AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
Li jing ne zha10/19/2023 ![]() ![]() While on the hunt, King Wen encountered Jiang fishing on a grass mat, and courteously began a conversation with him concerning military tactics and statecraft. If employed as your assistant, you will flourish and the benefits will extend to three generations of Zhou Kings.'" Recognizing that the result of this divination was similar to the result of divinations given to his eldest ancestor, King Wen observed a vegetarian diet for three days in order to spiritually purify himself for the meeting. ![]() According to the signs, you will find a duke or marquis there whom Heaven has sent to be your teacher. It will not be any form of dragon, nor a tiger or great bear. The divinations revealed that, "'While hunting on the north bank of the Wei river you will get a great catch. Before going hunting, King Wen consulted his chief scribe to perform divination in order to discover if the king would be successful. The meeting was recorded as being characterized by a mythic aura common to meetings between great historical figures in ancient China. The first meeting between King Wen and Jiang Ziya is recorded in the book that records Jiang's teachings to King Wen and King Wu, the Six Secret Teachings (太公六韜). In fact, he had been told by his grandfather, the Grand Duke of Zhou, that one day a sage would appear to help rule the Zhou state. ![]() King Wen, following the advice of his father and grandfather before him, was in search of talented people. King Wen of Zhou, (central Shaanxi), found Jiang Ziya fishing. ![]() Hired by King Wen of the Zhou Dai Jin, Dropping a Fishing Line on the Bank of the Wei River, National Palace Museum It is said that, while in exile, he continued to wait placidly, fishing in a tributary of the Wei River (near today's Xi'an) using a barbless hook or even no hook at all, on the theory that the fish would come to him of their own volition when they were ready. Jiang disappeared, only to resurface in the Zhou countryside at the apocryphal age of seventy-two, when he was recruited by King Wen of Zhou and became instrumental in Zhou affairs. Jiang was an expert in military affairs and hoped that someday someone would call on him to help overthrow the king. After faithfully serving the Shang court for approximately twenty years, Jiang came to find King Zhou insufferable, and feigned madness in order to escape court life and the ruler's power. The last ruler of the Shang dynasty, King Zhou of Shang, was a tyrant who spent his days with his favorite concubine Daji and executing or punishing officials. as Jiang Ziya was seen as the sage – whom King Wen of Zhou's ancestor Duke Uncle Ancestor Lei (公叔祖类) (also titled 太公 "Great ~ Grand Duke") had prophesied about and hoped for – to help the Zhou prosper. He is also less often known as "Grand Duke Jiang" (姜太公 Jiang Taigong), the " Grand Duke's Hope" (Taigong Wang 太公望), and the "Hoped-for Lü" (Lü Wang 呂望). It is under this name that he appears in Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian. įollowing the elevation of Qi to a duchy, he was given the posthumous name 齊太公 Grand ~ Great Duke of Qi, on occasions left untranslated as "Duke Tai". The names Jiang Shang and Jiang Ziya became the most common after their use in the popular Ming-era novel Fengshen Bang, written over 2,500 years after his death. "Master Ivory, Master Tusk"), which were used for respectful address by his peers. He had two courtesy names, Shangfu (尚父 lit. His were Jiang (姜) and Lü (呂), respectively. The nobility of ancient China bore two surnames, an ancestral name and a clan name. The first marquis of Qi bore the given name Shang. Jiang Ziya's portrait in the Sancai Tuhui ![]()
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |