Jump to content

Jie Zhitui: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
adding add'l sentence for DYK purposes
clean up, replaced: Period → period (3)
 
(47 intermediate revisions by 28 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|7th century BC Chinese Jin aristocrat}}
{{chinese
{{chinese
|pic=File:Duke Wen of Jin Recovering His State (晉文公復國圖) by Li Tang (李唐), 1140.jpg |piccap=The [[Wen Duke of Jin|Wen Duke]] recovering [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]], attributed to [[Li Tang (painter)|Li Tang]] ({{sc|ad}}{{nbsp}}1140)
|pic=File:Duke Wen of Jin Recovering His State (晉文公復國圖) by Li Tang (李唐), 1140.jpg |piccap=The [[Wen Duke of Jin|Wen Duke]] recovering [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]], attributed to [[Li Tang (painter)|Li Tang]] (AD{{nbsp}}1140)
|c={{linktext|介|之|推}} |p=Jiè Zhītuī |w=Chieh Chih-t‘ui
|c={{linktext|介|之|推}} |p=Jiè Zhītuī |w=Chieh Chih-t‘ui |mi={{IPAc-cmn|j|ie|4|-|zh|i|1|.|t|ui|1|}}
}}
}}
{{chinese |title=Alternative names
{{chinese |title=Alternative names
|altname=Jie Zitui |c2={{linktext|介|子|推}} |p2=Jiè Zǐtuī |w2=Chieh Tzu-t‘ui
|altname=Jie Zitui |c2={{linktext|介|子|推}} |p2=Jiè Zǐtuī |w2=Chieh Tzu-t‘ui |mi2={{IPAc-cmn|j|ie|4|-|z|i|3|.|t|ui|1|}}
|altname3=Jiezi |c3={{linktext|介|子}} |p3=Jièzǐ |w3=Chieh-tzu |l3=Master{{nbsp}}Jie<br>[[Zi (title)|Viscount]]{{nbsp}}Jie
|altname3=Jiezi |c3={{linktext|介|子}} |p3=Jièzǐ |w3=Chieh-tzu |l3=Master{{nbsp}}Jie<br>[[Zi (title)|Viscount]]{{nbsp}}Jie |mi3={{IPAc-cmn|j|ie|4|.|z|i|3|}}
|altname4=Jie Tui |c4={{linktext|介|推}} |p4=Jiè Tuī |w4=Chieh T‘ui
|altname4=Jie Tui |c4={{linktext|介|推}} |p4=Jiè Tuī |w4=Chieh T‘ui |mi4={{IPAc-cmn|j|ie|4|-|t|ui|1|}}
|altname5=Wang Guang |c5={{linktext|王|光}} |p5=Wáng Guāng |w5=Wang Kuang
|altname5=Wang Guang |c5={{linktext|王|光}} |p5=Wáng Guāng |w5=Wang Kuang |mi5={{IPAc-cmn|wang|2|-|g|uang|1|}}
}}
}}
{{chinese name|Jie}}
{{family name hatnote|Jie|lang=Chinese}}
'''Jie Zhitui''' ({{fl.|7th}}{{nbsp}}century{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}),{{sfnp|Couling|1917}} also known as '''Jie Zitui''', was a [[Huaxia|Han]] [[Chinese feudalism|aristocrat]] who served the [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]] prince [[Ji Chong'er|Chong'er]] during the [[Spring and Autumn Period]] of [[Chinese history]]. Chinese legend holds that when Chong'er finally ascended to power as the [[Gong (title)|duke]] of Jin ("Duke Wen"), Jie either refused or was passed over for any reward, despite his great loyalty during the prince's times of hardship. Jie then retired to the forests of Jin in what is now central [[Shanxi]] with his mother. Supposedly, the duke so desired to repay Jie's years of loyalty that, when Jie declined to present himself at court, he ordered a [[forest fire]] to compel the recluse out of hiding. Instead, Jie and his mother were [[Death by burning|burnt alive]] on {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}}. By the [[Han dynasty|Han]], Jie was being revered in central [[Shanxi]] as a [[Taoist immortal]]. He was annually commemorated with a ritual avoidance of fire that, despite many official bans, eventually became China's [[Cold Food Festival|Cold Food]] and [[Qingming Festival]]s.
'''Jie Zhitui''' ({{fl.|7th}}{{nbsp}}century{{nbsp}}BC),{{sfnp|Couling|1917}} also known as '''Jie Zitui''', was an ancient [[Chinese feudalism|aristocrat]] who served the [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]] prince [[Ji Chong'er|Chong'er]] during the [[Spring and Autumn period]] of [[Chinese history]]. Chinese legend holds that when Chong'er finally ascended to power as the [[Gong (title)|duke]] of Jin ("Duke Wen"), Jie either refused or was passed over for any reward, despite his great loyalty during the prince's times of hardship. Jie then retired to the forests of Jin in what is now central [[Shanxi]] with his mother. Supposedly, the duke so desired to repay Jie's years of loyalty that, when Jie declined to present himself at court, he ordered a [[forest fire]] to compel the recluse out of hiding. Instead, Jie and his mother were killed by the fire on {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}}. By the [[Han dynasty|Han]], Jie was being revered in central [[Shanxi]] as a [[Taoist immortal]]. He was annually commemorated with a ritual avoidance of fire that, despite many official bans, eventually became China's [[Cold Food Festival|Cold Food]] and [[Qingming Festival]]s.


{{anchor|Name|Etymology}}
{{anchor|Name|Etymology}}

==Names==
==Names==
Jie Zhitui{{efn|In addition to the forms given above, Jie Zhitui's name also appears as '''Këae Che-ts‘uy''' in older sources using [[Legge romanization]]<ref name=legate>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA191 191]}}.</ref> and, for Jiezi Tui, as '''Kie-tse Tch'oei''' in sources following [[Édouard Chavannes|Chavannes]].<ref name=chav>{{harvp|Chavannes|1895|loc=[[:s:fr:Mémoires historiques/39|Ch. XXXIX]]}}.</ref>}} or Jiezhi Tui<ref name=sq/> is the name given to him in the oldest surviving records,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=52}} with Jie Zitui or Jiezi Tui<ref name=sq/> coming later.{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} [[Sima Qian]] treats his name as though it were actually {{nowrap|'''Jie Tui'''}}, with "Jiezi" serving as an [[Chinese nobility|honorific]] equivalent to "Master" or {{nowrap|"[[Zi (title)|Viscount]] Jie"}}.{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA331 331]}}<ref name=lxzck>{{harvp|Theobald|24 July 2010|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/Literature/Daoists/liexianzhuan.html Liexianzhuan]"}}.</ref>{{sfnp|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.|loc=§372.6}} A single 2nd-century source has "Jiezi Sui" {{nowrap|(<small>[[traditional characters|t]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|介|子|綏}}}},}} <small>[[simplified characters|s]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|介|子|绥}}}}, ''Jièzǐ Suí'').<ref name=qc>{{citation |last=Cai |first=Yong |authormask=[[Cai Yong]] |title=[[Qin Melodies]] ''[《琴操》, ''Qíncāo'']'' |contribution=21 Hejian Zage |at=§8 }}. {{zh icon}}</ref> Others state that the entire name Jiezi Tui was a [[posthumous name|posthumous title]] and that his real name had been {{nowrap|'''Wang Guang'''}}.<ref name=lxz/>
Jie Zhitui{{efn|In addition to the forms given above, Jie Zhitui's name also appears as '''Këae Che-ts‘uy''' in older sources using [[Legge romanization]]<ref name=legate>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA191 191]}}.</ref> and, for Jiezi Tui, as '''Kie-tse Tch'oei''' in sources following [[Édouard Chavannes|Chavannes]].<ref name=chav>{{harvp|Chavannes|1895|loc=[[:s:fr:Mémoires historiques/39|Ch. XXXIX]]}}.</ref>}} or Jiezhi Tui<ref name=sq/> is the name given to him in the oldest surviving records,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=52}} with Jie Zitui or Jiezi Tui<ref name=sq/> coming later.{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} [[Sima Qian]] treats his name as though it were actually {{nowrap|'''Jie Tui'''}}, with "Jiezi" serving as an [[Chinese nobility|honorific]] equivalent to "Master" or {{nowrap|"[[Zi (title)|Viscount]] Jie"}}.{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA331 331]}}<ref name=lxzck>{{harvp|Theobald|2010|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/Literature/Daoists/liexianzhuan.html Liexianzhuan]"}}.</ref>{{sfnp|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.|loc=§372.6}} A single 2nd-century source has "Jiezi Sui" ({{lang-zh |t={{linktext|介|子|綏}} |s={{linktext|介|子|绥}} |p=Jièzǐ Suí}}).<ref name=qc>{{citation |last=Cai |first=Yong |author-mask=[[Cai Yong]] |title=Qin Melodies ''[《琴操》, ''Qíncāo'']'' |contribution=21 Hejian Zage |at=§8 |title-link=Qin Melodies }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref> Others state that the entire name Jiezi Tui was a [[posthumous name|posthumous title]] and that his real name had been {{nowrap|'''Wang Guang'''}}.<ref name=lxz/>


==Life==
==Life==
[[File:China 2b.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The major [[ancient Chinese states|states]] of [[Zhou China]] during its [[Spring and Autumn Period]]]]
[[File:China 2b.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The major [[ancient Chinese states|states]] of [[Zhou China]] during its [[Spring and Autumn period]]]]
Jie was a [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]] [[Chinese feudalism|aristocrat]], [[Chinese poetry|poet]], and composer for the [[guqin|Chinese zither]] during the [[Spring and Autumn Period]] of [[China]]'s [[Zhou dynasty|Zhou]] [[list of Chinese dynasties|dynasty]].<ref name=sq/> He served at the court of the Jin prince [[Ji Chong'er|Chong'er]] (posthumously the "[[Wen Duke of Jin|Wen Duke]]") in [[Pu, Shanxi|Pu]] during the reign of Chong'er's father [[Ji Guizhu|Duke Guizhu]] (posthumously the "[[Xian Duke of Jin|Xian Duke]]"). A passage of the ''[[Huainanzi]]'' relates that, when Master Jie sang "The Dragon and the Snake", Prince Chong'er "broke down in tears".<ref>[[Liu An]] & al. ({{c.|140}}{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}), ''[[Huainanzi]]'' [《淮南子》], [http://ctext.org/huainanzi/shuo-shan-xun Vol. 16, §2.], with additional details in [[Gao You]]'s commentary on it.</ref>{{sfnp|Major & al.|2010|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=mhQ9B0aRWEIC&pg=PA626 626]}} [[Lionel Giles|Giles]]{{sfnp|Giles|1948}} considered Jie to be the same person as the "Jiezi Tui" who is mentioned as having been a minister in [[state of Chu|Chu]] at the age of 15.{{sfnp|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.|loc=§372.7}}<ref>{{citation |editor-last=Liu |editor-first=Xiang |editor-mask=[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]] |title=Garden of Stories ''[《說苑》, ''Shuōyuàn'']'' |volume=[http://ctext.org/shuo-yuan/zun-xian Vol. 8] |at=§18 }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>
Jie was a [[Jin (Chinese state)|Jin]] [[Chinese feudalism|aristocrat]], [[Chinese poetry|poet]], and composer for the [[guqin|Chinese zither]] during the [[Spring and Autumn period]] of [[China]]'s [[Zhou dynasty|Zhou]] [[list of Chinese dynasties|dynasty]].<ref name=sq/> He served at the court of the Jin prince [[Ji Chong'er|Chong'er]] (posthumously the "[[Wen Duke of Jin|Wen Duke]]") in [[Pu, Shanxi|Pu]] during the reign of Chong'er's father [[Ji Guizhu|Duke Guizhu]] (posthumously the "[[Xian Duke of Jin|Xian Duke]]"). A passage of the ''[[Huainanzi]]'' relates that, when Master Jie sang "The Dragon and the Snake", Prince Chong'er "broke down in tears".<ref>[[Liu An]] & al. ({{c.|140}}{{nbsp}}BC), ''[[Huainanzi]]'' [《淮南子》], [http://ctext.org/huainanzi/shuo-shan-xun Vol. 16, §2.], with additional details in [[Gao You]]'s commentary on it.</ref>{{sfnp|Major & al.|2010|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=mhQ9B0aRWEIC&pg=PA626 626]}} [[Lionel Giles|Giles]]{{sfnp|Giles|1948}} considered Jie to be the same person as the "Jiezi Tui" who is mentioned as having been a minister in [[state of Chu|Chu]] at the age of 15.{{sfnp|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.|loc=§372.7}}<ref>{{citation |editor-last=Liu |editor-first=Xiang |editor-mask=[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]] |title=Garden of Stories ''[《說苑》, ''Shuōyuàn'']'' |volume=[http://ctext.org/shuo-yuan/zun-xian Vol. 8] |at=§18 }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>


In 655{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}, Jie followed Chong'er into exile<ref name=qc/> among the [[Beidi|Di tribes]] north of the Chinese<ref name=4ma/> when the [[Xirong|Rong]] beauty [[Li Ji (concubine)|Li Ji]] [[Li Ji unrest|successfully plotted]] against the sons of the other wives of the [[Ji Guizhu|Duke of Jin]]. Her son [[Xiqi]] and his successor [[Zhuozi (Jin)|Zhuozi]] were quickly killed by the minister [[Li Ke (Jin)|Li Ke]], who then offered the throne to Chong'er in 651{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}. The prince declined; his younger brother [[Ji Yiwu|Yiwu]] (posthumously the "[[Hui Duke of Jin|Hui Duke]]") accepted and then—after a perilous period of imprisonment in [[state of Qin|Qin]]—sent [[assassin]]s after Chong'er in 646{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}. Hearing about them, he and his court fled from the Di, arriving at the [[state of Qi]] in [[Shandong]] in 644{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}. Soon after, Qi fell into [[War of Qi's succession|a civil war over its own succession]]. Prince Chong'er and his growing entourage then travelled to the courts of [[state of Cao|Cao]], [[state of Song|Song]], [[state of Zheng|Zheng]], [[state of Chu|Chu]], and finally [[state of Qin|Qin]]. In 636{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}, [[Ying Renhao|Duke Renhao]] (posthumously the "[[Mu Duke of Qin|Mu Duke]]") lent Qin's army for an invasion against Duke Yiwu's son [[Ji Yu (Jin)|Yu]] (posthumously the "[[Duke Huai of Jin|Huai Duke]]"), defeating him at [[Battle of Gaoliang|Gaoliang]].
In 655{{nbsp}}BC, Jie followed Chong'er into exile<ref name=qc/> among the [[Beidi|Di tribes]] north of the Chinese<ref name=4ma/> when the [[Xirong|Rong]] beauty [[Li Ji (concubine)|Li Ji]] [[Li Ji unrest|successfully plotted]] against the sons of the other wives of the [[Ji Guizhu|Duke of Jin]]. Her son [[Xiqi]] and his successor [[Zhuozi (Jin)|Zhuozi]] were quickly killed by the minister [[Li Ke (Jin)|Li Ke]], who then offered the throne to Chong'er in 651{{nbsp}}BC. The prince declined; his younger brother [[Ji Yiwu|Yiwu]] (posthumously the "[[Hui Duke of Jin|Hui Duke]]") accepted and then—after a perilous period of imprisonment in [[state of Qin|Qin]]—sent [[assassin]]s after Chong'er in 646{{nbsp}}BC. Hearing about them, he and his court fled from the Di, arriving at the [[state of Qi]] in [[Shandong]] in 644{{nbsp}}BC. Soon after, Qi fell into [[War of Qi's succession|a civil war over its own succession]]. Prince Chong'er and his growing entourage then travelled to the courts of [[state of Cao|Cao]], [[state of Song|Song]], [[state of Zheng|Zheng]], [[state of Chu|Chu]], and finally [[state of Qin|Qin]]. In 636{{nbsp}}BC, [[Ying Renhao|Duke Renhao]] (posthumously the "[[Mu Duke of Qin|Mu Duke]]") lent Qin's army for an invasion against Duke Yiwu's son [[Ji Yu (Jin)|Yu]] (posthumously the "[[Duke Huai of Jin|Huai Duke]]"), defeating him at [[Battle of Gaoliang|Gaoliang]].


Jie was passed over for reward when Chong'er became duke of Jin.{{sfnp|Couling|1917}} The 4th-century-{{sc|bc}} [[Commentary of Zuo|commentary]] on the ''[[Spring and Autumn Annals]]'' credited to [[Zuo Qiuming]] contains the earliest surviving record of Jie's story,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} in a section now placed beside [[Confucius]]'s entry on [[Ji Yiwu|Duke Yiwu]]'s death in 637{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}. In it, a [[History of the Peloponnesian War#Speeches|Thucydidean dialogue]] between Jie and his mother explains how he finds the duke's other retainers to be thieves for taking credit and receiving rewards when [[Tian|Heaven]] itself was responsible for Chong'er's restoration. His lord also showed himself to be unworthy by failing to reward him despite his failure to appear at court. His mother asks him to at least go before the duke,<ref name=legate>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA191 191]}}.</ref> but he explains he has already criticized the other nobles so harshly that he could not possibly return and is resolved to [[hermit|withdraw into the wilderness]]. She accepts his decision and leaves with him. When the duke later realized his mistake, he sought out Jie but failed. He then set aside the produce of the fields of [[Mianshang]]{{sfnp|Xiao & al.|1996|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=V08ABAAAQBAJ&pg=PA274 274]}} to endow sacrifices in Jie's honor, "a memento... of my neglect and a mark of distinction for the good man".<ref name=leggy>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA192 192]}}.</ref>
Jie was passed over for reward when Chong'er became duke of Jin.{{sfnp|Couling|1917}} The 4th-century-BC [[Commentary of Zuo|commentary]] on the ''[[Spring and Autumn Annals]]'' credited to [[Zuo Qiuming]] contains the earliest surviving record of Jie's story,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} in a section now placed beside [[Confucius]]'s entry on [[Ji Yiwu|Duke Yiwu]]'s death in 637{{nbsp}}BC. In it, a [[History of the Peloponnesian War#Speeches|Thucydidean dialogue]] between Jie and his mother explains how he finds the duke's other retainers to be thieves for taking credit and receiving rewards when [[Tian|Heaven]] itself was responsible for Chong'er's restoration. His lord also showed himself to be unworthy by failing to reward him despite his failure to appear at court. His mother asks him to at least go before the duke,<ref name=legate>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA191 191]}}.</ref> but he explains he has already criticized the other nobles so harshly that he could not possibly return and is resolved to [[hermit|withdraw into the wilderness]]. She accepts his decision and leaves with him. When the duke later realized his mistake, he sought out Jie but failed. He then set aside the produce of the fields of [[Mianshang]]{{sfnp|Xiao & al.|1996|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=V08ABAAAQBAJ&pg=PA274 274]}} to endow sacrifices in Jie's honor, "a memento&nbsp;... of my neglect and a mark of distinction for the good man".<ref name=leggy>{{harvp|Legge|1872|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=KzJ3D82yE_AC&pg=PA192 192]}}.</ref>


The [[Lüshi Chunqiu|annals]] compiled {{c.|239}}{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}} under [[state of Qin|Qin]]'s [[Chinese chancellor|chancellor]] [[Lü Buwei]] opine that Duke Chong'er never became a [[wang (title)|king]] because he proved less capable in success than he had been in adversity.<ref name=loblaw>{{harvp|Knoblock & al.|2000|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC&pg=PA264 264]}}.</ref> Its account of Jie's fate—which omits mention of his mother—begins with the moral that "it is easy to hold onto others if you offer them honor and wealth[, b]ut it is difficult... if you offer them poverty and debasement".<ref name=bob>{{harvp|Knoblock & al.|2000|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC&pg=PA263 263]}}.</ref> Lü's scholars do not suggest that the duke overlooked Jie, however, but that he was simply "far from the vulgar crowd" and embarrassed by the behavior the duke's other close retainers.<ref name=loblaw/> He posts a [[Classic of Poetry#Style|poem]] upon the palace gates,<ref>{{citation |last=Lü |first=Buwei |authormask=[[Lü Buwei]] & al. |title=Master Lü's Spring & Autumn Annals ''[《呂氏春秋》, ''Lǚshì Chūnqiū'']'' |url=http://ctext.org/lv-shi-chun-qiu/zh |contribution-url=http://ctext.org/lv-shi-chun-qiu/jie-li/zh |contribution=An Account of Jie }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{efn|Knoblock & al. translate it as:<ref name=loblaw/>
The [[Lüshi Chunqiu|annals]] compiled {{c.|239}}{{nbsp}}BC under [[state of Qin|Qin]]'s [[Chinese chancellor|chancellor]] [[Lü Buwei]] opine that Duke Chong'er never became a [[wang (title)|king]] because he proved less capable in success than he had been in adversity.<ref name=loblaw>{{harvp|Knoblock & al.|2000|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC&pg=PA264 264]}}.</ref> Its account of Jie's fate—which omits mention of his mother—begins with the moral that "it is easy to hold onto others if you offer them honor and wealth[, b]ut it is difficult&nbsp;... if you offer them poverty and debasement".<ref name=bob>{{harvp|Knoblock & al.|2000|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC&pg=PA263 263]}}.</ref> Lü's scholars do not suggest that the duke overlooked Jie, however, but that he was simply "far from the vulgar crowd" and embarrassed by the behavior the duke's other close retainers.<ref name=loblaw/> He posts a [[Classic of Poetry#Style|poem]] upon the palace gates,<ref>{{citation |last=Lü |first=Buwei |author-mask=[[Lü Buwei]] & al. |title=Master Lü's Spring & Autumn Annals ''[《呂氏春秋》, ''Lǚshì Chūnqiū'']'' |url=http://ctext.org/lv-shi-chun-qiu/zh |contribution-url=http://ctext.org/lv-shi-chun-qiu/jie-li/zh |contribution=An Account of Jie }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{efn|Knoblock & al. translate it as:<ref name=loblaw/>
{{Poem quote |text=
A [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] went flying,
Circling all the world.
Five serpents accompanied him,
Serving as aides and helpers.
When the dragon returned to his home,
And won his proper place,
Four of the serpents accompanied him
And won their dew and rain.
But one serpent was ashamed of this
And withered to death in the open fields.
}} }} obliquely announcing his retirement into the mountains. Chong'er hears of it, recognizes its author, and goes into [[Chinese mourning|mourning]] for his old friend, changing his clothes and sleeping away from the palace.<ref name=loblaw/> He offers a million "fields" of land and a position as senior minister ({{lang-zh|s={{linktext|上|卿}}|l=shǎngqīng|labels=no}}) to anyone—[[Chinese nobility|noble]] or common—who is able to find Jie for him. The only person who does discover Jie, however, finds him carrying a pot and a large umbrella in the remote mountains. Asked if he knows where Jie Zhitui might live, the hermit replies that Jie "does not wish to be discovered" and "wants to remain hidden". Complaining "How is it that I alone know this?" he wandered away beneath his umbrella, never to be seen again.<ref name=loblaw/>


The account in [[Sima Qian]]'s 1st-century{{nbsp}}BC ''[[Records of the Grand Historian|Records]]'' largely repeats the ''Zuozhuan'' account with greater detail.<ref name=nienny>{{harvp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA334 334–5]}}.</ref> (In fact, the [[Classical Chinese poetry forms#Fixed line length poems|four-character lines]] and [[Classical Chinese poetry forms#Rhyme|rhyming dialogue]] in Jie's conversations with his mother suggests it draws on an earlier, now-lost poetic treatment of the life of Chong'er.){{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA372 372]}} Sima specifies that Jie hid himself out of disgust at what he took as [[Hu Yan]]'s insincere and overdramatic retirement on the journey from Qin to Jin, which Chong'er declined with similar overstatement.{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA331 331–2]}} Sima interrupts Jie's story, though, to make excuses for the duke's tardiness in remembering and rewarding Jie. The beginning of Chong'er's reign was distracted by rioting caused by Duke Yu's partisans<ref name=nihau/> [[Yin Yi]]<ref>{{harvp|Theobald|2012|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Zhou/personsyinyisheng.html Yin Yi Sheng or Lü Sheng]"}}.</ref> and [[Xi Rui]],<ref>{{harvp|Theobald|2012|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Zhou/personsxirui.html Xi Rui]"}}.</ref> who even succeeded in burning down the ducal palace before being captured and put to death with [[Ying Renhao|Duke Renhao]]'s assistance.<ref name=nihau>{{harvp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA332 332–3]}}.</ref> When Jie is brought back to Chong'er's attention by the poem on the gates of the new palace,<ref name=4ma>{{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |author-mask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |title=Records of the Grand Historian'' [《史記》, ''Shǐjì'']'' |volume=39 |contribution=[[:s:zh:史記/卷039#晉 文公|The Dynasty of Jin]] |title-link=:s:zh:史記 }}. {{in lang|zh}}.</ref>{{efn|Nienhauser & al. translate it as:<ref name=nienny/>
<table><tr>
{{Poem quote |text=
<td>A [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] went flying,</td>
The [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] wanted to ascent to [[Tian|Heaven]], [and]
</tr><tr>
Five snakes acted to support him.
<td>Circling all the world.</td>
Once the dragon had risen to the clouds
</tr><tr>
Four of the snakes each entered their own dwelling places.
<td>Five serpents accompanied him,</td>
Only one snake harbored resentment and
</tr><tr>
To the end one never saw where he lived.
<td>Serving as aides and helpers.</td>
}} }} it has been placed there not by Jie himself but by his own loyal friends. Chong'er sees it himself and again immediately understands that it is about Jie.<ref name=nienny/> Jie and his mother are never seen again,{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA334 334]}} but Chong'er—doing what he can—"surrounded and sealed off" the "heart" of Mianshang in order to make it Jie's and "in order to record [his] error and also to commend an excellent man".{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA335 335]}}
</tr><tr>
<td>When the dragon returned to his home,</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>And won his proper place,</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Four of the serpents accompanied him</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>And won their dew and rain.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>But one serpent was ashamed of this</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>And withered to death in the open fields.</td>
</tr></table>}} obliquely announcing his retirement into the mountains. Chong'er hears of it, recognizes its author, and goes into [[Chinese mourning|mourning]] for his old friend, changing his clothes and sleeping away from the palace.<ref name=loblaw/> He offers a million "fields" of land and a position as senior minister {{nowrap|({{lang|zh|{{linktext|上|卿}}}},}} ''shǎngqīng'') to anyone—[[Chinese nobility|noble]] or common—who is able to find Jie for him. The only person who does discover Jie, however, finds him carrying a pot and a large umbrella in the remote mountains. Asked if he knows where Jie Zhitui might live, the hermit replies that Jie "does not wish to be discovered" and "wants to remain hidden". Complaining "How is it that I alone know this?" he wandered away beneath his umbrella, never to be seen again.<ref name=loblaw/>

The account in [[Sima Qian]]'s 1st-century{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}} ''[[Records of the Grand Historian|Records]]'' largely repeats the ''Zuozhuan'' account with greater detail.<ref name=nienny>{{harvp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA334 334–5]}}.</ref> (In fact, the [[Classical Chinese poetry forms#Fixed line length poems|four-character lines]] and [[Classical Chinese poetry forms#Rhyme|rhyming dialogue]] in Jie's conversations with his mother suggests it draws on an earlier, now-lost poetic treatment of the life of Chong'er.){{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA372 372]}} Sima specifies that Jie hid himself out of disgust at what he took as [[Hu Yan]]'s insincere and overdramatic retirement on the journey from Qin to Jin, which Chong'er declined with similar overstatement.{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA331 331–2]}} Sima interrupts Jie's story, though, to make excuses for the duke's tardiness in remembering and rewarding Jie. The beginning of Chong'er's reign was distracted by rioting caused by Duke Yu's partisans<ref name=nihau/> [[Yin Yi]]<ref>{{harvp|Theobald|2012|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Zhou/personsyinyisheng.html Yin Yi Sheng or Lü Sheng]"}}.</ref> and [[Xi Rui]],<ref>{{harvp|Theobald|2012|loc="[http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Zhou/personsxirui.html Xi Rui]"}}.</ref> who even succeeded in burning down the ducal palace before being captured and put to death with [[Ying Renhao|Duke Renhao]]'s assistance.<ref name=nihau>{{harvp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|pp=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA332 332–3]}}.</ref> When Jie is brought back to Chong'er's attention by the poem on the gates of the new palace,<ref name=4ma>{{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |authormask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |title=[[:s:zh:史記|Records of the Grand Historian]]'' [《史記》, ''Shǐjì'']'' |volume=Vol. 39 |contribution=[[:s:zh:史記/卷039#晉_文公|The Dynasty of Jin]] }}. {{zh icon}}.</ref>{{efn|Nienhauser & al. translate it as:<ref name=nienny/>

<table><tr>
<td>The [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] wanted to ascent to [[Tian|Heaven]], [and]</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Five snakes acted to support him.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Once the dragon had risen to the clouds</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Four of the snakes each entered their own dwelling places.</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Only one snake harbored resentment and</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>To the end one never saw where he lived.</td>
</tr></table>}} it has been placed there not by Jie himself but by his own loyal friends. Chong'er sees it himself and again immediately understands that it is about Jie.<ref name=nienny/> Jie and his mother are never seen again,{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA334 334]}} but Chong'er—doing what he can—"surrounded and sealed off" the "heart" of Mianshang in order to make it Jie's and "in order to record [his] error and also to commend an excellent man".{{sfnp|Nienhauser & al.|2006|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC&pg=PA335 335]}}


==Legend==
==Legend==
[[File:Mianshan.jpg|thumb|right|300px|{{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}} in [[Jinzhong Prefecture]] in central [[Shanxi]]]]
[[File:Mianshan.jpg|thumb|right|300px|{{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}} in [[Jinzhong Prefecture]] in central [[Shanxi]]]]
By the 3rd century{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}}, Jie Zhitui's story had received additional embellishment.{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} [[Han Fei]]'s [[Han Feizi|collected works]] reference the story—dramatizing Jie's selflessness and loyalty—whereby he fed Chong'er with soup made from flesh carved from his own body because he was unable to bear his lord's thirst or hunger.{{sfnp|Liao|1959|loc=[http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&chunk.id=d2.27&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual Bk. VIII, Ch. xxvii]}} [[Zhuang Zhou]]'s [[Zhuangzi (book)|collected works]] specify that the meat came from his thigh and that he "was burned to death with a tree in his arms".{{sfnp|Legge & al.|1891|loc=[http://ctext.org/zhuangzi/robber-zhi Bk. XXIX, §10]}} The ''[[Songs of Chu]]'' written and compiled between the 3rd century{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}} and the 2nd century{{nbsp}}{{sc|ad}}{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|p=28}} reference Jie repeatedly as a loyal and wronged vassal,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} mentioning the story about his flesh,{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT349 "Embittered Thoughts"] (怨思, ''Yuàn Sī'')}} treating his former haunts as shrines for honest officials,{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT254 "Grieving at the Eddying Wind"] (悲回風, ''Bēi Huífēng'')}} and adding the details that Chong'er found Jie's body and donned [[Chinese mourning|mourning]] robes for him.{{sfnp|Sukhu|2017|loc=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=CNkoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT166 "Alas for the Days Gone By"] (昔往日, ''Xī Wǎngrì'')}}{{efn|[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]], the 1st-century{{nbsp}}{{sc|bc}} author of the ''[[Songs of Chu]]''’s "[[Nine Laments]]", references the original story of Jie disappearing into the forest, rather than his death in a fire.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT404 "Lament for the Worthy"] (惜賢, ''Xī Xián'')}} At one point, [[David Hawkes (sinologist)|Hawkes]]'s translation suggests that Jie starved to death.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT245 "Alas for the Days Gone By"] (昔往日, ''Xī Wǎngrì'')}} but a subsequent note in its [[Penguin Books|Penguin]] reprint clarifies that the text does not intend that.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1985|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT262 262]}}}}
By the 3rd century{{nbsp}}BC, Jie Zhitui's story had received additional embellishment.{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} [[Han Fei]]'s [[Han Feizi|collected works]] reference the story—dramatizing Jie's selflessness and loyalty—whereby he fed Chong'er with soup made from flesh carved from his own body because he was unable to bear his lord's thirst or hunger.{{sfnp|Liao|1959|loc=[http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&chunk.id=d2.27&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual Bk. VIII, Ch. xxvii]}} [[Zhuang Zhou]]'s [[Zhuangzi (book)|collected works]] specify that the meat came from his thigh and that he "was burned to death with a tree in his arms".{{sfnp|Legge & al.|1891|loc=[http://ctext.org/zhuangzi/robber-zhi Bk. XXIX, §10]}} The ''[[Songs of Chu]]'' written and compiled between the 3rd century{{nbsp}}BC and the 2nd century{{nbsp}}AD{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|p=28}} reference Jie repeatedly as a loyal and wronged vassal,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} mentioning the story about his flesh,{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT349 "Embittered Thoughts"] (怨思, ''Yuàn Sī'')}} treating his former haunts as shrines for honest officials,{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT254 "Grieving at the Eddying Wind"] (悲回風, ''Bēi Huífēng'')}} and adding the details that Chong'er found Jie's body and donned [[Chinese mourning|mourning]] robes for him.{{sfnp|Sukhu|2017|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=CNkoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT166 "Alas for the Days Gone By"] (昔往日, ''Xī Wǎngrì'')}}{{efn|[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]], the 1st-century{{nbsp}}BC author of the ''[[Songs of Chu]]''’s "[[Nine Laments]]", references the original story of Jie disappearing into the forest, rather than his death in a fire.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT404 "Lament for the Worthy"] (惜賢, ''Xī Xián'')}} At one point, [[David Hawkes (sinologist)|Hawkes]]'s translation suggests that Jie starved to death.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1959|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT245 "Alas for the Days Gone By"] (昔往日, ''Xī Wǎngrì'')}} but a subsequent note in its [[Penguin Books|Penguin]] reprint clarifies that the text does not intend that.{{sfnp|Hawkes|1985|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&pg=PT262 262]}}}}


Modern forms of the story invariably include the story of Jie cooking a stew using flesh from his own thigh and wild herbs,{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} usually specifying that Chong'er was on the verge of starvation at the time.{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}}{{sfnp|Ning|2007}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} Some elaborate on the duke's generosity to ''all'' his other supporters: one source includes proclamations that "awards may be divided into three grades: the first-grade award goes to those [who] followed me into exile; the second-grade award goes to those who donated money; and the third grade goes to those who welcomed the return of my dukedom" and that even "those who have supported me in other ways but not yet been rewarded may report their names for awards".{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} Nonetheless, Jie retired to [[Mount Mian|Mt{{nbsp}}Mian]],{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}} carrying his mother.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} When the duke was unable to find his old friend's hermitage amid the endless trees and ridges,{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} his advisors suggested lighting a [[forest fire]] on one side{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} of Mt{{nbsp}}Mian to drive him out<ref name=oldyeller>{{harvp|Huang & al.|2016|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=XN1SDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA82 82–3]}}.</ref> since his [[filial piety|duty to his mother]] would overcome his pride.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} However, the fire raged three days and nights{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}}{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} and Jie was [[death by burning|burnt to death]] under a [[willow tree|willow]]<ref name=oldyeller/>{{sfnp|''China Today''|2016}} together with his mother.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}}{{sfnp|Ning|2007}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} Some add the detail that he left verses written in blood, "I cut off my own flesh to dedicate [it] to you, [and] only wish [that] my king will always be clear and bright."{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}} Duke Chong'er then erected a temple in his honor{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} and personally ordered the [[Cold Food Festival]].{{sfnp|Couling|1917}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}}<ref name=oldyeller/>{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|Zhang|2015}}{{sfnp|''China Today''|2016}}
Modern forms of the story invariably include the story of Jie cooking a stew using flesh from his own thigh and wild herbs,{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} usually specifying that Chong'er was on the verge of starvation at the time.{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}}{{sfnp|Ning|2007}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} Some elaborate on the duke's generosity to {{em|all}} his other supporters: one source includes proclamations that "awards may be divided into three grades: the first-grade award goes to those [who] followed me into exile; the second-grade award goes to those who donated money; and the third grade goes to those who welcomed the return of my dukedom" and that even "those who have supported me in other ways but not yet been rewarded may report their names for awards".{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} Nonetheless, Jie retired to [[Mount Mian|Mt{{nbsp}}Mian]],{{CN|date=September 2023}} carrying his mother.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} When the duke was unable to find his old friend's hermitage amid the endless trees and ridges,{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} his advisors suggested lighting a [[forest fire]] on one side{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} of Mt{{nbsp}}Mian to drive him out<ref name=oldyeller>{{harvp|Huang & al.|2016|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=XN1SDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA82 82–3]}}.</ref> since his [[filial piety|duty to his mother]] would overcome his pride.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}} However, the fire raged three days and nights{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} and Jie was burnt to death under a [[willow tree|willow]]<ref name=oldyeller/>{{sfnp|''China Today''|2016}} together with his mother.{{sfnp|Lan & al.|1996}}{{sfnp|Ning|2007}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} Some add the detail that he left verses written in blood, "I cut off my own flesh to dedicate [it] to you, [and] only wish [that] my king will always be clear and bright."{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}} Duke Chong'er then erected a temple in his honor{{sfnp|Bardeen|2016}} and personally ordered the [[Cold Food Festival]].{{sfnp|Couling|1917}}{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2004}}<ref name=oldyeller/>{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}}{{sfnp|''China Today''|2016}}


==Works==
==Works==
Jie is listed as the author of several [[Chinese poetry|poems]] or [[Chinese music|songs]], although since they were composed in a dialect of [[Old Chinese]] their lines do not necessarily [[rhyme]] or [[scansion|scan]] correctly in present-day [[Standard Mandarin|Mandarin]].<ref name=sq>{{citation |last=Thompson |first=John |title=On the Guqin Silk String Zither |url=http://www.silkqin.com/index.html |contribution-url=http://www.silkqin.com/09hist/qinshi/jiezhitui.htm |contribution=Jiezhi Tui |volume=''[http://www.silkqin.com/09hist/bios.htm Qin Biographies]'' |location= |publisher= }}.</ref> The lyrics of "The Dragon and Snake Song" {{nowrap|(<small>[[traditional characters|t]]</small> {{lang|zh|{{linktext|龍|蛇|歌}}}},}} {{nowrap|<small>[[simplified characters|s]]</small> {{lang|zh|{{linktext|龙|蛇|歌}}}},}} ''Lóngshégē'') or "The Song of the Dragon and the Snake" {{nowrap|(<small>[[traditional characters|t]]</small> {{lang|zh|{{linktext|龍|蛇|之|歌}}}},}} {{nowrap|<small>[[simplified characters|s]]</small> {{lang|zh|{{linktext|龙|蛇|之|歌}}}},}} ''Lóngshé zhī Gē'') are included in the ''[[Qin Melodies]]''.<ref name=qc/> They tell the story of a beautiful [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] stripped of its horns, scales, and flight owing to the jealousy of [[Tian|Heaven]]. On [[Earth]], it becomes close friends with a [[snake]] before eventually returning to its proper station. The snake understands the two come from different worlds but remains forlorn, and the song—set for the [[guqin|Chinese zither]]—ends with the moral that, "to be cheerful, one cannot look back."{{efn|Its lyrics are reported as:<ref name=qc/><ref name=sq/>
Jie is listed as the author of several [[Chinese poetry|poems]] or [[Chinese music|songs]], although since they were composed in a dialect of [[Old Chinese]] their lines do not necessarily [[rhyme]] or [[scansion|scan]] correctly in present-day [[Standard Mandarin|Mandarin]].<ref name=sq>{{citation |last=Thompson |first=John |title=On the Guqin Silk String Zither |url=http://www.silkqin.com/index.html |contribution-url=http://www.silkqin.com/09hist/qinshi/jiezhitui.htm |contribution=Jiezhi Tui |volume=[http://www.silkqin.com/09hist/bios.htm Qin Biographies] }}.</ref> The lyrics of "The Dragon and Snake Song" ({{lang-zh |t={{linktext|龍|蛇|歌}} |s={{linktext|龙|蛇|歌}} |p=Lóngshégē |links=no}}) or "The Song of the Dragon and the Snake" ({{lang-zh |t={{linktext|龍|蛇|之|歌}} |s={{linktext|龙|蛇|之|歌}} |p=Lóngshé zhī Gē |links=no}}) are included in the ''[[Qin Melodies]]''.<ref name=qc/> They tell the story of a beautiful [[Chinese dragon|dragon]] stripped of its horns, scales, and flight owing to the jealousy of [[Tian|Heaven]]. On [[Earth]], it becomes close friends with a [[snake]] before eventually returning to its proper station. The snake understands the two come from different worlds but remains forlorn, and the song—set for the [[guqin|Chinese zither]]—ends with the moral that, "to be cheerful, one cannot look back."{{efn|Its lyrics are reported as:<ref name=sq/><ref name=qc/>
{{Poem quote |text=
<table>
{{lang|zh|有龍矯矯,遭天譴怒。}}
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|有龍矯矯遭天譴怒。}}</td>
{{lang|zh|卷排角甲來遯於下。}}
{{lang|zh|志願不與,蛇得同伍,}}
</tr>
{{lang|zh|龍蛇俱行,身辨山墅。}}
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|卷排角甲來遯於下。}}</td>
{{lang|zh|龍得升天,安厥房戶,}}
{{lang|zh|蛇獨抑摧,沈滯泥土。}}
</tr>
{{lang|zh|仰天怨望,綢繆悲苦,}}
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|志願不與,蛇得同伍,}}</td>
{{lang|zh|非樂龍伍,惔不眄顧。}}
}} }} He was also credited with "The Scholar who Lost His Ambition" ({{lang-zh|s={{linktext|士|失|志|操}} |p=Shì Shī Zhì Cāo |labels=no}}).<ref name=sq/>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|龍蛇俱行,身辨山墅。}}</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|龍得升天,安厥房戶,}}</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|蛇獨抑摧,沈滯泥土。}}</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|仰天怨望,綢繆悲苦,}}</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>{{lang|zh|非樂龍伍,惔不眄顧。}}</td>
</tr>
</table>
}} He was also credited with "The Scholar who Lost His Ambition" {{nowrap|({{lang|zh|{{linktext|士|失|志|操}}}},}} ''Shì Shī Zhì Cāo'').<ref name=sq/>


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
[[File:Qingtuan.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Qingtuan]], one of the '[[Cold Food Festival|cold foods]]' still eaten for the [[Tomb-Sweeping Festival]] around the [[Qingming]] [[solar term]].]]
[[File:Qingtuan.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Qingtuan]], one of the "[[Cold Food Festival|cold foods]]" still eaten for the [[Tomb-Sweeping Festival]] around the [[Qingming (solar term)|Qingming]] [[solar term]].]]
[[File:Alongtheriver QingMing.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Zhang Zeduan]]'s 12th-century ''[[Along the River at Qingming]]'', one of the most famous [[Chinese painting]]s, showing the people of the [[Northern Song dynasty|Northern Song]] during the [[Cold Food Festival]]. (''Click to enlarge.'')]]
[[File:Alongtheriver QingMing.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Zhang Zeduan]]'s 12th-century ''[[Along the River at Qingming]]'', one of the most famous [[Chinese painting]]s, showing the people of the [[Northern Song dynasty|Northern Song]] during the [[Cold Food Festival]]. (''Click to enlarge.'')]]
{{main|Cold Food Festival|Tomb-Sweeping Day}}
{{main|Cold Food Festival|Tomb-Sweeping Day}}
The oldest sources for Jie's story state that Duke Chong'er set apart the income from the fields of Mianshang near [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]]<ref>{{citation |last=Yuan |first=Shansong |authormask=Yuan Shansong |title=Treatise on Administrative Geography ''[郡國志, ''Jùnguózhì'']'' }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=75}} to endow sacrifices in his honor.<ref name=leggy/> By the [[Eastern Han]] (1st & 2nd centuries), he was listed among the [[Taoism in China|Taoist]] [[Taoist immortal|immortals]]<ref name=lxz>{{citation |title=[[Collected Biographies of the Immortals]] ''[《列仙傳》, ''Lièxiān Zhuàn'']'' |editor-last=Liu |editor-first=Xiang |editor-mask=Pseudo-[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]] |contribution=Jiezi Tui |contribution-url=http://ctext.org/lie-xian-zhuan/jie-zi-tui }}. {{zh icon}}</ref> and had a [[Chinese temple|temple]] in [[Taiyuan]]<ref name=hhs>{{citation |title=[[Book of the Later Han]] ''[《後漢書》, ''Hòu Hàn Shū'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:後漢書/卷61|Vol. 61]] |at=[[:s:zh:後漢書/卷61#周舉|§2024]] |last=Fan |first=Ye |authormask=[[Fan Ye (historian)|Fan Ye]] }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=55}} and another at {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}}{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=75–6}} at his tomb on Lord Jie Ridge.{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} The mountain temple supposedly also preserved various relics of Jie's, brought there by Chong'er.{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} A [[grove (nature)|grove]] of blackened trees on the mountain was also revered and, in the 6th century, supposed to be a place of [[miracle]]s granted by the sage.<ref name=qmys/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=60}}
The oldest sources for Jie's story state that Duke Chong'er set apart the income from the fields of Mianshang near [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]]<ref>{{citation |last=Yuan |first=Shansong |author-mask=Yuan Shansong |title=Treatise on Administrative Geography ''[郡國志, ''Jùnguózhì'']'' }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=75}} to endow sacrifices in his honor.<ref name=leggy/> By the [[Eastern Han]] (1st & 2nd centuries), he was listed among the [[Taoism in China|Taoist]] [[Taoist immortal|immortals]]<ref name=lxz>{{citation |title=Collected Biographies of the Immortals ''[《列仙傳》, ''Lièxiān Zhuàn'']'' |editor-last=Liu |editor-first=Xiang |editor-mask=Pseudo-[[Liu Xiang (scholar)|Liu Xiang]] |contribution=Jiezi Tui |contribution-url=http://ctext.org/lie-xian-zhuan/jie-zi-tui |title-link=Collected Biographies of the Immortals }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref> and had a [[Chinese temple|temple]] in [[Taiyuan]]<ref name=hhs>{{citation |title=Book of the Later Han ''[《後漢書》, ''Hòu Hàn Shū'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:後漢書/卷61|Vol. 61]] |at=[[:s:zh:後漢書/卷61#周舉|§2024]] |last=Fan |first=Ye |author-mask=[[Fan Ye (historian)|Fan Ye]] |title-link=Book of the Later Han }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=55}} and another at {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}}{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=75–6}} at his tomb on Lord Jie Ridge.{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} The mountain temple supposedly also preserved various relics of Jie's, brought there by Chong'er.{{sfnp|Ning|2007}} A [[grove (nature)|grove]] of blackened trees on the mountain was also revered and, in the 6th century, supposed to be a place of [[miracle]]s granted by the sage.<ref name=qmys/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=60}}


During the [[Eastern Han]], people in central and southern [[Shanxi]] avoided fire for up to a month in the middle of winter, either out of respect{{sfnp|Pokora|1975|pp=122 & 136–7}}{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=52}} for Jie or because they feared [[Chinese soul|his spirit]]'s vengeance against those who broke the taboo.<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} This left them unable to cook their [[Five Grains|staple grains]] like [[rice]] and [[millet]] or most other forms of [[Chinese food]].<ref name=newman/> At first, the most common dish was a cold form of uncooked [[congee]] or [[gruel]];<ref>{{harvp|Newman|2004|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Jt6u8RZw51cC&pg=PA164 164]}}</ref> later, a menu developed of items that were precooked but kept long enough that they could be eaten unheated during the festival.<ref name=newman>{{harvp|Newman|2004|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Jt6u8RZw51cC&pg=PA74 74]}}.</ref>
During the [[Eastern Han]], people in central and southern [[Shanxi]] avoided fire for up to a month in the middle of winter, either out of respect{{sfnp|Pokora|1975|pp=122 & 136–7}}{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=52}} for Jie or because they feared [[Chinese soul|his spirit]]'s vengeance against those who broke the taboo.<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} This left them unable to cook their [[five grains|staple grains]] like [[rice]] and [[millet]]. From the 2nd to the 5th century, [[Zhou Ju]] (<small>[[traditional characters|t]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|周|舉}}}}, <small>[[simplified characters|s]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|周|举}}}}, ''Zhōu Jǔ''),<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=54–5}} [[Cao Cao]],<ref name=tpyl>{{citation |title=[[Imperial Reader of the Taiping Era]] ''[《太平御覽》, ''Tàipíng Yùlǎn'']'' |at=Vol. 28, §8a; Vol. 30, §6a–b; Vol. 869, §7b |last=Li |first=Fang |authormask=[[Li Fang (Song dynasty)|Li Fang]] }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=56–7}} [[Shi Le]],<ref name=js>{{citation |authormask=[[Fang Xuanling]] |last=Fang |first=Xuanling |title=[[Book of Jin]] ''[《晉書》, ''Jìn Shū'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:晉書/卷105|Vol. 105]] |at=[[:s:zh:晉書/卷105#2749|§2749–50]] }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=57–9}} and [[Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei|Tuoba or Yuan Hong]]<ref>{{citation |title=[[Book of Wei]] ''[《魏書》, ''Wèi Shū'']'' |last=Wei |first=Shou |authormask=[[Wei Shou]] |at=[[:s:zh:魏書/卷7上|Vol. 7A]], [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7上#140|§140]], & [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7下|Vol. 7B]], [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7下#179|§179]] }}. {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=59}} all attempted to ban this [[Cold Food Festival]] because of the suffering that it caused children and the elderly.<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} All failed,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=60}} in Shi Le's case because a massive [[hailstorm]] across all of [[Shanxi]] the year after his ban required that he adjust the policy.<ref name=js/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=58–9}} At some point before the end of the 3rd century, however, the pronouncements of Zhou Ju and other officials did succeed in moving the festival from the middle of winter to 105 days later, around the [[Qingming]] [[solar term]] near the end of spring (by Chinese reckoning).{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=69}} The Cold Food Festival spread throughout China by the 6th century<ref name=qmys>{{citation |title=[[Essential Techniques for the Welfare of the People]] ''[《齊民要術》, ''Qímín Yàoshù'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:齊民要術/卷第九|Vol. 9]] |at=[[:s:zh:卷第九#煑醴酪第八十五|§521]] }} {{zh icon}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=60–1}} but, after the incorporation of [[ancestral veneration]] and other aspects of the [[Double Third Festival]] under the [[Tang dynasty|Tang]],<ref name=chappy>{{harvp|Chapman|2014|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC&pg=PA484 484]}}.</ref> the prohibition against fire and remembrance of Jie slowly diminished in importance as it became the modern [[Tomb-Sweeping Festival]]<ref name=shaday>{{harvp|Zhang|2017}}.</ref> by the [[Qing dynasty|Qing]].<ref name=doobydooby>{{harvp|Wu|2014|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=K3N-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT126 126]}}</ref> Today, as was true long in the past, observance of the fire taboo is mostly limited to the countryside around [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]] and {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}} in [[Shanxi]],<ref name=timetimetime>{{harvp|''China Daily''|2008}}.</ref> where there is still a small temple in his honor, the Pavilion of the Divine Jie (<small>[[traditional characters|t]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|介|神|閣}}}}, <small>[[simplified characters|s]]</small>{{nbsp}}{{lang|zh|{{linktext|介|神|阁}}}}, ''Jièshéngé'').<ref>{{citation |contribution-url=http://www.china.org.cn/travel/2010-08/12/content_20691804.htm |contribution=Amazing Trip to Mianshan Mountain |url=http://www.china.org.cn |title=''Official site'' |publisher=China Internet Information Center |location=Beijing |date=Aug 2010 }}.</ref> Some people hang willow beside their doors.<ref name=oldyeller/> Downtown [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]] also holds themed events and [[temple fair]]s during the old Cold Food Festival{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}} and some cold foods like [[qingtuan]] continue to be popular as seasonal staples.<ref name=timetimetime/>


From the 2nd to the 5th century, [[Zhou Ju]] ({{lang-zh |t={{linktext|周|舉}} |s={{linktext|周|举}} |p=Zhōu Jǔ |links=no}}),<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=54–5}} [[Cao Cao]],<ref name=tpyl>{{citation |title=Imperial Reader of the Taiping Era ''[《太平御覽》, ''Tàipíng Yùlǎn'']'' |at=Vol. 28, §8a; Vol. 30, §6a–b; Vol. 869, §7b |last=Li |first=Fang |author-mask=[[Li Fang (Song dynasty)|Li Fang]] |title-link=Imperial Reader of the Taiping Era }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=56–7}} [[Shi Le]],<ref name=js>{{citation |author-mask=[[Fang Xuanling]] |last=Fang |first=Xuanling |title=Book of Jin ''[《晉書》, ''Jìn Shū'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:晉書/卷105|Vol. 105]] |at=[[:s:zh:晉書/卷105#2749|§2749–50]] |title-link=Book of Jin }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=57–9}} and [[Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei|Tuoba or Yuan Hong]]<ref>{{citation |title=Book of Wei ''[《魏書》, ''Wèi Shū'']'' |last=Wei |first=Shou |author-mask=[[Wei Shou]] |at=[[:s:zh:魏書/卷7上|Vol. 7A]], [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7上#140|§140]], & [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7下|Vol. 7B]], [[:s:zh:魏書/卷7下#179|§179]] |title-link=Book of Wei }}. {{in lang|zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=59}} all attempted to ban this [[Cold Food Festival]] because of the suffering that it caused children and the elderly.<ref name=hhs/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=54}} All failed,{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=60}} in Shi Le's case because a massive [[hailstorm]] across all of [[Shanxi]] the year after his ban required that he adjust the policy.<ref name=js/>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=58–9}} At some point before the end of the 3rd century, however, the pronouncements of Zhou Ju and other officials did succeed in moving the festival from the middle of winter to 105 days later, around the [[Qingming (solar term)|Qingming]] [[solar term]] near the end of spring (by Chinese reckoning).{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=69}} The Cold Food Festival spread throughout China by the 6th century<ref name=qmys>{{citation |title=Essential Techniques for the Welfare of the People ''[《齊民要術》, ''Qímín Yàoshù'']'' |volume=[[:s:zh:齊民要術/卷第九|Vol. 9]] |at=[[:s:zh:卷第九#煑醴酪第八十五|§521]] |title-link=Essential Techniques for the Welfare of the People |language=zh}}</ref>{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|pp=60–1}} but, after the incorporation of [[ancestral veneration]] and other aspects of the [[Double Third Festival]] under the [[Tang dynasty|Tang]],<ref name=chappy>{{harvp|Chapman|2014|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC&pg=PA484 484]}}.</ref> the prohibition against fire and remembrance of Jie slowly diminished in importance as it became the modern [[Tomb-Sweeping Festival]]<ref name=shaday>{{harvp|Zhang|2017}}.</ref> by the [[Qing dynasty|Qing]].<ref name=doobydooby>{{harvp|Wu|2014|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=K3N-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT126 126]}}</ref> Today, as was true long in the past, observance of the fire taboo is mostly limited to the countryside around [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]] and {{nowrap|[[Mt Mian]]}} in [[Shanxi]],<ref name=timetimetime>{{harvp|''China Daily''|2008}}.</ref> where there is still a small temple in his honor, the Pavilion of the Divine Jie ({{lang-zh |t={{linktext|介|神|閣}} |s={{linktext|介|神|阁}} |p=Jièshéngé |links=no}}).<ref>{{citation |contribution-url=http://www.china.org.cn/travel/2010-08/12/content_20691804.htm |contribution=Amazing Trip to Mianshan Mountain |url=http://www.china.org.cn |title=''Official site'' |publisher=China Internet Information Center |location=Beijing |date=Aug 2010 }}.</ref> Some people hang willow beside their doors.<ref name=oldyeller/> Downtown [[Jiexiu, Shanxi|Jiexiu]] also holds themed events and [[temple fair]]s during the old Cold Food Festival{{sfnp|''China Daily''|2014}} and some cold foods like [[qingtuan]] continue to be popular as seasonal staples.<ref name=timetimetime/>
Jie is usually considered the namesake of the town of [[Jiexiu]] (<small>{{abbr|lit|literally}}.</small>{{nbsp}}"Jie's Rest"), which was renamed from Pingchang under the [[Tang dynasty|Tang]] about {{sc|ad}}{{nbsp}}618 to reflect the name its surrounding [[commandery (China)|commandery]]—including Mt{{nbsp}}Mian—had borne since the [[Northern Wei]] (4th–6th century).{{sfnp|Xiong|2016}}


Jie is usually considered the namesake of the town of [[Jiexiu]] ({{lang-zh|l=Jie's Rest}}), which was renamed from Pingchang under the [[Tang dynasty|Tang]] about AD{{nbsp}}618 to reflect the name its surrounding [[commandery (China)|commandery]]—including Mt{{nbsp}}Mian—had borne since the [[Northern Wei]] (4th–6th century).{{sfnp|Xiong|2016}}
His legend—with adjustments—appears in Wang Mengji's 17th-century short story "Jie Zhitui Sets Fire to His Jealous Wife",{{sfnp|Mei & al.|2017}} which uses [[irony]] and [[absurdism|absurdities]] to comment on feminine [[jealousy]] and the difficulty of matching results to intentions.{{sfnp|Mei & al.|2007|p=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA214 214]}} The first [[contemporary dance]] troupe on [[Taiwan]],{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=8}} the [[Cloud Gate Dance Theatre]], has dramatized the story of Jie Zhitui as ''Han Shih'' since 1974.{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=247}} Jie is depicted in "a white robe with a long, broad trail... as the hero[,] dragging the weight of his principle, struggles to his self-redemption".{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=247}} [[He Bing]] portrayed "Jie Zitui" as the main character of the 2011 TV drama ''[[Song of Spring and Autumn]]''.

His legend—with adjustments—appears in Wang Mengji's 17th-century short story "Jie Zhitui Sets Fire to His Jealous Wife",{{sfnp|Mei & al.|2017}} which uses [[irony]] and [[absurdism|absurdities]] to comment on feminine [[jealousy]] and the difficulty of matching results to intentions.{{sfnp|Mei & al.|2017|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA214 214]}} The first [[contemporary dance]] troupe on [[Taiwan]],{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=8}} the [[Cloud Gate Dance Theater]], has dramatized the story of Jie Zhitui as ''Han Shih'' since 1974.{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=247}} Jie is depicted in "a white robe with a long, broad trail&nbsp;... as the hero[,] dragging the weight of his principle, struggles to his self-redemption".{{sfnp|Chao|2000|p=247}} [[He Bing]] portrayed "Jie Zitui" as the main character of the 2011 TV drama ''Song of Spring and Autumn''.


Jie's intransigence has not always escaped criticism. The [[Legalism (China)|Legalist]] [[Chinese philosophy|philosopher]] [[Han Fei]] listed him among the absurd advisors who "were all like hard gourds".{{sfnp|Liao|1959|p=[http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&chunk.id=d2.32&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual Bk. XI, Ch. xxxii]}} [[Richard Holzman|Holzman]] acknowledges that Jie's behavior "earned him immortality as a loyal official who chose obscure retirement rather than sacrifice his principles", but still personally finds it "rather strange... and rather petulant".{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} A 2015 article in the ''[[Shanghai Daily]]'' admits that, "judged in light of modern notion[s]", Jie "would probably be suffering from personality disorders that lead to him to perceive and understand the world in ways that are 'inflexible'". Being "one of the most celebrated models of integrity of the old school", however, Jie is not faulted for his actions but listed as "a mentally sound person who live[d] in an 'unhealthy society'" and did not "fit" it.{{sfnp|Wan|2015}}
Jie's intransigence has not always escaped criticism. The [[Legalism (China)|Legalist]] [[Chinese philosophy|philosopher]] [[Han Fei]] listed him among the absurd advisors who "were all like hard gourds".{{sfnp|Liao|1959|p=[http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&chunk.id=d2.32&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual Bk. XI, Ch. xxxii]}} [[Richard Holzman|Holzman]] acknowledges that Jie's behavior "earned him immortality as a loyal official who chose obscure retirement rather than sacrifice his principles", but still personally finds it "rather strange... and rather petulant".{{sfnp|Holzman|1986|p=53}} A 2015 article in the ''[[Shanghai Daily]]'' admits that, "judged in light of modern notion[s]", Jie "would probably be suffering from personality disorders that lead to him to perceive and understand the world in ways that are 'inflexible'". Being "one of the most celebrated models of integrity of the old school", however, Jie is not faulted for his actions but listed as "a mentally sound person who live[d] in an 'unhealthy society'" and did not "fit" it.{{sfnp|Wan|2015}}
Line 123: Line 94:
===Citations===
===Citations===
{{reflist|30em}}
{{reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
===Bibliography===
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
* {{citation |contribution-url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/livechina/2004-01/09/content_297524.htm |contribution=Qingming Festival: Hanshi |title=Living in China |url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/livechina/livingchina.html |date=9 Jan 2004 |location=Beijing |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |ref={{harvid|''China Daily''|2004}} }}.
* {{citation |contribution-url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/livechina/2004-01/09/content_297524.htm |contribution=Qingming Festival: Hanshi |title=Living in China |url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/livechina/livingchina.html |date=9 Jan 2004 |location=Beijing |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |ref={{harvid|''China Daily''|2004}} }}.
* {{citation |contribution=A Time to Feast on Cold Foods |contribution-url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/citylife/2008-04/03/content_6589225.htm |title=China Daily |url=http://www.chinadaily.com |location=Beijing |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |date=3 Apr 2008 }}.
* {{citation |contribution=A Time to Feast on Cold Foods |contribution-url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/citylife/2008-04/03/content_6589225.htm |title=China Daily |url=http://www.chinadaily.com/ |location=Beijing |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |date=3 Apr 2008 |ref={{harvid|''China Daily''|2008}} |access-date=8 December 2017 |archive-date=28 April 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220428125755/http://www.chinadaily.com/ |url-status=dead }}.
* {{citation |contribution-url=https://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/2014-04/04/content_17407727.htm |contribution=Shanxi's Intangible Cultural Heritage: Cold Food Festival in Jiexiu City |date=4 Apr 2014 |title=Welcome to Shanxi, China |url=http://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/index2.html |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |location=Beijing |ref={{harvid|''China Daily''|2014}} }}.
* {{citation |contribution-url=https://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/2014-04/04/content_17407727.htm |contribution=Shanxi's Intangible Cultural Heritage: Cold Food Festival in Jiexiu City |date=4 Apr 2014 |title=Welcome to Shanxi, China |url=http://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/index2.html |publisher=China Daily Information Co. |location=Beijing |ref={{harvid|''China Daily''|2014}} |access-date=8 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171130025604/http://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/index2.html |archive-date=30 November 2017 |url-status=dead }}.
* {{citation |contribution-url=http://www.chinatoday.com.cn/english/culture/2016-05/13/content_720593.htm |contribution=Traditions in Different Regions |date=13 May 2016 |title=China Today |url=http://www.chinatoday.com.cn |publisher=China Internet Information Center |location=Beijing |ref={{harvid|''China Today''|2016}} }}.
* {{citation |contribution-url=http://www.chinatoday.com.cn/english/culture/2016-05/13/content_720593.htm |contribution=Traditions in Different Regions |date=13 May 2016 |title=China Today |url=http://www.chinatoday.com.cn |publisher=China Internet Information Center |location=Beijing |ref={{harvid|''China Today''|2016}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Bardeen |first=Tara |contribution-url=http://www.ricepaperkite.com/holidays/qing-ming/ |contribution=Qing Ming Festival |url=http://www.ricepaperkite.com/holidays/ |title=Holidays |location=Denver |publisher=Rice Paper Kite |date=2016 }}.
* {{citation |last=Bardeen |first=Tara |contribution-url=http://www.ricepaperkite.com/holidays/qing-ming/ |contribution=Qing Ming Festival |url=http://www.ricepaperkite.com/holidays/ |title=Holidays |location=Denver |publisher=Rice Paper Kite |date=2016 }}.
* {{citation |last=Chao |first=Yu-ling |authormask=Chao Yu-ling |title=''"Dance, Culture, and Nationalism: The Socio-Cultural Significance of Cloud Gate Dance Theatre in Taiwanese Society"'' |url=http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/11875/1/Dance%2C%20culture%20and%20nationalism.pdf |date=May 2000 |location=London |publisher=City University }}.
* {{citation |last=Chao |first=Yu-ling |author-mask=Chao Yu-ling |title=Dance, Culture, and Nationalism: The Socio-Cultural Significance of Cloud Gate Dance Theatre in Taiwanese Society |url=http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/11875/1/Dance%2C%20culture%20and%20nationalism.pdf |date=May 2000 |location=London |publisher=City University }}.
* {{citation |last=Chapman |first=Ian |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC&printsec=frontcover |title=Early Medieval China: A Sourcebook |editor-last=Swartz |editor-first=Wendy |editor2=Robert Ford Campany |editor3=Lu Yang |editor4=Jessey Jiun-chyi Choo |display-editors=0 |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |date=2014 |contribution=Festival and Ritual Calendar: Selections from ''Record of the Year'' and ''Seasons of Jing-Chu'' |contribution-url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC&pg=PA463 |pp=468–493 |isbn=978-0-231-15987-6 }}.
* {{citation |last=Chapman |first=Ian |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC |title=Early Medieval China: A Sourcebook |editor-last=Swartz |editor-first=Wendy |editor2=Robert Ford Campany |editor3=Lu Yang |editor4=Jessey Jiun-chyi Choo |display-editors=0 |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |date=2014 |contribution=Festival and Ritual Calendar: Selections from ''Record of the Year'' and ''Seasons of Jing-Chu'' |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AeiIl2y6vJQC&pg=PA463 |pages=468–493 |isbn=978-0-231-15987-6 }}.
* {{citation |last=Couling |first=Samuel |url=https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/n3/mode/2up |title=The Encyclopaedia Sinica |publisher=Kelly & Walsh |location=Shanghai |date=1917 |contribution-url=https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/94/mode/2up |p=[https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/94/mode/2up 98] |contribution=Chieh Chih-t'ui }}.
* {{citation |last=Couling |first=Samuel |url=https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/n3/mode/2up |title=The Encyclopaedia Sinica |publisher=Kelly & Walsh |location=Shanghai |date=1917 |contribution-url=https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/94/mode/2up |page=[https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediasi00coul#page/94/mode/2up 98] |contribution=Chieh Chih-t'ui }}.
* {{citation |author=[[Confucius]] |editor-last=Legge |editor-first=James |editor-link=James Legge |series=''The Chinese Classics'', Vol. V |location=Hong Kong |publisher=Lane, Crawford, & Co. |date=1872 |title=[[:s:The Ch'un Ts'ew|The Ch‘un Ts‘ew, with the Tso Chuen]], ''Pt. I'' |ref={{harvid|Legge|1872}} }}
* {{citation |author=Confucius |editor-last=Legge |editor-first=James |editor-link=James Legge |series=''The Chinese Classics'', Vol. V |location=Hong Kong |publisher=Lane, Crawford, & Co. |date=1872 |title=The Ch'un Ts'ew, with the Tso Chuen, ''Pt. I'' |ref={{harvid|Legge|1872}} |title-link=:s:The Ch'un Ts'ew |author-link=Confucius }}
* {{citation |last=Giles |first=Lionel |authorlink=Lionel Giles |date=1948 |url=http://www.angelfire.com/in4/alchemy2084/giles.html |title=A Gallery of Chinese Immortals |location=London |publisher=John Murray |isbn=0-404-14478-0 }}, reprinted 1979 by AMS Press (New York).
* {{citation |last=Giles |first=Lionel |author-link=Lionel Giles |date=1948 |url=https://www.angelfire.com/in4/alchemy2084/giles.html |title=A Gallery of Chinese Immortals |location=London |publisher=John Murray |isbn=978-0-404-14478-4 }}, reprinted 1979 by AMS Press (New York).
* {{citation |last=Han |first=Fei |authormask=[[Han Fei]] |url=http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&doc.view=tocc&chunk.id=tpage&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual |title=The Complete Works of Han Fei Tzŭ with Collected Commentaries |editor-last=Liao |editor-first=Wên-kuei |editor-mask=Liao Wên-kuei |location=London |publisher=Arthur Probsthain |date=1959 |series=''Oriental Series'', Nos. XXV & XXVI |ref={{harvid|Liao|1959}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Han |first=Fei |author-mask=[[Han Fei]] |url=http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/saxon/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=xwomen/texts/hanfei.xml&style=xwomen/xsl/dynaxml.xsl&doc.view=tocc&chunk.id=tpage&toc.depth=1&toc.id=d2.37&doc.lang=bilingual |title=The Complete Works of Han Fei Tzŭ with Collected Commentaries |editor-last=Liao |editor-first=Wên-kuei |editor-mask=Liao Wên-kuei |location=London |publisher=Arthur Probsthain |date=1959 |series=''Oriental Series'', Nos. XXV & XXVI |ref={{harvid|Liao|1959}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Holzman |first=Donald |contribution-url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/2719075 |contribution=The Cold Food Festival in Early Medieval China |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=[[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]] |title=Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies |volume=Vol. 46 |issue=No. 1 |date=June 1986 |pp=51–79 }}.
* {{citation |last=Holzman |first=Donald |contribution=The Cold Food Festival in Early Medieval China |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=[[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]] |title=Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies |volume=46 |issue=1 |pages=51–79 |date=June 1986 |doi=10.2307/2719075 |jstor=2719075 }}.
* {{citation |last=Huan |first=Tan |authormask=[[Huan Tan]] |editor-last=Pokora |editor-first=T. |title=Hsin-lun and Other Writings |series=''Michigan Papers in Chinese Studies'', No. 20 |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |date=1975 |ref={{harvid|Pokora|1975}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Huan |first=Tan |author-mask=[[Huan Tan]] |editor-last=Pokora |editor-first=T. |title=Hsin-lun and Other Writings |series=''Michigan Papers in Chinese Studies'', No. 20 |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |date=1975 |ref={{harvid|Pokora|1975}} }}.
* {{citation |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=XN1SDQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |title=Along the River during the Qingming Festival |last=Huang |first=Julie Shiu-lan |author2=Chang Wei-chao |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Huang & al.|2016}} |date=2016 |publisher=Cosmos Classics }}.
* {{citation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XN1SDQAAQBAJ |title=Along the River during the Qingming Festival |last=Huang |first=Julie Shiu-lan |author2=Chang Wei-chao |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Huang & al.|2016}} |date=2016 |publisher=Cosmos Classics |isbn=9789869212564 }}.
* {{citation |last=Lan |first=Peijin |authormask=Lan Peijin |author2=Li Zhang |author3=Jing Tong |author4=Yao Tianxin |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Lan & al.|1996}} |title=Long Corridor Paintings at [the] Summer Palace |date=1996 |contribution=Carrying His Mother into the Mountain[s] |p=115 |location=Beijing |publisher=Foreign Languages Press }}.
* {{citation |last=Lan |first=Peijin |author-mask=Lan Peijin |author2=Li Zhang |author3=Jing Tong |author4=Yao Tianxin |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Lan & al.|1996}} |title=Long Corridor Paintings at [the] Summer Palace |date=1996 |contribution=Carrying His Mother into the Mountain[s] |page=115 |location=Beijing |publisher=Foreign Languages Press }}.
* {{citation |last=Liu |first=An |authormask=[[Liu An]] |author2=Su Fei |author3=Li Shang |author4=Zuo Wu |author5=Tian You |author6=Lei Bei |author7=Mao Bei |author8=Wu Bei |author9=Jin Chang |display-authors=1 |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=mhQ9B0aRWEIC&printsec=frontcover |title=The Huainanzi: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China |editor-last=Major |editor-first=John S. |editor2=Michael Puett |editor3=Judson Murray |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Major & al.|2010}} |date=2010 |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |series=''Translations from the Asian Classics'' }}.
* {{citation |last=Liu |first=An |author-mask=[[Liu An]] |author2=Su Fei |author3=Li Shang |author4=Zuo Wu |author5=Tian You |author6=Lei Bei |author7=Mao Bei |author8=Wu Bei |author9=Jin Chang |display-authors=1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mhQ9B0aRWEIC |title=The Huainanzi: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China |editor-last=Major |editor-first=John S. |editor2=Michael Puett |editor3=Judson Murray |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Major & al.|2010}} |date=2010 |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |series=Translations from the Asian Classics |isbn=9780231520850 }}.
* {{citation |last=Lü |first=Buwei |authormask=[[Lü Buwei]] & al. |title=The Annals |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC&printsec=frontcover |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford |date=2000 |editor-last=Knoblock |editor-first=John |editor2=Jeffrey Riegel |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Knoblock & al.|2000}} |isbn=0-8047-3354-6 }}.
* {{citation |last=Lü |first=Buwei |author-mask=[[Lü Buwei]] & al. |title=The Annals |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2F2HKh99PDMC |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford |date=2000 |editor-last=Knoblock |editor-first=John |editor2=Jeffrey Riegel |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Knoblock & al.|2000}} |isbn=978-0-8047-3354-0 }}.
* {{citation |last=Ning |first=Yan |author-mask=Ning Yan |contribution-url=http://english.cri.cn/4026/2007/12/30/[email protected] |contribution=Mount Mianshan |title=CRI English |publisher=China Radio International |location=Beijing |date=30 Dec 2007 }}.
* {{citation |last=Newman |first=Jacqueline M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jt6u8RZw51cC |title=Food Culture in China |series=Food Culture around the World |date=2004 |publisher=Greenwood Press |location=[[Westport, Connecticut|Westport]] |isbn=9780313325816 }}.
* {{citation |last=Ning |first=Yan |author-mask=Ning Yan |contribution-url=http://english.cri.cn/4026/2007/12/30/[email protected] |contribution=Mount Mianshan |title=CRI English |publisher=China Radio International |location=Beijing |date=30 Dec 2007 |access-date=18 December 2017 |archive-date=17 May 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160517175351/http://english.cri.cn/4026/2007/12/30/[email protected] |url-status=dead }}.
* {{citation |last=Qu |first=Yuan |authormask=[[Qu Yuan]] & al. |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC&printsec=frontcover |title=Ch'u Tz'u: The Songs of the South |editor-last=Hawkes |editor-first=David |editor-link=David Hawkes (sinologist) |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |date=1959 |ref={{harvid|Hawkes|1959}} }}, reprinted by Penguin Classics, 1985.
* {{citation |last=Qu |first=Yuan |authormask=[[Qu Yuan]] & al. |editor-last=Sukhu |editor-first=Gopal |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=CNkoDwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |title=The Songs of Chu |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |date=2017 |isbn=9780231166065 |ref={{harvid|Sukhu|2017}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Qu |first=Yuan |author-mask=[[Qu Yuan]] & al. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zow8nQ5LURsC |title=Ch'u Tz'u: The Songs of the South |editor-last=Hawkes |editor-first=David |editor-link=David Hawkes (sinologist) |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |date=1959 |ref={{harvid|Hawkes|1959}} |isbn=9780141971261 }},{{anchor|CITEREFHawkes1985}} reprinted by Penguin Classics, 1985.
* {{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |authormask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |editor-last=Chavannes |editor-first=Édouard |editor-link=Édouard Chavannes |title=[[:s:fr:Mémoires historiques|Les Mémoires Historiques]] |date=1895 |location=Paris |publisher=Adrien Maisonneuve |ref={{harvid|Chavannes|1895}} }}. {{fr icon}}
* {{citation |last=Qu |first=Yuan |author-mask=[[Qu Yuan]] & al. |editor-last=Sukhu |editor-first=Gopal |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CNkoDwAAQBAJ |title=The Songs of Chu |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |date=2017 |isbn=9780231166065 |ref={{harvid|Sukhu|2017}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |author-mask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |editor-last=Chavannes |editor-first=Édouard |editor-link=Édouard Chavannes |title=Les Mémoires Historiques |date=1895 |location=Paris |publisher=Adrien Maisonneuve |ref={{harvid|Chavannes|1895}} |title-link=:s:fr:Mémoires historiques }}. {{in lang|fr}}
* {{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |authormask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |title=The Grand Scribe's Records, ''Vol. V:'' The Hereditary Houses of Pre-Han China, ''Pt. 1'' |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC |publisher=Indiana University Press |location=Bloomington |date=2006 |editor-last=Nienhauser |editor-first=William H. Jr. |editor2=Cao Weiguo |editor3=Chen Zhi |editor4=Scott Cook |editor5=Huang Hongyu |editor6=Bruce Knickerbocker |editor7=Wang Jing |editor8=Zhang Zhenjun |editor9=Zhao Hua |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Nienhauser & al.|2006}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Sima |first=Qian |author-mask=[[Sima Qian]] & al. |title=The Grand Scribe's Records, ''Vol. V:'' The Hereditary Houses of Pre-Han China, ''Pt. 1'' |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xGBYRAIfExsC |publisher=Indiana University Press |location=Bloomington |date=2006 |editor-last=Nienhauser |editor-first=William H. Jr. |editor2=Cao Weiguo |editor3=Chen Zhi |editor4=Scott Cook |editor5=Huang Hongyu |editor6=Bruce Knickerbocker |editor7=Wang Jing |editor8=Zhang Zhenjun |editor9=Zhao Hua |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Nienhauser & al.|2006}} |isbn=9780253340252 }}.{{anchor|{{harvid|Theobald|2012}}}}
* {{citation |title=China Knowledge |url=http://www.chinaknowledge.de |last=Theobald |first=Ulrich |location=Tübingen |ref={{harvid|Theobald}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Wan |first=Lixin |authormask=Wan Lixin |contribution-url=http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:SL0ccnYEu3EJ:www.shanghaidaily.com/opinion/book-review/Psychologists-take-on-stress-and-mental-health-at-workplace/shdaily.shtml+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=tw |contribution=Psychologists Take On Stress and Mental Health at Workplace[s] |title=Shanghai Daily |url=http://www.shanghaidaily.com |location=Shanghai |date=16 Jan 2015 |publisher=Shanghai United Media Group }}.
* {{citation |title=China Knowledge |url=http://www.chinaknowledge.de |last=Theobald |first=Ulrich |location=Tübingen |ref={{harvid|Theobald|2010}} |date=2010–2012 }}.
* {{citation |last=Wan |first=Lixin |author-mask=Wan Lixin |contribution-url=http://www.shanghaidaily.com/opinion/book-review/Psychologists-take-on-stress-and-mental-health-at-workplace/shdaily.shtml |contribution=Psychologists Take On Stress and Mental Health at Workplace[s] |title=Shanghai Daily |url=http://www.shanghaidaily.com |location=Shanghai |date=16 Jan 2015 |publisher=Shanghai United Media Group }}.
* {{citation |last=Wang |first=Mengji |authormask=Wang Mengji |editor-last=Mei |ref={{harvid|Mei & al.|2017}} |editor-first=Chun |editor-mask=Mei Chun |editor2=Lane J. Harris |contribution=Jie Zhitui Sets Fire to His Jealous Wife |pp=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9 9–22] |editor3=Robert E. Hegel |display-editors=1 |contribution-url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9 |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ |title=Idle Talk under the Bean Arbor |location=Seattle |publisher=University of Washington Press |date=2017 }}.
* {{citation |last=Wang |first=Mengji |author-mask=Wang Mengji |editor-last=Mei |ref={{harvid|Mei & al.|2017}} |editor-first=Chun |editor-mask=Mei Chun |editor2=Lane J. Harris |contribution=Jie Zhitui Sets Fire to His Jealous Wife |pages=[https://books.google.com/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9 9–22] |editor3=Robert E. Hegel |display-editors=1 |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6NBiDgAAQBAJ |title=Idle Talk under the Bean Arbor |location=Seattle |publisher=University of Washington Press |date=2017 |isbn=9780295999982 }}.
* {{citation |last=Wu |first=Dongming |authormask=Wu Dongming |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=K3N-AgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |title=A Panoramic View of Chinese Culture |publisher=Simon & Schuster |date=2014 }}.
* {{citation |last=Wu |first=Dongming |author-mask=Wu Dongming |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K3N-AgAAQBAJ |title=A Panoramic View of Chinese Culture |publisher=Simon & Schuster |date=2014 |isbn=9781476774961 }}.
* {{citation |last=Xiao |first=Tong |authormask=[[Xiao Tong]] |author2=David R. Knechtges |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Xiao & al.|1996}} |isbn=0-691-05346-4 |title=Wen Xuan or Selections of Refined Literature, ''Vol. III'' |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=V08ABAAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |publisher=Princeton University Press |date=1996 |location=[[Princeton, NJ|Princeton]] }}.
* {{citation |last=Xiao |first=Tong |author-mask=[[Xiao Tong]] |author2=David R. Knechtges |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Xiao & al.|1996}} |isbn=978-0-691-05346-2 |title=Wen Xuan or Selections of Refined Literature, ''Vol. III'' |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V08ABAAAQBAJ |publisher=Princeton University Press |date=1996 |location=[[Princeton, NJ|Princeton]] }}.
* {{citation |last=Xiong |first=Victor Cunrui |url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ |contribution=Jiexiu |contribution-url=https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA293 |pp=[https://books.google.com.tw/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA293 293–4] |title=Historical Dictionary of Medieval China |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |location=[[Lanham, Maryland|Lanham]] |date=2016 }}.
* {{citation |last=Xiong |first=Victor Cunrui |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ |contribution=Jiexiu |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA293 |pages=[https://books.google.com/books?id=fCdCDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA293 293–4] |title=Historical Dictionary of Medieval China |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |location=[[Lanham, Maryland|Lanham]] |date=2016 |isbn=9781442276161 }}.
* {{citation |last=Zhang |first=Hui |authormask=Zhang Hui |contribution-url=http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/914232.shtml |contribution=Jiexiu: Doorway to the Past |title=Global Times |url=http://www.globaltimes.cn |date=27 Mar 2015 |location=Beijing |publisher=People's Daily }}.
* {{citation |last=Zhang |first=Qian |author-mask=Zhang Qian |date=1 April 2017 |contribution-url=https://www.shine.cn/archive/feature/art-and-culture/Change-of-weather-rich-food-mark-the-arrival-of-Qingming/shdaily.shtml |contribution=Change of Weather, Rich Food Mark the Arrival of Qingming |title=Shanghai Daily |url=http://www.shanghaidaily.com |location=Shanghai |publisher=Shanghai United Media Group }}.
* {{citation |editor-last=Zhang |editor-first=Qiyun |editor-mask=[[Zhang Qiyun]] & al. |title=Encyclopaedic Dictionary of the Chinese Language ''[《中文大辭典》, ''Zhōngwén Dà Cídiǎn'']'' |date=1962–1968 |ref={{harvid|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.}} |title-link=Zhongwen Da Cidian }}. {{in lang|zh}}
* {{citation |last=Zhang |first=Qian |authormask=Zhang Qian |date=1 April 2017 |contribution-url=https://www.shine.cn/archive/feature/art-and-culture/Change-of-weather-rich-food-mark-the-arrival-of-Qingming/shdaily.shtml |contribution=Change of Weather, Rich Food Mark the Arrival of Qingming |title=Shanghai Daily |url=http://www.shanghaidaily.com |location=Shanghai |publisher=Shanghai United Media Group }}.
* {{citation |editor-last=Zhang |editor-first=Qiyun |editor-mask=[[Zhang Qiyun]] & al. |title=[[Zhongwen Da Cidian|Encyclopaedic Dictionary of the Chinese Language]] ''[《中文大辭典》, ''Zhōngwén Cídiǎn'']'' |date=1962–1968 |location= |publisher= |ref={{harvid|Zhang & al.|1962 ff.}} }}. {{zh icon}}
* {{citation |last=Zhuang |first=Zhou |author-mask=[[Zhuang Zhou]] |editor-first=James |editor-last=Legge |editor-link=James Legge |date=1891 |title=The Texts of Taoism, ''Pt. II'' |contribution=The Writings of Kwang Tse, Pt. 2 |series=''[[The Sacred Books of China]]'', Vol. VI, ''[[The Sacred Books of the East]]'', Vol. XL |editor2=Max Müller |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Legge & al.|1891}} |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford }}.
* {{citation |last=Zhuang |first=Zhou |authormask=[[Zhuang Zhou]] |editor-first=James |editor-last=Legge |editor-link=James Legge |date=1891 |title=The Texts of Taoism, ''Pt. II'' |contribution=The Writings of Kwang Tse, Pt. 2 |series=''[[The Sacred Books of China]]'', Vol. VI, ''[[The Sacred Books of the East]]'', Vol. XL |editor2=Max Müller |display-editors=1 |ref={{harvid|Legge & al.|1891}} |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford }}.
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://baike.baidu.com/item/介之推 《介之推》] at [[Baidu Baike]] {{zh icon}}
* [http://www.baike.com/wiki/介之推 《介之推》] at [[Baike.com]] {{in lang|zh}}
* [http://www.baike.com/wiki/介之推 《介之推》] at [[Baike.com]] {{zh icon}}
* [http://jadeturtlerecords.blogspot.tw/2011/04/qingming-festival.html Image of the Jie Zhitui idol on Mt Mian], hosted by ''The Jade Turtle Records''
* [http://jadeturtlerecords.blogspot.tw/2011/04/qingming-festival.html Image of the Jie Zhitui idol on Mt Mian], hosted by ''The Jade Turtle Records''
* [https://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/sxcoldfoodfestival.html "Cold Food Festival in Jiexiu, Shanxi"], hosted by ''China Daily''
* [https://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/sxcoldfoodfestival.html "Cold Food Festival in Jiexiu, Shanxi"], hosted by ''China Daily''

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jie, Zhitui}}


[[Category:Zhou dynasty nobility]]
[[Category:Zhou dynasty nobility]]
[[Category:Deified Chinese people]]
[[Category:Jin (Chinese state)]]
[[Category:Jin (Chinese state)]]
[[Category:7th-century BC Chinese people]]
[[Category:7th-century BC Chinese people]]
[[Category:Zhou dynasty poets]]
[[Category:Zhou dynasty poets]]
[[Category:Taoist immortals]]

Latest revision as of 17:29, 23 June 2024

Jie Zhitui
The Wen Duke recovering Jin, attributed to Li Tang (AD 1140)
Chinese
Alternative names
Jie Zitui
Chinese
Jiezi
Chinese
Literal meaningMaster Jie
Viscount Jie
Jie Tui
Chinese
Wang Guang
Chinese

Jie Zhitui (fl. 7th century BC),[1] also known as Jie Zitui, was an ancient aristocrat who served the Jin prince Chong'er during the Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history. Chinese legend holds that when Chong'er finally ascended to power as the duke of Jin ("Duke Wen"), Jie either refused or was passed over for any reward, despite his great loyalty during the prince's times of hardship. Jie then retired to the forests of Jin in what is now central Shanxi with his mother. Supposedly, the duke so desired to repay Jie's years of loyalty that, when Jie declined to present himself at court, he ordered a forest fire to compel the recluse out of hiding. Instead, Jie and his mother were killed by the fire on Mt Mian. By the Han, Jie was being revered in central Shanxi as a Taoist immortal. He was annually commemorated with a ritual avoidance of fire that, despite many official bans, eventually became China's Cold Food and Qingming Festivals.

Names[edit]

Jie Zhitui[a] or Jiezhi Tui[4] is the name given to him in the oldest surviving records,[5] with Jie Zitui or Jiezi Tui[4] coming later.[6] Sima Qian treats his name as though it were actually Jie Tui, with "Jiezi" serving as an honorific equivalent to "Master" or "Viscount Jie".[7][8][9] A single 2nd-century source has "Jiezi Sui" (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Jièzǐ Suí).[10] Others state that the entire name Jiezi Tui was a posthumous title and that his real name had been Wang Guang.[11]

Life[edit]

The major states of Zhou China during its Spring and Autumn period

Jie was a Jin aristocrat, poet, and composer for the Chinese zither during the Spring and Autumn period of China's Zhou dynasty.[4] He served at the court of the Jin prince Chong'er (posthumously the "Wen Duke") in Pu during the reign of Chong'er's father Duke Guizhu (posthumously the "Xian Duke"). A passage of the Huainanzi relates that, when Master Jie sang "The Dragon and the Snake", Prince Chong'er "broke down in tears".[12][13] Giles[14] considered Jie to be the same person as the "Jiezi Tui" who is mentioned as having been a minister in Chu at the age of 15.[15][16]

In 655 BC, Jie followed Chong'er into exile[10] among the Di tribes north of the Chinese[17] when the Rong beauty Li Ji successfully plotted against the sons of the other wives of the Duke of Jin. Her son Xiqi and his successor Zhuozi were quickly killed by the minister Li Ke, who then offered the throne to Chong'er in 651 BC. The prince declined; his younger brother Yiwu (posthumously the "Hui Duke") accepted and then—after a perilous period of imprisonment in Qin—sent assassins after Chong'er in 646 BC. Hearing about them, he and his court fled from the Di, arriving at the state of Qi in Shandong in 644 BC. Soon after, Qi fell into a civil war over its own succession. Prince Chong'er and his growing entourage then travelled to the courts of Cao, Song, Zheng, Chu, and finally Qin. In 636 BC, Duke Renhao (posthumously the "Mu Duke") lent Qin's army for an invasion against Duke Yiwu's son Yu (posthumously the "Huai Duke"), defeating him at Gaoliang.

Jie was passed over for reward when Chong'er became duke of Jin.[1] The 4th-century-BC commentary on the Spring and Autumn Annals credited to Zuo Qiuming contains the earliest surviving record of Jie's story,[6] in a section now placed beside Confucius's entry on Duke Yiwu's death in 637 BC. In it, a Thucydidean dialogue between Jie and his mother explains how he finds the duke's other retainers to be thieves for taking credit and receiving rewards when Heaven itself was responsible for Chong'er's restoration. His lord also showed himself to be unworthy by failing to reward him despite his failure to appear at court. His mother asks him to at least go before the duke,[2] but he explains he has already criticized the other nobles so harshly that he could not possibly return and is resolved to withdraw into the wilderness. She accepts his decision and leaves with him. When the duke later realized his mistake, he sought out Jie but failed. He then set aside the produce of the fields of Mianshang[18] to endow sacrifices in Jie's honor, "a memento ... of my neglect and a mark of distinction for the good man".[19]

The annals compiled c. 239 BC under Qin's chancellor Lü Buwei opine that Duke Chong'er never became a king because he proved less capable in success than he had been in adversity.[20] Its account of Jie's fate—which omits mention of his mother—begins with the moral that "it is easy to hold onto others if you offer them honor and wealth[, b]ut it is difficult ... if you offer them poverty and debasement".[21] Lü's scholars do not suggest that the duke overlooked Jie, however, but that he was simply "far from the vulgar crowd" and embarrassed by the behavior the duke's other close retainers.[20] He posts a poem upon the palace gates,[22][b] obliquely announcing his retirement into the mountains. Chong'er hears of it, recognizes its author, and goes into mourning for his old friend, changing his clothes and sleeping away from the palace.[20] He offers a million "fields" of land and a position as senior minister (; 'shǎngqīng') to anyone—noble or common—who is able to find Jie for him. The only person who does discover Jie, however, finds him carrying a pot and a large umbrella in the remote mountains. Asked if he knows where Jie Zhitui might live, the hermit replies that Jie "does not wish to be discovered" and "wants to remain hidden". Complaining "How is it that I alone know this?" he wandered away beneath his umbrella, never to be seen again.[20]

The account in Sima Qian's 1st-century BC Records largely repeats the Zuozhuan account with greater detail.[23] (In fact, the four-character lines and rhyming dialogue in Jie's conversations with his mother suggests it draws on an earlier, now-lost poetic treatment of the life of Chong'er.)[24] Sima specifies that Jie hid himself out of disgust at what he took as Hu Yan's insincere and overdramatic retirement on the journey from Qin to Jin, which Chong'er declined with similar overstatement.[25] Sima interrupts Jie's story, though, to make excuses for the duke's tardiness in remembering and rewarding Jie. The beginning of Chong'er's reign was distracted by rioting caused by Duke Yu's partisans[26] Yin Yi[27] and Xi Rui,[28] who even succeeded in burning down the ducal palace before being captured and put to death with Duke Renhao's assistance.[26] When Jie is brought back to Chong'er's attention by the poem on the gates of the new palace,[17][c] it has been placed there not by Jie himself but by his own loyal friends. Chong'er sees it himself and again immediately understands that it is about Jie.[23] Jie and his mother are never seen again,[29] but Chong'er—doing what he can—"surrounded and sealed off" the "heart" of Mianshang in order to make it Jie's and "in order to record [his] error and also to commend an excellent man".[30]

Legend[edit]

Mt Mian in Jinzhong Prefecture in central Shanxi

By the 3rd century BC, Jie Zhitui's story had received additional embellishment.[31] Han Fei's collected works reference the story—dramatizing Jie's selflessness and loyalty—whereby he fed Chong'er with soup made from flesh carved from his own body because he was unable to bear his lord's thirst or hunger.[32] Zhuang Zhou's collected works specify that the meat came from his thigh and that he "was burned to death with a tree in his arms".[33] The Songs of Chu written and compiled between the 3rd century BC and the 2nd century AD[34] reference Jie repeatedly as a loyal and wronged vassal,[31] mentioning the story about his flesh,[35] treating his former haunts as shrines for honest officials,[36] and adding the details that Chong'er found Jie's body and donned mourning robes for him.[37][d]

Modern forms of the story invariably include the story of Jie cooking a stew using flesh from his own thigh and wild herbs,[41] usually specifying that Chong'er was on the verge of starvation at the time.[42][43][44][41] Some elaborate on the duke's generosity to all his other supporters: one source includes proclamations that "awards may be divided into three grades: the first-grade award goes to those [who] followed me into exile; the second-grade award goes to those who donated money; and the third grade goes to those who welcomed the return of my dukedom" and that even "those who have supported me in other ways but not yet been rewarded may report their names for awards".[45] Nonetheless, Jie retired to Mt Mian,[citation needed] carrying his mother.[45] When the duke was unable to find his old friend's hermitage amid the endless trees and ridges,[43] his advisors suggested lighting a forest fire on one side[41] of Mt Mian to drive him out[46] since his duty to his mother would overcome his pride.[45] However, the fire raged three days and nights[45][41] and Jie was burnt to death under a willow[46][47] together with his mother.[45][43][44][41] Some add the detail that he left verses written in blood, "I cut off my own flesh to dedicate [it] to you, [and] only wish [that] my king will always be clear and bright."[42] Duke Chong'er then erected a temple in his honor[41] and personally ordered the Cold Food Festival.[1][42][46][44][47]

Works[edit]

Jie is listed as the author of several poems or songs, although since they were composed in a dialect of Old Chinese their lines do not necessarily rhyme or scan correctly in present-day Mandarin.[4] The lyrics of "The Dragon and Snake Song" (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Lóngshégē) or "The Song of the Dragon and the Snake" (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Lóngshé zhī Gē) are included in the Qin Melodies.[10] They tell the story of a beautiful dragon stripped of its horns, scales, and flight owing to the jealousy of Heaven. On Earth, it becomes close friends with a snake before eventually returning to its proper station. The snake understands the two come from different worlds but remains forlorn, and the song—set for the Chinese zither—ends with the moral that, "to be cheerful, one cannot look back."[e] He was also credited with "The Scholar who Lost His Ambition" (; Shì Shī Zhì Cāo).[4]

Legacy[edit]

Qingtuan, one of the "cold foods" still eaten for the Tomb-Sweeping Festival around the Qingming solar term.
Zhang Zeduan's 12th-century Along the River at Qingming, one of the most famous Chinese paintings, showing the people of the Northern Song during the Cold Food Festival. (Click to enlarge.)

The oldest sources for Jie's story state that Duke Chong'er set apart the income from the fields of Mianshang near Jiexiu[48][49] to endow sacrifices in his honor.[19] By the Eastern Han (1st & 2nd centuries), he was listed among the Taoist immortals[11] and had a temple in Taiyuan[50][51] and another at Mt Mian[52] at his tomb on Lord Jie Ridge.[43] The mountain temple supposedly also preserved various relics of Jie's, brought there by Chong'er.[43] A grove of blackened trees on the mountain was also revered and, in the 6th century, supposed to be a place of miracles granted by the sage.[53][54]

During the Eastern Han, people in central and southern Shanxi avoided fire for up to a month in the middle of winter, either out of respect[55][5] for Jie or because they feared his spirit's vengeance against those who broke the taboo.[50][31] This left them unable to cook their staple grains like rice and millet or most other forms of Chinese food.[56] At first, the most common dish was a cold form of uncooked congee or gruel;[57] later, a menu developed of items that were precooked but kept long enough that they could be eaten unheated during the festival.[56]

From the 2nd to the 5th century, Zhou Ju (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Zhōu Jǔ),[50][58] Cao Cao,[59][60] Shi Le,[61][62] and Tuoba or Yuan Hong[63][64] all attempted to ban this Cold Food Festival because of the suffering that it caused children and the elderly.[50][31] All failed,[54] in Shi Le's case because a massive hailstorm across all of Shanxi the year after his ban required that he adjust the policy.[61][65] At some point before the end of the 3rd century, however, the pronouncements of Zhou Ju and other officials did succeed in moving the festival from the middle of winter to 105 days later, around the Qingming solar term near the end of spring (by Chinese reckoning).[66] The Cold Food Festival spread throughout China by the 6th century[53][67] but, after the incorporation of ancestral veneration and other aspects of the Double Third Festival under the Tang,[68] the prohibition against fire and remembrance of Jie slowly diminished in importance as it became the modern Tomb-Sweeping Festival[69] by the Qing.[70] Today, as was true long in the past, observance of the fire taboo is mostly limited to the countryside around Jiexiu and Mt Mian in Shanxi,[71] where there is still a small temple in his honor, the Pavilion of the Divine Jie (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Jièshéngé).[72] Some people hang willow beside their doors.[46] Downtown Jiexiu also holds themed events and temple fairs during the old Cold Food Festival[44] and some cold foods like qingtuan continue to be popular as seasonal staples.[71]

Jie is usually considered the namesake of the town of Jiexiu (lit. 'Jie's Rest'), which was renamed from Pingchang under the Tang about AD 618 to reflect the name its surrounding commandery—including Mt Mian—had borne since the Northern Wei (4th–6th century).[73]

His legend—with adjustments—appears in Wang Mengji's 17th-century short story "Jie Zhitui Sets Fire to His Jealous Wife",[74] which uses irony and absurdities to comment on feminine jealousy and the difficulty of matching results to intentions.[75] The first contemporary dance troupe on Taiwan,[76] the Cloud Gate Dance Theater, has dramatized the story of Jie Zhitui as Han Shih since 1974.[77] Jie is depicted in "a white robe with a long, broad trail ... as the hero[,] dragging the weight of his principle, struggles to his self-redemption".[77] He Bing portrayed "Jie Zitui" as the main character of the 2011 TV drama Song of Spring and Autumn.

Jie's intransigence has not always escaped criticism. The Legalist philosopher Han Fei listed him among the absurd advisors who "were all like hard gourds".[78] Holzman acknowledges that Jie's behavior "earned him immortality as a loyal official who chose obscure retirement rather than sacrifice his principles", but still personally finds it "rather strange... and rather petulant".[6] A 2015 article in the Shanghai Daily admits that, "judged in light of modern notion[s]", Jie "would probably be suffering from personality disorders that lead to him to perceive and understand the world in ways that are 'inflexible'". Being "one of the most celebrated models of integrity of the old school", however, Jie is not faulted for his actions but listed as "a mentally sound person who live[d] in an 'unhealthy society'" and did not "fit" it.[79]

See also[edit]

  • Qu Yuan and Wu Zixu, two other ancient Chinese courtiers whose deaths supposedly inspired Chinese holidays

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ In addition to the forms given above, Jie Zhitui's name also appears as Këae Che-ts‘uy in older sources using Legge romanization[2] and, for Jiezi Tui, as Kie-tse Tch'oei in sources following Chavannes.[3]
  2. ^ Knoblock & al. translate it as:[20]

    A dragon went flying,
    Circling all the world.
    Five serpents accompanied him,
    Serving as aides and helpers.
    When the dragon returned to his home,
    And won his proper place,
    Four of the serpents accompanied him
    And won their dew and rain.
    But one serpent was ashamed of this
    And withered to death in the open fields.

  3. ^ Nienhauser & al. translate it as:[23]

    The dragon wanted to ascent to Heaven, [and]
    Five snakes acted to support him.
    Once the dragon had risen to the clouds
    Four of the snakes each entered their own dwelling places.
    Only one snake harbored resentment and
    To the end one never saw where he lived.

  4. ^ Liu Xiang, the 1st-century BC author of the Songs of Chu’s "Nine Laments", references the original story of Jie disappearing into the forest, rather than his death in a fire.[38] At one point, Hawkes's translation suggests that Jie starved to death.[39] but a subsequent note in its Penguin reprint clarifies that the text does not intend that.[40]
  5. ^ Its lyrics are reported as:[4][10]

    有龍矯矯,遭天譴怒。
    卷排角甲,來遯於下。
    志願不與,蛇得同伍,
    龍蛇俱行,身辨山墅。
    龍得升天,安厥房戶,
    蛇獨抑摧,沈滯泥土。
    仰天怨望,綢繆悲苦,
    非樂龍伍,惔不眄顧。

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Couling (1917).
  2. ^ a b Legge (1872), p. 191.
  3. ^ Chavannes (1895), Ch. XXXIX.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Thompson, John, "Jiezhi Tui", On the Guqin Silk String Zither, vol. Qin Biographies {{citation}}: External link in |volume= (help).
  5. ^ a b Holzman (1986), p. 52.
  6. ^ a b c Holzman (1986), p. 53.
  7. ^ Nienhauser & al. (2006), p. 331.
  8. ^ Theobald (2010), "Liexianzhuan".
  9. ^ Zhang & al. & 1962 ff., §372.6.
  10. ^ a b c d Cai Yong, "21 Hejian Zage", Qin Melodies [《琴操》, Qíncāo], §8. (in Chinese)
  11. ^ a b Pseudo-Liu Xiang (ed.), "Jiezi Tui", Collected Biographies of the Immortals [《列仙傳》, Lièxiān Zhuàn]. (in Chinese)
  12. ^ Liu An & al. (c. 140 BC), Huainanzi [《淮南子》], Vol. 16, §2., with additional details in Gao You's commentary on it.
  13. ^ Major & al. (2010), p. 626.
  14. ^ Giles (1948).
  15. ^ Zhang & al. & 1962 ff., §372.7.
  16. ^ Liu Xiang (ed.), Garden of Stories [《說苑》, Shuōyuàn], vol. Vol. 8, §18 {{citation}}: External link in |volume= (help). (in Chinese)
  17. ^ a b Sima Qian & al., "The Dynasty of Jin", Records of the Grand Historian [《史記》, Shǐjì], vol. 39. (in Chinese).
  18. ^ Xiao & al. (1996), p. 274.
  19. ^ a b Legge (1872), p. 192.
  20. ^ a b c d e Knoblock & al. (2000), p. 264.
  21. ^ Knoblock & al. (2000), p. 263.
  22. ^ Lü Buwei & al., "An Account of Jie", Master Lü's Spring & Autumn Annals [《呂氏春秋》, Lǚshì Chūnqiū]. (in Chinese)
  23. ^ a b c Nienhauser & al. (2006), pp. 334–5.
  24. ^ Nienhauser & al. (2006), p. 372.
  25. ^ Nienhauser & al. (2006), pp. 331–2.
  26. ^ a b Nienhauser & al. (2006), pp. 332–3.
  27. ^ Theobald (2012), "Yin Yi Sheng or Lü Sheng".
  28. ^ Theobald (2012), "Xi Rui".
  29. ^ Nienhauser & al. (2006), p. 334.
  30. ^ Nienhauser & al. (2006), p. 335.
  31. ^ a b c d Holzman (1986), p. 54.
  32. ^ Liao (1959), Bk. VIII, Ch. xxvii.
  33. ^ Legge & al. (1891), Bk. XXIX, §10.
  34. ^ Hawkes (1959), p. 28.
  35. ^ Hawkes (1959), "Embittered Thoughts" (怨思, Yuàn Sī).
  36. ^ Hawkes (1959), "Grieving at the Eddying Wind" (悲回風, Bēi Huífēng).
  37. ^ Sukhu (2017), "Alas for the Days Gone By" (昔往日, Xī Wǎngrì).
  38. ^ Hawkes (1959), "Lament for the Worthy" (惜賢, Xī Xián).
  39. ^ Hawkes (1959), "Alas for the Days Gone By" (昔往日, Xī Wǎngrì).
  40. ^ Hawkes (1985), p. 262.
  41. ^ a b c d e f Bardeen (2016).
  42. ^ a b c China Daily (2004).
  43. ^ a b c d e Ning (2007).
  44. ^ a b c d China Daily (2014).
  45. ^ a b c d e Lan & al. (1996).
  46. ^ a b c d Huang & al. (2016), p. 82–3.
  47. ^ a b China Today (2016).
  48. ^ Yuan Shansong, Treatise on Administrative Geography [郡國志, Jùnguózhì]. (in Chinese)
  49. ^ Holzman (1986), p. 75.
  50. ^ a b c d Fan Ye, Book of the Later Han [《後漢書》, Hòu Hàn Shū], vol. Vol. 61, §2024. (in Chinese)
  51. ^ Holzman (1986), p. 55.
  52. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 75–6.
  53. ^ a b Essential Techniques for the Welfare of the People [《齊民要術》, Qímín Yàoshù] (in Chinese), vol. Vol. 9, §521
  54. ^ a b Holzman (1986), p. 60.
  55. ^ Pokora (1975), pp. 122 & 136–7.
  56. ^ a b Newman (2004), p. 74.
  57. ^ Newman (2004), p. 164
  58. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 54–5.
  59. ^ Li Fang, Imperial Reader of the Taiping Era [《太平御覽》, Tàipíng Yùlǎn], Vol. 28, §8a; Vol. 30, §6a–b; Vol. 869, §7b. (in Chinese)
  60. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 56–7.
  61. ^ a b Fang Xuanling, Book of Jin [《晉書》, Jìn Shū], vol. Vol. 105, §2749–50. (in Chinese)
  62. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 57–9.
  63. ^ Wei Shou, Book of Wei [《魏書》, Wèi Shū], Vol. 7A, §140, & Vol. 7B, §179. (in Chinese)
  64. ^ Holzman (1986), p. 59.
  65. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 58–9.
  66. ^ Holzman (1986), p. 69.
  67. ^ Holzman (1986), pp. 60–1.
  68. ^ Chapman (2014), p. 484.
  69. ^ Zhang (2017).
  70. ^ Wu (2014), p. 126
  71. ^ a b China Daily (2008).
  72. ^ "Amazing Trip to Mianshan Mountain", Official site, Beijing: China Internet Information Center, Aug 2010.
  73. ^ Xiong (2016).
  74. ^ Mei & al. (2017).
  75. ^ Mei & al. (2017), p. 214.
  76. ^ Chao (2000), p. 8.
  77. ^ a b Chao (2000), p. 247.
  78. ^ Liao (1959), p. Bk. XI, Ch. xxxii.
  79. ^ Wan (2015).

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]