosperity before the fall. (and of cause the 3 kingdom era with the all the games behind it). there are literally thousands of years history besides those and such much fascinating stories out there too.
 
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