fbpx
Wikipedia

Hong Xiuquan

Hong Xiuquan (1 January 1814[2] – 1 June 1864), born Hong Huoxiu and with the courtesy name Renkun, was a Chinese revolutionary and religious leader who led the Taiping Rebellion against the Qing dynasty. He established the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom over large portions of southern China, with himself as its "Heavenly King".

Hong Xiuquan
洪秀全
Heavenly King of Great Peace
Alleged[a] drawing of Hong Xiuquan, dating from around early 1850s.
Taiping Heavenly King
Reign11 January 1851 – 1 June 1864
PredecessorKingdom established
SuccessorHong Tianguifu
BornHong Huoxiu (洪火秀)
(1814-01-01)1 January 1814
Hua County, Guangdong, Qing China
Died1 June 1864(1864-06-01) (aged 50)
Tianjing, Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
SpouseLai Xiying (賴惜英)[2] or Lai Lianying (賴蓮英)[3]
Issue
  • Princess Hong Tianjiao (洪天姣)[3]
  • Hong Tianguifu, Junior Heavenly King[3]
  • Hong Tianming, Ming King (明王 洪天明)[3]
  • Hong Tianguang, Guang King (光王 洪天光)[3]
  • Hong Tianyou, Junior East King (幼東王 洪天佑)
Names
Hong Xiuquan (洪秀全)
Era name and dates
太平天囯: 11 January 1851 – 1 June 1864
HouseHong
FatherHong Jingyang (洪鏡揚)[3]
MotherMadam Wang (王氏)
ReligionGod Worshipping Society
Hong Xiuquan
Chinese洪秀全
Hong Renkun
Chinese洪仁坤
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHóng Rénkūn
Wade–GilesHung2 Jen2-kun1
Hong Huoxiu
Chinese洪火秀
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHóng Huǒxiù

Born into a Hakka family in Guangdong, Hong claimed to have experienced mystical visions after failing the imperial examination. He came to believe that his celestial father he saw in the visions was God the Father, his celestial elder brother was Jesus Christ, and he had been directed to rid the world of demon worship. He rejected Confucianism and began propagating his own unique version of Christianity in southern China. His associate Feng Yunshan then founded the God Worshipping Society to spread Hong's teachings. By 1850, Hong's sect had over 10,000 followers and increasingly came into conflict with Qing authorities.

In January 1851, Hong organized a rebel army and routed the Qing forces at Jintian, marking the beginning of the Taiping Rebellion. He then declared himself the Heavenly King of the Heavenly Kingdom of Peace. Taiping rebels captured the city of Nanjing in March 1853 and declared it the Heavenly Capital of the kingdom, after which Hong withdrew to his new palace and began ruling through proclamations. He became increasingly suspicious of Yang Xiuqing, his fellow Taiping leader, and engineered Yang's murder in a 1856 purge that spiraled into the further purge of more Taiping leaders. The kingdom gradually lost ground and in June 1864, in the face of Qing advance, Hong died following a period of illness and was succeeded by his son, Hong Tianguifu. Nanjing fell a month later.

Early life and education edit

Hong Xiuquan (洪秀全), born "Hong Huoxiu", was the third and youngest son of a Hakka family.[4][5] Some sources claim his family was "well to do".[6] He was born in Fuyuan Springs (also called Fuyuanshui village[4]), Hua county (now part of Huadu District) in Canton (Guangzhou), Guangdong to Hong Jingyang, a farmer and elected headman, and Madam Wang.[7][8][9] He and his family moved to Guanlubu Village shortly after his birth.[2] Upon marrying his wife Lai Xiying, Hong received the courtesy name "Renkun."[2] His sister, Hong Xuanjiao, became the commander of the female battalion during the Taiping Rebellion.[2]

Hong showed an interest in scholarship at an early age, so his family made financial sacrifices to provide a formal education for him, in the hope that he could one day complete all of the civil service examinations.[4] Hong began studying at a primary school in his village at the age of five.[5] He was able to recite the Four Books after five or six years. He then took the local xiucai preliminary civil service examinations and placed first.[10] A few years later, he traveled to the nearby city of Guangzhou to take the imperial examinations.[10] He was unsuccessful and, his parents being unable to afford to continue his education, he was forced to return to agricultural work.[10] The next year, he accompanied a wealthy schoolmate elsewhere for a year of study and became a village schoolteacher upon his return.[10]

In 1836, at the age of 22, Hong returned to Guangzhou to retake the imperial examinations.[10] While in Guangzhou, Hong heard Edwin Stevens, a foreign missionary, and his interpreter preaching about Christianity.[11] From them, Hong received a set of pamphlets entitled "Good Words for Exhorting the Age", which were written by Liang Fa, Stevens's assistant, and contained excerpts from the Bible along with homilies and other material prepared by Liang.[12] Supposedly, Hong only briefly looked over these pamphlets and did not pay much attention to them at the time.[4] Unsurprisingly, he again failed the imperial examinations, which had a pass rate of less than one percent.[13]

Visions and iconoclasm edit

In 1837, Hong attempted and failed the imperial examinations for a third time, leading to a nervous breakdown.[14] He was delirious for days to the point that his family feared for his life.[15] While convalescing, Hong dreamed of visiting Heaven, where he discovered that he possessed a celestial family distinct from his earthly family, which included a heavenly father, mother, elder brother, sister-in-law, wife, and son.[16] His heavenly father, wearing a black dragon robe and high-brimmed hat with a long golden beard, lamented that men were worshiping demons rather than he himself, and presented Hong with a sword and golden seal with which to slay the demons infesting Heaven.[17] Furthermore, he did so with the help of his celestial older-brother and a heavenly army.[17] The father figure later informed Hong that his given name violated taboos and had to be changed, suggesting as one option the "Hong Xiuquan" moniker ultimately adopted by Hong.[18] In later embellishments, Hong would declare that he also saw Confucius being punished by Hong's celestial father for leading the people astray.[19] His acquaintances would later claim that after awakening from his dreams Hong became more careful, friendly, and open, while his pace became imposing and firm and his height and size increased.[15][20] Hong stopped studying for the imperial examinations and sought work as a teacher. For the next several years Hong taught at several schools around the area of his hometown.

In 1843, Hong failed the imperial examinations for the fourth and final time.[21] It was only then, prompted by a visit by his cousin, that Hong took time to carefully examine the Christian pamphlets he had received.[22] After reading these pamphlets, Hong came to believe that they had given him the key to interpreting his visions: his celestial father was God the Father (whom he identified with Shangdi from Chinese tradition), the elder brother that he had seen was Jesus Christ, and he had been directed to rid the world of demon worship.[23][24] This interpretation led him to conclude that he was the literal son of God and younger brother to Jesus.[25] In contrast to some of the later leaders of his movement, Hong appears to have genuinely believed in his ascent to Heaven and divine mission.[26] After coming to this conclusion Hong began destroying idols and enthusiastically preaching his interpretation of Christianity.[4] As a symbolic gesture to purge China of Confucianism, he and the cousin asked for two giant swords, three chi (1 meter (3.3 ft)) long and nine jin (about 4.5 kg), called the "demon-slaying swords" (斬妖劍), to be forged.[27]

Hong began by burning all Confucian and Buddhist statues and books in his house, and began preaching to his community about his visions. Some of his earliest converts were relatives of his who had also failed their examinations and belonged to the Hakka minority, Feng Yunshan and Hong Rengan.[28] He collaborated with them to destroy holy statues in small villages, to the ire of local citizens and officials. Hong and his converts' acts were considered sacrilegious and they were persecuted by Confucians who forced them to leave their positions as village tutors. In April 1844, Hong, Feng Yunshan, and two other relatives of Hong left Hua county to travel and preach.[29] They first journeyed to Guangzhou and preached in the outlying areas before heading northwest to White Tiger Village.[30] There, Hong and Feng Yunshan parted ways before traveling some 400 kilometers (250 mi) to the southwest to the village of Sigu, Guiping county, Guangxi, where distant relatives of Hong's resided, including two early converts who had returned home.[30] It is in or near Sigu that Hong begins to draft "Exhortations to Worship the One True God", his first substantial work.[31] In November 1844, after having preached in Guangxi for five months, Hong returned home without Feng and resumed his previous job as a village teacher, while continuing to write religious tracts.[32]

The "God Worshippers" edit

In 1847, Hong Xiuquan was invited by a member of the Chinese Union to study with the American Southern Baptist missionary Reverend Issachar Jacox Roberts.[33] Hong accepted the invitation and traveled to Guangzhou with his cousin, Hong Rengan.[33] Once there, Hong studied Karl Gützlaff's translations of the Old and New Testaments, converted to Protestantism[34] and requested to be baptized by Roberts.[33] Roberts refused to do so, possibly due to Hong being tricked by the other converts into requesting monetary aid from Roberts.[33] Hong left Guangzhou on 12 July 1847 to search for Feng Yunshan.[35] Although robbed of all of his possessions, including his demon-slaying sword, by bandits in the town of Meizixun,[where?] he eventually reached Thistle Mountain on 27 August 1847.[36] There, he reunited with Feng and discovered the "Society of God-Worshippers" that Feng had founded.[37]

In January 1848, Feng Yunshan was arrested and banished to Guangdong, and Hong Xiuquan left for Guangdong shortly thereafter to once again reunite with Feng.[38] In Feng and Hong's absence, Yang Xiuqing and Xiao Chaogui jointly emerged to lead the "God Worshipers" themselves. [39] Both claimed to enter trances which allowed them to speak as a member of the Trinity; God the Father in the case of Yang and Jesus Christ in the case of Xiao.[39] When Hong and Feng returned in the summer of 1849, they investigated Yang and Xiao's claims and declared them to be genuine.[40] Hong ministered to the faithful in outdoor meetings strongly resembling the Baptist tent revivals he had witnessed with Issachar Roberts.[41]

Most of Hong Xiuquan's knowledge of the scriptures came from the books known as "Good Words to Admonish the Age" written by the Chinese preacher Liang Fa, as well as a localized Bible translated into Chinese. Many Western missionaries grew jealous of Hong and his local ministry. These competing missionaries were fond of spreading defamatory rumors such as his "lack of baptism." (Hong and his cousin were in fact both baptized according to the way prescribed in the pamphlet "Good words to admonish the age").[42]

In 1847, Hong began his translation and adaptation of the Bible, what came to be known as "Authorized Taiping Version of the Bible", or "The Taiping Bible", which he based on Gutzlaff's translation. He presented his followers with the Bible as a vision of the authentic religion that had existed in ancient China before it was wiped out by Confucius and the imperial system. The deity of the Old Testament punished evil nations and rewarded those who followed his commandments, even music, food, and marriage laws.[43]

Hong made some minor changes in the text, such as correcting misprints and improving the prose style, but adapted the meaning elsewhere to fit his own theology and moral teachings. For instance, in Genesis 27:25 the Israelites did not drink wine, and in Genesis 38:16–26 he omitted the sexual relations between the father and his son's widow.[43] Hong preached a mixture of communal utopianism, evangelism and oriental syncretism. While proclaiming sexual equality, the sect segregated men from women and encouraged all its followers to pay their assets into a communal treasury.[44][45]

When Hong returned to Guangxi, he found that Feng Yunshan had accumulated a following of around 2,000 converts. Guangxi was a dangerous area at this time with many bandit groups based in the mountains and pirates on the rivers. Perhaps due to these more pressing concerns, the authorities were largely tolerant of Hong and his followers. However, the instability of the region meant that Hong's followers were inevitably drawn into conflict with other groups, not least because of their predominantly Hakka ethnicity. There are records of numerous incidents when local villages and clans, as well as groups of pirates and bandits, came into conflict with the authorities, and responded by fleeing to join Hong's movement. The rising tension between the sect and the authorities was probably the most important factor in Hong's eventual decision to rebel.

Rebellion and the Heavenly Kingdom edit

By 1850, Hong had between 10,000 and 30,000 followers. The authorities were alarmed at the growing size of the sect, and ordered them to disperse. A local force was sent to attack them when they refused, but the imperial troops were routed and a deputy magistrate killed. A full-scale attack was launched by government forces in the first month of 1851, in what came to be known as the Jintian Uprising, named after the town of Jintian (which became Guiping, Guangxi) where the sect was based. Hong's followers emerged victorious and beheaded the Manchu commander of the government army. Hong declared the founding of the "Heavenly Kingdom of Transcendent Peace" on 11 January 1851. Despite this evidence of planning, Hong and his followers faced immediate challenges. The local Green Standard Army outnumbered them ten to one, and had recruited the help of the river pirates to keep the rebellion contained to Jintian. After a month of preparation the rebels managed to break through the blockade and fight their way to the town of Yongan (distinct from places named Yong'an), which fell to them on 25 September 1851.

Hong and his troops remained in Yongan for three months, sustained by local landowners who were hostile to the Manchu-ruled Qing Dynasty. The imperial army regrouped and launched another attack on the rebels in Yongan. Having run out of gunpowder, Hong's followers fought their way out by sword, and made for the city of Guilin, to which they laid siege. However, the fortifications of Guilin proved too strong, and Hong and his followers eventually gave up and set out northwards, towards Hunan. Here, they encountered an elite militia created by a local member of the gentry specifically to put down peasant rebellions. The two forces fought at Soyi Ford on 10 June 1852; the rebels were forced into retreat, and 20% of their troops were killed. However, in March 1853, Hong's forces managed to take Nanjing and turned it into the capital of their movement.

After establishing his capital at Nanjing, Hong implemented an ambitious reform and modernization program. He created an elaborate civil bureaucracy, reformed the calendar used in his kingdom, outlawed opium use, and introduced a number of reforms designed to make women more socially equal to men.[4] Hong ruled by making frequent proclamations from his Heavenly Palace, demanding strict compliance with various moral and religious rules. Most trade was suppressed, and some communal land ownership was introduced. Polygamy was forbidden and men and women were separated, although Hong and other leaders maintained groups of concubines.

Yang Xiuqing, also known as the "Eastern King", was a fellow Taiping leader who had directed successful military campaigns, and who often claimed to speak with the voice of God. Hong became increasingly suspicious of Yang's ambitions and his network of spies. In 1856, he and others in the Taiping élite had Yang and his family murdered in a purge that subsequently spun out of control, resulting in the further purge of its main perpetrator Wei Changhui.[46][47]

Following a failed attempt by the Taiping rebels to take Shanghai in 1860, Qing government forces, aided by Western officers, slowly gained ground.

Death edit

In the spring of 1864, Tianjing was besieged and dangerously low on food supplies.[48] Hong's solution was to order his subjects to eat manna, which had been translated into Chinese as sweetened dew and a medicinal herb.[49] Hong himself gathered weeds from the grounds of his palace, which he then ate.[50] Hong fell ill in April 1864, possibly due to his ingestion of the weeds, and died on 1 June 1864.[50] Although Hong likely died of his illness, suicide by poison has also been suggested.[50][51] He was buried in a yellow-silk shroud without a coffin according to Taiping custom,[50] near the former Ming Imperial Palace. He was succeeded by his teenage son, Hong Tianguifu.[50]

On 30 July 1864, Qing forces exhumed, beheaded, and cremated Hong Xiuquan's body. Zeng Guofan had ordered this done to verify Hong Xiuquan's death. The ashes were blasted out of a cannon to ensure that his remains had no resting place, as eternal punishment for the uprising.[52]

Publications edit

  • Imperial Decree of Taiping (《太平詔書》) (1852)
  • The Instructions on the Original Way Series (《原道醒世訓》系列) (1845–1848): included in the Imperial Decree of Taiping later. The series is proclaimed by the People's Republic of China's National Affairs Department to be a Protected National Significant Document in 1988.
    • Instructions on the Original Way to Save the World (《原道救世訓》)
    • Instructions on the Original Way to Awake the World (《原道醒世訓》)
    • Instructions on the Original Way to Make the World Realize (《原道覺世訓》)
  • The Heavenly Father's poem (《天父詩》) (1857)
  • New Essay on Economics and Politics (《資政新篇》) (1859)

Poetry edit

The following poem, titled Poem on Executing the Evil and Preserving the Righteous (斬邪留正詩), written in 1837 by Hong Xiuquan, illustrates his religious thinking and goal that later led to the establishment of the "Heavenly Kingdom of Taiping". Note that in the seventh line, the name of the then yet-to-come kingdom is mentioned.

《斬邪留正詩》

Poem on Executing the Evil and Preserving the Righteous

手握乾坤殺伐權,

In my hand I wield the Universe and the power to attack and kill,

斬邪留正解民懸。

I slay the evil, preserve the righteous, and relieve the people's suffering.

眼通西北江山外,

My eyes see through beyond the west, the north, the rivers, and the mountains,

聲振東南日月邊。

My voice shakes the east, the south, the Sun, and the Moon.

璽劍光榮存帝賜,

The glorious sword of authority was given by the Lord,

詩章憑據誦爺前,

Poems and books are evidences that praise Yahweh in front of Him.

太平一統光世界,

Taiping [Perfect Peace] unifies the World of Light,

威風快樂萬千年。

The domineering air will be joyous for myriads of millennia.

Legacy edit

Views and opinions on Hong differ greatly. The Communists under Mao Zedong generally admired Hong and his rebellion as a legitimate peasant uprising that anticipated their own.[53] Sun Yat-sen came from the same area as Hong and was said to have identified with Hong since his childhood days.[53]

To honor his legacy, the People's Republic of China established a small museum in 1959, the "Hong Xiuquan's Former Residence Memorial Museum" (洪秀全故居紀念館), in his birthplace, where there is a longan tree planted by him. The museum's plate is written by the famous literary figure Guo Moruo (1892–1978). The residence and Book Chamber Building were renovated in 1961.

There has been an active academic debate on the degree to which Hong is similar or dissimilar to Falun Gong founder Li Hongzhi. Scholars that promote the opinion that a strong similarity exists between Li and Hong note that both rallied a large number of people behind a religious or spiritual cause in order to challenge the status quo. Scholars disputing a close relationship note that Li's political intentions are debatable.[54]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to P. Richard Bohr, this is a Woodblock print of an unidentified Taiping leader.[1]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Bohr, P. Richard (2009). "Did the Hakka Save China? Ethnicity, Identity, and Minority Status in China's Modern Transformation". Headwaters. College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University. 26: 13.
  2. ^ a b c d e Jen 1973, p. 10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "洪天贵福亲书自述、诗句" (PDF). jds.cssn.cn (in Chinese). 1 September 1997.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Li 2012, p. 165.
  5. ^ a b Jen 1973, p. 12.
  6. ^ Wakeman, Frederic Jr. (1975). The Fall of Imperial China. Free Press. ISBN 978-0029336908.
  7. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, pp. 21–22.
  8. ^ Jen 1973, pp. 11–12.
  9. ^ Spence 1996, p. 27.
  10. ^ a b c d e Jen 1973, p. 13.
  11. ^ Jen 1973, p. 14.
  12. ^ Jen 1973, pp. 14–15.
  13. ^ Gray 1990, p. 55.
  14. ^ Jen 1973, pp. 15–18.
  15. ^ a b Michael & Chang 1966, p. 23.
  16. ^ Spence 1996, pp. 47–48.
  17. ^ a b Spence 1996, p. 48.
  18. ^ Spence 1996, p. 49.
  19. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 28.
  20. ^ Hamberg, Theodore (1854). The Visions of Hung-Siu-tshuen and Origin of the Kwang-si Insurrection. Hong Kong. p. 14.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ Jen 1973, p. 19.
  22. ^ Jen 1973, p. 20.
  23. ^ De Bary, William Theodore; Lufrano, Richard (2000). Sources of Chinese Tradition. Vol. 2. Columbia University Press. pp. 213–215. ISBN 978-0-231-11271-0.
  24. ^ Spence 1996, p. 64.
  25. ^ Spence 1996, p. 65.
  26. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 36.
  27. ^ Spence 1996, p. 67 "The two men discuss Hong's dream, and feel that some of it, at least, can be understood literally. So together they ordered a local craftsman to forge two double-edged swords – each sword nine pounds in weight, and three feet in length – with three characters carved upon each blade, 'Sword for exterminating demons'."
  28. ^ Spence 1996, p. 67.
  29. ^ Spence 1996, p. 69.
  30. ^ a b Spence 1996, p. 71.
  31. ^ Spence 1996, p. 72.
  32. ^ Spence 1996, pp. 78–79.
  33. ^ a b c d Spence 1996, p. 93.
  34. ^ China a to Z: Everything You Need to Know to Understand Chinese Customs and Culture. Penguin. 25 November 2014. ISBN 978-0142180846.
  35. ^ Spence 1996, pp. 93–94.
  36. ^ Spence 1996, pp. 94–95.
  37. ^ Spence 1996, p. 95.
  38. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, pp. 34–37.
  39. ^ a b Michael & Chang 1966, p. 35.
  40. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 37.
  41. ^ Crossley, Pamela Kyle (2010). The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800. p. 104.
  42. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 25.
  43. ^ a b Reilly 2004, pp. 74–79.
  44. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 47.
  45. ^ Michael 1966, p. 68.
  46. ^ Kuhn 1978.
  47. ^ (Cambridge University Press, 1978). Cambridge Histories Online. Cambridge University Press.
  48. ^ Spence 1996, p. 324.
  49. ^ Spence 1996, pp. 324–325.
  50. ^ a b c d e Spence 1996, p. 325.
  51. ^ Michael & Chang 1966, p. 173.
  52. ^ Spence 1996, p. 371.
  53. ^ a b Cohen 2003, p. 212.
  54. ^ Porter, Noah (2003). Falun Gong in the United States: An Ethnographic Study. Universal-Publishers. pp. 89–92. ISBN 978-1-58112-190-2.

Bibliography edit

  • Anderson, Flavia (1959), The Rebel Emperor, Doubleday & Company
  • Cohen, Paul A. (2003), China Unbound: Evolving Perspectives on the Chinese Past
  • Gray, Jack (1990), Rebellions and Revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-821576-2
  • Jen, Yu-Wen (1973), The Taiping Revolutionary Movement, Yale University Press, ISBN 978-1597407434
  • Kilcourse, Carl S. "Instructing the Heavenly King: Joseph Edkins's Mission to Correct the Theology of Hong Xiuquan." Journal of Ecclesiastical History (2020) 71#1 pp 116–134.
  • Kuhn, Philip A. (1978), "The Taiping Rebellion", in Fairbank, John K. (ed.), Late Ch'ing 1800–1911, Part I., Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
  • Li, Xiaobing (2012), "Hong Xiuquan", in Li, Xiaobing (ed.), China at War: An Encyclopedia, Santa Barabara, CA: ABC-CLIO, pp. 165–168, ISBN 978-1-59884-415-3, retrieved 21 May 2012
  • Michael, Franz H.; Chang, Chung-li (1966), The Taiping Rebellion: History and Documents, vol. I: History, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Publications on Asia
  • Michael, Franz H. (1966), The Taiping Rebellion: History and Documents, vol. II: Documents, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Publications on Asia
  • Reilly, Thomas H. (2004), The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom: Rebellion and the Blasphemy of Empire, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, ISBN 0295984309
  • Spence, Jonathan D. (1996), God's Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan, W.W. Norton, ISBN 0-393-03844-0
  • Wills, John E. (1994), "Hong Xiuquan", Mountain of Fame: Portraits in Chinese History, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, ISBN 0691055424
  • Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). "Hung Hsiu-ch'üan" . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Position established
Heavenly King of Taiping
1851-1864
Succeeded by

hong, xiuquan, confused, with, hung, hsiu, this, chinese, name, family, name, hong, january, 1814, june, 1864, born, hong, huoxiu, with, courtesy, name, renkun, chinese, revolutionary, religious, leader, taiping, rebellion, against, qing, dynasty, established,. Not to be confused with Hung Hsiu chu In this Chinese name the family name is Hong Hong Xiuquan 1 January 1814 2 1 June 1864 born Hong Huoxiu and with the courtesy name Renkun was a Chinese revolutionary and religious leader who led the Taiping Rebellion against the Qing dynasty He established the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom over large portions of southern China with himself as its Heavenly King Hong Xiuquan洪秀全Heavenly King of Great PeaceAlleged a drawing of Hong Xiuquan dating from around early 1850s Taiping Heavenly KingReign11 January 1851 1 June 1864PredecessorKingdom establishedSuccessorHong TianguifuBornHong Huoxiu 洪火秀 1814 01 01 1 January 1814Hua County Guangdong Qing ChinaDied1 June 1864 1864 06 01 aged 50 Tianjing Taiping Heavenly KingdomSpouseLai Xiying 賴惜英 2 or Lai Lianying 賴蓮英 3 IssuePrincess Hong Tianjiao 洪天姣 3 Hong Tianguifu Junior Heavenly King 3 Hong Tianming Ming King 明王 洪天明 3 Hong Tianguang Guang King 光王 洪天光 3 Hong Tianyou Junior East King 幼東王 洪天佑 NamesHong Xiuquan 洪秀全 Era name and dates太平天囯 11 January 1851 1 June 1864HouseHongFatherHong Jingyang 洪鏡揚 3 MotherMadam Wang 王氏 ReligionGod Worshipping SocietyHong XiuquanChinese洪秀全TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHong XiuquanWade GilesHung2 Hsiu4 ch uan2IPA xʊ ŋ ɕjo ʊ tɕʰɥɛ n HakkaPha k fa sṳFung Siu chhionYue CantoneseYale RomanizationHuhng SauchyunJyutpingHung4 Sau3cyun4IPA hoŋ sɐu tsʰyːn Hong RenkunChinese洪仁坤TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHong RenkunWade GilesHung2 Jen2 kun1Hong HuoxiuChinese洪火秀TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHong HuǒxiuBorn into a Hakka family in Guangdong Hong claimed to have experienced mystical visions after failing the imperial examination He came to believe that his celestial father he saw in the visions was God the Father his celestial elder brother was Jesus Christ and he had been directed to rid the world of demon worship He rejected Confucianism and began propagating his own unique version of Christianity in southern China His associate Feng Yunshan then founded the God Worshipping Society to spread Hong s teachings By 1850 Hong s sect had over 10 000 followers and increasingly came into conflict with Qing authorities In January 1851 Hong organized a rebel army and routed the Qing forces at Jintian marking the beginning of the Taiping Rebellion He then declared himself the Heavenly King of the Heavenly Kingdom of Peace Taiping rebels captured the city of Nanjing in March 1853 and declared it the Heavenly Capital of the kingdom after which Hong withdrew to his new palace and began ruling through proclamations He became increasingly suspicious of Yang Xiuqing his fellow Taiping leader and engineered Yang s murder in a 1856 purge that spiraled into the further purge of more Taiping leaders The kingdom gradually lost ground and in June 1864 in the face of Qing advance Hong died following a period of illness and was succeeded by his son Hong Tianguifu Nanjing fell a month later Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Visions and iconoclasm 3 The God Worshippers 4 Rebellion and the Heavenly Kingdom 5 Death 6 Publications 6 1 Poetry 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 BibliographyEarly life and education editHong Xiuquan 洪秀全 born Hong Huoxiu was the third and youngest son of a Hakka family 4 5 Some sources claim his family was well to do 6 He was born in Fuyuan Springs also called Fuyuanshui village 4 Hua county now part of Huadu District in Canton Guangzhou Guangdong to Hong Jingyang a farmer and elected headman and Madam Wang 7 8 9 He and his family moved to Guanlubu Village shortly after his birth 2 Upon marrying his wife Lai Xiying Hong received the courtesy name Renkun 2 His sister Hong Xuanjiao became the commander of the female battalion during the Taiping Rebellion 2 Hong showed an interest in scholarship at an early age so his family made financial sacrifices to provide a formal education for him in the hope that he could one day complete all of the civil service examinations 4 Hong began studying at a primary school in his village at the age of five 5 He was able to recite the Four Books after five or six years He then took the local xiucai preliminary civil service examinations and placed first 10 A few years later he traveled to the nearby city of Guangzhou to take the imperial examinations 10 He was unsuccessful and his parents being unable to afford to continue his education he was forced to return to agricultural work 10 The next year he accompanied a wealthy schoolmate elsewhere for a year of study and became a village schoolteacher upon his return 10 In 1836 at the age of 22 Hong returned to Guangzhou to retake the imperial examinations 10 While in Guangzhou Hong heard Edwin Stevens a foreign missionary and his interpreter preaching about Christianity 11 From them Hong received a set of pamphlets entitled Good Words for Exhorting the Age which were written by Liang Fa Stevens s assistant and contained excerpts from the Bible along with homilies and other material prepared by Liang 12 Supposedly Hong only briefly looked over these pamphlets and did not pay much attention to them at the time 4 Unsurprisingly he again failed the imperial examinations which had a pass rate of less than one percent 13 Visions and iconoclasm editIn 1837 Hong attempted and failed the imperial examinations for a third time leading to a nervous breakdown 14 He was delirious for days to the point that his family feared for his life 15 While convalescing Hong dreamed of visiting Heaven where he discovered that he possessed a celestial family distinct from his earthly family which included a heavenly father mother elder brother sister in law wife and son 16 His heavenly father wearing a black dragon robe and high brimmed hat with a long golden beard lamented that men were worshiping demons rather than he himself and presented Hong with a sword and golden seal with which to slay the demons infesting Heaven 17 Furthermore he did so with the help of his celestial older brother and a heavenly army 17 The father figure later informed Hong that his given name violated taboos and had to be changed suggesting as one option the Hong Xiuquan moniker ultimately adopted by Hong 18 In later embellishments Hong would declare that he also saw Confucius being punished by Hong s celestial father for leading the people astray 19 His acquaintances would later claim that after awakening from his dreams Hong became more careful friendly and open while his pace became imposing and firm and his height and size increased 15 20 Hong stopped studying for the imperial examinations and sought work as a teacher For the next several years Hong taught at several schools around the area of his hometown In 1843 Hong failed the imperial examinations for the fourth and final time 21 It was only then prompted by a visit by his cousin that Hong took time to carefully examine the Christian pamphlets he had received 22 After reading these pamphlets Hong came to believe that they had given him the key to interpreting his visions his celestial father was God the Father whom he identified with Shangdi from Chinese tradition the elder brother that he had seen was Jesus Christ and he had been directed to rid the world of demon worship 23 24 This interpretation led him to conclude that he was the literal son of God and younger brother to Jesus 25 In contrast to some of the later leaders of his movement Hong appears to have genuinely believed in his ascent to Heaven and divine mission 26 After coming to this conclusion Hong began destroying idols and enthusiastically preaching his interpretation of Christianity 4 As a symbolic gesture to purge China of Confucianism he and the cousin asked for two giant swords three chi 1 meter 3 3 ft long and nine jin about 4 5 kg called the demon slaying swords 斬妖劍 to be forged 27 Hong began by burning all Confucian and Buddhist statues and books in his house and began preaching to his community about his visions Some of his earliest converts were relatives of his who had also failed their examinations and belonged to the Hakka minority Feng Yunshan and Hong Rengan 28 He collaborated with them to destroy holy statues in small villages to the ire of local citizens and officials Hong and his converts acts were considered sacrilegious and they were persecuted by Confucians who forced them to leave their positions as village tutors In April 1844 Hong Feng Yunshan and two other relatives of Hong left Hua county to travel and preach 29 They first journeyed to Guangzhou and preached in the outlying areas before heading northwest to White Tiger Village 30 There Hong and Feng Yunshan parted ways before traveling some 400 kilometers 250 mi to the southwest to the village of Sigu Guiping county Guangxi where distant relatives of Hong s resided including two early converts who had returned home 30 It is in or near Sigu that Hong begins to draft Exhortations to Worship the One True God his first substantial work 31 In November 1844 after having preached in Guangxi for five months Hong returned home without Feng and resumed his previous job as a village teacher while continuing to write religious tracts 32 The God Worshippers editIn 1847 Hong Xiuquan was invited by a member of the Chinese Union to study with the American Southern Baptist missionary Reverend Issachar Jacox Roberts 33 Hong accepted the invitation and traveled to Guangzhou with his cousin Hong Rengan 33 Once there Hong studied Karl Gutzlaff s translations of the Old and New Testaments converted to Protestantism 34 and requested to be baptized by Roberts 33 Roberts refused to do so possibly due to Hong being tricked by the other converts into requesting monetary aid from Roberts 33 Hong left Guangzhou on 12 July 1847 to search for Feng Yunshan 35 Although robbed of all of his possessions including his demon slaying sword by bandits in the town of Meizixun where he eventually reached Thistle Mountain on 27 August 1847 36 There he reunited with Feng and discovered the Society of God Worshippers that Feng had founded 37 In January 1848 Feng Yunshan was arrested and banished to Guangdong and Hong Xiuquan left for Guangdong shortly thereafter to once again reunite with Feng 38 In Feng and Hong s absence Yang Xiuqing and Xiao Chaogui jointly emerged to lead the God Worshipers themselves 39 Both claimed to enter trances which allowed them to speak as a member of the Trinity God the Father in the case of Yang and Jesus Christ in the case of Xiao 39 When Hong and Feng returned in the summer of 1849 they investigated Yang and Xiao s claims and declared them to be genuine 40 Hong ministered to the faithful in outdoor meetings strongly resembling the Baptist tent revivals he had witnessed with Issachar Roberts 41 Most of Hong Xiuquan s knowledge of the scriptures came from the books known as Good Words to Admonish the Age written by the Chinese preacher Liang Fa as well as a localized Bible translated into Chinese Many Western missionaries grew jealous of Hong and his local ministry These competing missionaries were fond of spreading defamatory rumors such as his lack of baptism Hong and his cousin were in fact both baptized according to the way prescribed in the pamphlet Good words to admonish the age 42 In 1847 Hong began his translation and adaptation of the Bible what came to be known as Authorized Taiping Version of the Bible or The Taiping Bible which he based on Gutzlaff s translation He presented his followers with the Bible as a vision of the authentic religion that had existed in ancient China before it was wiped out by Confucius and the imperial system The deity of the Old Testament punished evil nations and rewarded those who followed his commandments even music food and marriage laws 43 Hong made some minor changes in the text such as correcting misprints and improving the prose style but adapted the meaning elsewhere to fit his own theology and moral teachings For instance in Genesis 27 25 the Israelites did not drink wine and in Genesis 38 16 26 he omitted the sexual relations between the father and his son s widow 43 Hong preached a mixture of communal utopianism evangelism and oriental syncretism While proclaiming sexual equality the sect segregated men from women and encouraged all its followers to pay their assets into a communal treasury 44 45 When Hong returned to Guangxi he found that Feng Yunshan had accumulated a following of around 2 000 converts Guangxi was a dangerous area at this time with many bandit groups based in the mountains and pirates on the rivers Perhaps due to these more pressing concerns the authorities were largely tolerant of Hong and his followers However the instability of the region meant that Hong s followers were inevitably drawn into conflict with other groups not least because of their predominantly Hakka ethnicity There are records of numerous incidents when local villages and clans as well as groups of pirates and bandits came into conflict with the authorities and responded by fleeing to join Hong s movement The rising tension between the sect and the authorities was probably the most important factor in Hong s eventual decision to rebel Rebellion and the Heavenly Kingdom editMain articles Taiping Rebellion and Taiping Heavenly Kingdom By 1850 Hong had between 10 000 and 30 000 followers The authorities were alarmed at the growing size of the sect and ordered them to disperse A local force was sent to attack them when they refused but the imperial troops were routed and a deputy magistrate killed A full scale attack was launched by government forces in the first month of 1851 in what came to be known as the Jintian Uprising named after the town of Jintian which became Guiping Guangxi where the sect was based Hong s followers emerged victorious and beheaded the Manchu commander of the government army Hong declared the founding of the Heavenly Kingdom of Transcendent Peace on 11 January 1851 Despite this evidence of planning Hong and his followers faced immediate challenges The local Green Standard Army outnumbered them ten to one and had recruited the help of the river pirates to keep the rebellion contained to Jintian After a month of preparation the rebels managed to break through the blockade and fight their way to the town of Yongan distinct from places named Yong an which fell to them on 25 September 1851 Hong and his troops remained in Yongan for three months sustained by local landowners who were hostile to the Manchu ruled Qing Dynasty The imperial army regrouped and launched another attack on the rebels in Yongan Having run out of gunpowder Hong s followers fought their way out by sword and made for the city of Guilin to which they laid siege However the fortifications of Guilin proved too strong and Hong and his followers eventually gave up and set out northwards towards Hunan Here they encountered an elite militia created by a local member of the gentry specifically to put down peasant rebellions The two forces fought at Soyi Ford on 10 June 1852 the rebels were forced into retreat and 20 of their troops were killed However in March 1853 Hong s forces managed to take Nanjing and turned it into the capital of their movement After establishing his capital at Nanjing Hong implemented an ambitious reform and modernization program He created an elaborate civil bureaucracy reformed the calendar used in his kingdom outlawed opium use and introduced a number of reforms designed to make women more socially equal to men 4 Hong ruled by making frequent proclamations from his Heavenly Palace demanding strict compliance with various moral and religious rules Most trade was suppressed and some communal land ownership was introduced Polygamy was forbidden and men and women were separated although Hong and other leaders maintained groups of concubines Yang Xiuqing also known as the Eastern King was a fellow Taiping leader who had directed successful military campaigns and who often claimed to speak with the voice of God Hong became increasingly suspicious of Yang s ambitions and his network of spies In 1856 he and others in the Taiping elite had Yang and his family murdered in a purge that subsequently spun out of control resulting in the further purge of its main perpetrator Wei Changhui 46 47 Following a failed attempt by the Taiping rebels to take Shanghai in 1860 Qing government forces aided by Western officers slowly gained ground Death editIn the spring of 1864 Tianjing was besieged and dangerously low on food supplies 48 Hong s solution was to order his subjects to eat manna which had been translated into Chinese as sweetened dew and a medicinal herb 49 Hong himself gathered weeds from the grounds of his palace which he then ate 50 Hong fell ill in April 1864 possibly due to his ingestion of the weeds and died on 1 June 1864 50 Although Hong likely died of his illness suicide by poison has also been suggested 50 51 He was buried in a yellow silk shroud without a coffin according to Taiping custom 50 near the former Ming Imperial Palace He was succeeded by his teenage son Hong Tianguifu 50 On 30 July 1864 Qing forces exhumed beheaded and cremated Hong Xiuquan s body Zeng Guofan had ordered this done to verify Hong Xiuquan s death The ashes were blasted out of a cannon to ensure that his remains had no resting place as eternal punishment for the uprising 52 Publications editImperial Decree of Taiping 太平詔書 1852 The Instructions on the Original Way Series 原道醒世訓 系列 1845 1848 included in the Imperial Decree of Taiping later The series is proclaimed by the People s Republic of China s National Affairs Department to be a Protected National Significant Document in 1988 Instructions on the Original Way to Save the World 原道救世訓 Instructions on the Original Way to Awake the World 原道醒世訓 Instructions on the Original Way to Make the World Realize 原道覺世訓 The Heavenly Father s poem 天父詩 1857 New Essay on Economics and Politics 資政新篇 1859 Poetry edit The following poem titled Poem on Executing the Evil and Preserving the Righteous 斬邪留正詩 written in 1837 by Hong Xiuquan illustrates his religious thinking and goal that later led to the establishment of the Heavenly Kingdom of Taiping Note that in the seventh line the name of the then yet to come kingdom is mentioned 斬邪留正詩 Poem on Executing the Evil and Preserving the Righteous手握乾坤殺伐權 In my hand I wield the Universe and the power to attack and kill 斬邪留正解民懸 I slay the evil preserve the righteous and relieve the people s suffering 眼通西北江山外 My eyes see through beyond the west the north the rivers and the mountains 聲振東南日月邊 My voice shakes the east the south the Sun and the Moon 璽劍光榮存帝賜 The glorious sword of authority was given by the Lord 詩章憑據誦爺前 Poems and books are evidences that praise Yahweh in front of Him 太平一統光世界 Taiping Perfect Peace unifies the World of Light 威風快樂萬千年 The domineering air will be joyous for myriads of millennia Legacy editViews and opinions on Hong differ greatly The Communists under Mao Zedong generally admired Hong and his rebellion as a legitimate peasant uprising that anticipated their own 53 Sun Yat sen came from the same area as Hong and was said to have identified with Hong since his childhood days 53 To honor his legacy the People s Republic of China established a small museum in 1959 the Hong Xiuquan s Former Residence Memorial Museum 洪秀全故居紀念館 in his birthplace where there is a longan tree planted by him The museum s plate is written by the famous literary figure Guo Moruo 1892 1978 The residence and Book Chamber Building were renovated in 1961 There has been an active academic debate on the degree to which Hong is similar or dissimilar to Falun Gong founder Li Hongzhi Scholars that promote the opinion that a strong similarity exists between Li and Hong note that both rallied a large number of people behind a religious or spiritual cause in order to challenge the status quo Scholars disputing a close relationship note that Li s political intentions are debatable 54 See also edit nbsp China portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Politics portalHong Xuanjiao Millennarianism in colonial societies Liberation theology Sino Christian theology Autotheism Private revelation Messiah complex Entering heaven alive Conversion of Paul the Apostle Heavenly Mother Mormonism Christianity in ChinaReferences editNotes edit According to P Richard Bohr this is a Woodblock print of an unidentified Taiping leader 1 Citations edit Bohr P Richard 2009 Did the Hakka Save China Ethnicity Identity and Minority Status in China s Modern Transformation Headwaters College of Saint Benedict and Saint John s University 26 13 a b c d e Jen 1973 p 10 a b c d e f 洪天贵福亲书自述 诗句 PDF jds cssn cn in Chinese 1 September 1997 a b c d e f Li 2012 p 165 a b Jen 1973 p 12 Wakeman Frederic Jr 1975 The Fall of Imperial China Free Press ISBN 978 0029336908 Michael amp Chang 1966 pp 21 22 Jen 1973 pp 11 12 Spence 1996 p 27 a b c d e Jen 1973 p 13 Jen 1973 p 14 Jen 1973 pp 14 15 Gray 1990 p 55 Jen 1973 pp 15 18 a b Michael amp Chang 1966 p 23 Spence 1996 pp 47 48 a b Spence 1996 p 48 Spence 1996 p 49 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 28 Hamberg Theodore 1854 The Visions of Hung Siu tshuen and Origin of the Kwang si Insurrection Hong Kong p 14 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jen 1973 p 19 Jen 1973 p 20 De Bary William Theodore Lufrano Richard 2000 Sources of Chinese Tradition Vol 2 Columbia University Press pp 213 215 ISBN 978 0 231 11271 0 Spence 1996 p 64 Spence 1996 p 65 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 36 Spence 1996 p 67 The two men discuss Hong s dream and feel that some of it at least can be understood literally So together they ordered a local craftsman to forge two double edged swords each sword nine pounds in weight and three feet in length with three characters carved upon each blade Sword for exterminating demons Spence 1996 p 67 Spence 1996 p 69 a b Spence 1996 p 71 Spence 1996 p 72 Spence 1996 pp 78 79 a b c d Spence 1996 p 93 China a to Z Everything You Need to Know to Understand Chinese Customs and Culture Penguin 25 November 2014 ISBN 978 0142180846 Spence 1996 pp 93 94 Spence 1996 pp 94 95 Spence 1996 p 95 Michael amp Chang 1966 pp 34 37 a b Michael amp Chang 1966 p 35 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 37 Crossley Pamela Kyle 2010 The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 p 104 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 25 a b Reilly 2004 pp 74 79 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 47 Michael 1966 p 68 Kuhn 1978 Cambridge University Press 1978 Cambridge Histories Online Cambridge University Press Spence 1996 p 324 Spence 1996 pp 324 325 a b c d e Spence 1996 p 325 Michael amp Chang 1966 p 173 Spence 1996 p 371 a b Cohen 2003 p 212 Porter Noah 2003 Falun Gong in the United States An Ethnographic Study Universal Publishers pp 89 92 ISBN 978 1 58112 190 2 Bibliography edit Anderson Flavia 1959 The Rebel Emperor Doubleday amp Company Cohen Paul A 2003 China Unbound Evolving Perspectives on the Chinese Past Gray Jack 1990 Rebellions and Revolutions China from the 1800s to the 1980s Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 821576 2 Jen Yu Wen 1973 The Taiping Revolutionary Movement Yale University Press ISBN 978 1597407434 Kilcourse Carl S Instructing the Heavenly King Joseph Edkins s Mission to Correct the Theology of Hong Xiuquan Journal of Ecclesiastical History 2020 71 1 pp 116 134 Kuhn Philip A 1978 The Taiping Rebellion in Fairbank John K ed Late Ch ing 1800 1911 Part I Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Li Xiaobing 2012 Hong Xiuquan in Li Xiaobing ed China at War An Encyclopedia Santa Barabara CA ABC CLIO pp 165 168 ISBN 978 1 59884 415 3 retrieved 21 May 2012 Michael Franz H Chang Chung li 1966 The Taiping Rebellion History and Documents vol I History Seattle WA University of Washington Publications on Asia Michael Franz H 1966 The Taiping Rebellion History and Documents vol II Documents Seattle WA University of Washington Publications on Asia Reilly Thomas H 2004 The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom Rebellion and the Blasphemy of Empire Seattle WA University of Washington Press ISBN 0295984309 Spence Jonathan D 1996 God s Chinese Son The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan W W Norton ISBN 0 393 03844 0 Wills John E 1994 Hong Xiuquan Mountain of Fame Portraits in Chinese History Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0691055424 Hummel Arthur W Sr ed 1943 Hung Hsiu ch uan Eminent Chinese of the Ch ing Period United States Government Printing Office nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hong Xiuquan Regnal titlesPreceded byPosition established Heavenly King of Taiping1851 1864 Succeeded byHong Tianguifu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hong Xiuquan amp oldid 1185707070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.