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Mandate of Heaven

The Mandate of Heaven (Chinese: 天命; pinyin: Tiānmìng; Wade–Giles: T'ien-ming; lit. 'Heaven's command') is a Chinese political ideology that was used in ancient and imperial China to legitimize the rule of the King or Emperor of China.[1] According to this doctrine, heaven (天, Tian) bestows its mandate[a] on a virtuous ruler. This ruler, the Son of Heaven, was the supreme universal monarch, who ruled Tianxia (天下; "all under heaven", the world).[3] If a ruler was overthrown, this was interpreted as an indication that the ruler was unworthy and had lost the mandate.[4] It was also a common belief that natural disasters such as famine and flood were divine retributions bearing signs of Heaven's displeasure with the ruler, so there would often be revolts following major disasters as the people saw these calamities as signs that the Mandate of Heaven had been withdrawn.[5]

Mandate of Heaven
Traditional Chinese天命
Simplified Chinese天命
Literal meaning"Heaven's command"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTiānmìng
Bopomofoㄊㄧㄢ   ㄇㄧㄥˋ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhTianminq
Wade–GilesT'ien¹-ming⁴
IPA[tʰjɛ́nmîŋ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationTīnmihng
JyutpingTin1-ming6
IPA[tʰiːn˥ meŋ˨]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJThian-bēng
Tâi-lôThian-bīng
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinesetʰen mjæ̀ng 
Old Chinese
Baxter–Sagart (2014)*l̥ˁi[n] m-riŋ-s
Zhengzhang*qʰl'iːn mreŋs
A brief flow chart depicting the flow of auctoritas in the transfer of the Mandate of Heaven at the transition of dynastic cycles.[6]

The Mandate of Heaven does not require a legitimate ruler to be of noble birth, depending instead on how well that person can rule. Chinese dynasties such as the Han and Ming were founded by men of common origins, but they were seen as having succeeded because they had gained the Mandate of Heaven. Retaining the mandate is contingent on the just and able performance of the rulers and their heirs.

Corollary to the concept of the Mandate of Heaven was the right of rebellion against an unjust ruler. The Mandate of Heaven was often invoked by philosophers and scholars in China as a way to curtail the abuse of power by the ruler, in a system that had few other checks. Chinese historians interpreted a successful revolt as evidence that Heaven had withdrawn its mandate from the ruler. Throughout Chinese history, times of poverty and natural disasters were often taken as signs that heaven considered the incumbent ruler unjust and thus in need of replacement.

The concept of the Mandate of Heaven also extends to the ruler's family having divine rights[1] and was first used to support the rule of the kings of the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE) to legitimize their overthrow of the earlier Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE). It was used throughout the history of China to legitimize the successful overthrow and installation of new emperors, including by non-Han Chinese dynasties such as the Qing (1636–1912). The Mandate of Heaven has been called the Zhou dynasty's most important contribution to Chinese political thought,[7] but it coexisted and interfaced with other theories of sovereign legitimacy, including abdication to the worthy and five phases theory.

History Edit

Transition between the Shang and the Zhou Edit

The prosperous Shang dynasty saw its rule filled with multiple outstanding accomplishments. Notably, the dynasty lasted for a considerable time during which 31 kings ruled over an extended period of 17 generations. The rule of the Shang kings has been described as hegemonic. Royal authority flowed from the person of the king, enforced by his military. Neighbouring clans were allied through marriage and adopted into the Shang ancestral temple.[8]

A poem about the last years of the Shang dynasty reads "Heaven sends down death and disorder; famine comes repeatedly."[9] Paleoclimatic data show a long-term period of cooling in the northern hemisphere, which reached its maximum right around the fall of the Shang.[10]

In 1059 BCE, two unusual celestial phenomena took place: in May, the densest clustering in five hundred years' time of the five planets visible to the naked eye could be seen in the constellation of Cancer, and a few seasons later Comet 1P/Halley appeared.[11] One or more of these[12] was interpreted by the powerful Lord of Zhou as a visible sign indicating supernatural approval.[13] Early records, such as the inscription on the Da Yu ding, employ language more descriptive than theoretical: "the great command in the sky" (天有大令).[14][b]

Although both the Shang and Zhou claimed divine ancestry,[15] the Zhou were the first to use the concept of the Mandate of Heaven to explain their right to assume rule and presumed that the only way to hold the mandate was to rule well in the eyes of Heaven. They also stated that the Shang came into power because the Xia had lost their mandate, which had then been bestowed upon the Shang, leading to the fall of the Xia and the rise of the Shang.[16] The Xia gave precedent and legitimacy to the Zhou's own rebellion.[17] No Western Zhou bronze inscriptions mention the Xia, or any other dynasty preceding the Shang.[18] The Zhou believed that the Shang ruling house had become morally corrupt and that the Shang leaders' loss of virtue entitled their own house to take over.[19] The overthrow of the Shang Dynasty, they said, was in accordance with the mandate given by Heaven. Even at the time of the inauguration ritual of third-generation King Kang of Zhou, the royal command read out to the new king explicitly stated the belief that Heaven had changed its mandate.[20]

In the political theory of the Zhou, legitimate authority flowed directly from Heaven to their founding dynast, King Wen. Although he did not live to see the Zhou conquest of Shang, his legitimacy passed to his heirs.[21] Early on in the dynasty, there was some debate as to whether Heaven's mandate had fallen to the senior sons of King Wen's line, or to the house of Zhou as a group, as exemplified by an exchange surviving in the classic Book of Documents.[22]

Eastern Zhou Edit

The Zhou dynasty was marked by early success and expansion until the death on campaign of King Kang's successor, King Zhao of Zhou.[23] During the ensuing centuries, central authority waned overall, driven by socioeconomic pressures. This culminated in a succession crisis which saw the aristocracy split between two competing candidates for a number of years. When the crisis resolved, the royal house retained only a tiny amount of land and no real military power. This marked the beginning of the Eastern Zhou. During the decline of the royal house, although real power was wrested from their grasp, their divine legitimacy was not brought into question, and even with the king reduced to something of a figurehead, his prestige remained supreme as Heaven's eldest son.[24]

However, there is epigraphic evidence that, in private, the rulers of the state of Qin (which would go on to conquer everyone else and become the first dynasty of the imperial era) held that their ancestors had received Heaven's mandate. As early as the 600s BCE, multiple inscriptions attest to this idea.[25] It is unclear whether the Qin rulers meant they believed they had celestial approval to replace the Zhou kings, whether they believed themselves the appointed heirs of the Zhou should the royal line come to an end,[26] or whether their receipt of Heaven's mandate was construed as issuing through the Zhou king to give them legitimate authority over their own lands.[27]

Qin and Han dynasties Edit

When the Zhou dynasty did come to an end, Qin absorbed the remainder of their lands, as well as those of all their competitors. The Mandate of Heaven did not play a direct part in their public relations, going unmentioned in all surviving material.[28] The Qin dynasty was not long-lived: after the death of first emperor Qin Shihuang, widespread revolts by prisoners, peasants, unhappy soldiers, ambitious minor officials, and remnants of the recently defeated aristocracy rapidly downfell the central government.[29] The ensuing Chu–Han contention ended with the success of Liu Bang and establishment of the Han dynasty.

Surviving historical documents from the Han dynasty paint the preceding Qin in a deeply unfavourable light, emphasising tyrannical policies, the incompetence of the second emperor, and giving an account of illegitimate birth for the first emperor.[30][31] In this portrayal, it is clear the Qin had lost the Mandate, if they had ever possessed it to begin with. It was an uncomfortable fact that Han founder Liu Bang rose to power from a background outside the aristocracy, and achieved victory through military accomplishments. To accommodate this, Liu Bang was ascribed a magical birth, and later a divine ancestry.[32][33]

When Wang Mang took power at the end of the western Han, he used the acceptance of the theory of Heaven's Mandate to his advantage. Auspicious unusual events were said to portend Heaven's choosing a new heir, so Wang fabricated omens indicating that Heaven had changed its mandate, and that it had chosen him.[34]

Following the restoration of the Han house to power, the Mandate of Heaven stood on uncertain grounds. Some theorists decoupled judgements of virtue from the mandate, seeing it primarily as inherited through ancestry, while others abandoned the concept altogether in favour of five phases theories.[35]

Era of disunity Edit

The final Han emperor abdicated to the powerful minister Cao Pi in CE 220, and in this transfer of power the idea of Heaven's mandate played a large role. The court prognosticator Xu Zhi (許芝) enumerated in a lengthy memorandum the signs he had located in divinatory and historical texts showing that Cao Pi's Wei should succeed the Han.[36] A sequence of written statements by various officials followed, culminating in Emperor Xian of Han's formal announcement of abdication and Cao Pi's accession.[37] The announcement of abdication explicitly mentioned that the mandate of Heaven was not permanent, and no one argued that the virtue of the house of Han had not been in decline for some time.[38] In the eyes of these authors, Heaven's mandate followed virtue.[39] While the idea that Cao Wei was Heaven's legitimate successor predominated for several centuries, the alternate theory that Heaven's mandate instead fell to the rival state of Shu Han was first articulated by Xi Zuochi in the 300s,[40] and was universally accepted by the much later Song dynasty.[41]

The last Wei emperor abdicated in turn to the Western Jin. This dynasty soon lost control of northern China to non-Han ethnic groups, and in the literature of the southern dynasties that followed there began to appear an object called the State-Transmitting Seal. This magical talisman was the physical manifestation of Heaven's mandate, tied up in the fortunes of ruling families, allowing the exiled southern aristocracy to retain their sense of cultural superiority and maintain the validity of Heaven's mandate in the face of counterfactual political reality.[42]

Five Dynasties period Edit

During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period, there was no dominant Chinese dynasty that ruled all of China. This created a problem for the Song dynasty that followed, as they wanted to legitimize their rule by establishing a clear transmission of the Mandate from the Tang through to the Song. The scholar-official Xue Juzheng compiled the Old History of the Five Dynasties (五代史) during the 960s and 970s, after the Song dynasty had taken northern China from the last of the Five Dynasties, the Later Zhou. A major purpose of the book was to establish justification for the transference of the Mandate of Heaven through these five dynasties and thus to the Song dynasty. He argued that these dynasties met certain vital criteria to be considered as having attained the Mandate of Heaven despite never having ruled all of China. One is that they all ruled the traditional Chinese heartland.

However, there were certain other areas where these dynasties all clearly fell short. The brutal behavior of Zhu Wen and his Later Liang was a source of considerable embarrassment, and thus there was pressure to exclude them from the Mandate. The following three dynasties, the Later Tang, Later Jin, and Later Han were all non-Han Chinese dynasties with rulers from the Shatuo ethnic minority. Additionally, none of them were able to defeat the powerful states to the south and unify the entire Chinese realm. However, Xue Juzheng concluded that the Mandate had indeed passed through each of the Five Dynasties, and thus onto the Song Dynasty when it conquered the last of those dynasties.[43]

Qing dynasty Edit

The Qing dynasty was established by the Manchus who conquered the China proper. Nurhaci, who was regarded the founding father of the Qing dynasty, was originally a vassalage to the Ming dynasty and later rebelled against the Ming with the Seven Grievances. But according to the Qing rulers it was the peasant rebels led by Li Zicheng who overthrew the Ming, and so the Qing were not responsible for the destruction of the Ming dynasty. Instead, the Qing argued, they had obtained the Mandate of Heaven by defeating the many rebels and bandits that the Ming had failed to control and restoring stability to the empire.[44] Just as stability was a sign of Heaven's favor, difficulties were a sign of Heaven's displeasure. Thus, emperors in the Qing and earlier dynasties often interpreted natural disasters during their reigns as reasons to reflect on their failures to act and govern correctly.[45]

The right to rule and the right of rebellion Edit

Mencius stated that:[46]

The people are of supreme importance; the altars of soil and grain come next; last comes the ruler. That is why he who gains the confidence of the multitudinous people will be Emperor... When a local lord endangers the altars of soil and grain, he should be replaced. When the sacrificial animals are sleek, the offerings are clean and the sacrifices are observed at due times, and yet floods and droughts come [by the agency of heaven], then the altars should be replaced.

— Mencius, 盡心下

Thus, the Mandate of Heaven does not confer an unconditional right to rule. To retain the Mandate of Heaven, a ruler's performance had to be just and effective and not excessively expand and maintain power outside the nation's borders.[47] The people retained a right to rebel.[48]: 39  Of the political philosophers of the Warring States period, Mencius was perhaps the most radically revolutionary, deliberately eliding any distinction between overthrowing a wicked ruler and punishing a common criminal.[49] The more conservative Xunzi, writing not much later, regarded rebellion as the apical manifestation of an unfit ruler's ineptitude, only justified if already inevitable.[50] Meanwhile, the authoritarian Han Feizi rejected entirely the concept of a just rebellion, going as far as denouncing such culture heroes as Tang of Shang and Wu of Zhou, rebels who founded successful empires.[51] By the time of the Han dynasty, the right to rebellion was a politically sensitive topic, as the Han rulers could neither deny their own history as being birthed in rebellion nor embrace the idea that they should themselves be overthrown.[52]

The right of rebellion against an unjust ruler has been a part of Chinese political philosophy ever since the Zhou dynasty, and the successful rebellion was interpreted by Chinese historians as evidence that divine approval had passed on to the successive dynasty. The Right of Rebellion is not coded into any official law. Rather, rebellion is always outlawed and severely punished; but is still a positive right grounded in the Chinese moral system. Often, it is used as a justification for actions to overthrow a previous dynasty after a rebellion has been successful and a new dynastic rule has been established. Since the winner is the one who determines who has obtained the Mandate of Heaven and who has lost it, some Chinese scholars consider it to be a sort of victor's justice, best characterized in the popular Chinese saying "The winner becomes king, the loser becomes outlaw" (Chinese: “成者爲王,敗者爲寇”). Due to this, it is considered that Chinese historical accounts of the fall of a dynasty and the rise of a new one must be handled with caution. Chinese traditional historical compilation methods produce accounts that tend to fit their account to the theory, emphasizing aspects tending to prove that the old dynasty lost the Mandate of Heaven and the new one gained it, and de-emphasizing other aspects.[citation needed]

In the 20th and 21st centuries, Confucianist elements of student rebellions often claimed the Mandate of Heaven has been forfeited, as demonstrated by their large-scale activism, with notable instances including the 2014 Sunflower Student Movement in Taiwan and the 2014 and 2019 Hong Kong protests.[53][54]

In imperial times, Chinese emperors invoked de by striving to be good influences and performing rituals to benefit their status and keep the Mandate of Heaven.[55] Also, the Mandate could not be given to several emperors or rulers at once.[56]

Influence Edit

Because of China's influence in medieval times, the concept of the Mandate of Heaven spread to other East Asian countries as a justification for rule by divine political legitimacy.[57] In Korea, the kingdom of Goguryeo, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, adopted the Chinese concept of tianxia which was based on Mandate of Heaven, however in Goguryeo it was changed to be based on divine ancestry. The kingdom of Silla is also said to have adopted the Mandate of Heaven,[58] but the earliest records are from Joseon Dynasty, which made the Mandate of Heaven an enduring state ideology.[59]

The ideology was also adopted in Vietnam, known in Vietnamese as Thiên mệnh (Chữ Hán: 天命). A divine mandate gave the Vietnamese emperor the right to rule, based not on his lineage but on his competence to govern.[60] The later and more centralized Vietnamese dynasties adopted Confucianism as the state ideology, which led to the creation of a Vietnamese tributary system in Southeast Asia that was modeled after the Chinese Sinocentric system in East Asia.[61]

In Japan, the title "Son of Heaven" was interpreted literally where the monarch was referred to as a demigod, deity, or "living god", chosen by the gods and goddesses of heaven.[62] Eventually, the Japanese government found the concept ideologically problematic, preferring not to have divine political legitimacy that was conditional and that could be withdrawn. The Japanese Taihō Code, formulated in 703, was largely an adaptation of the governmental system of the Tang dynasty, but the Mandate of Heaven was specifically omitted.[citation needed]

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The "mandate" of Heaven's Mandate is the same word () the sovereign used to appoint an aristocratic relative to rule a regional state. In this sense the relation between Heaven and the sovereign was analogous to the relation between the sovereign and the regional lord.[2]
  2. ^ The early word here for "command" (; líng) had either not yet diverged from the modern version (; mìng) or was written to express the same word.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Harari (2015), p. 219.
  2. ^ von Falkenhausen (1996), p. 9.
  3. ^ Ebrey 2010, p. 179.
  4. ^ Nylan (2007), p. 75.
  5. ^ Szczepanski, Kallie. . About Education. Archived from the original on October 8, 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  6. ^ Lai (2002), p. 95.
  7. ^ Chen (2002), p. 291.
  8. ^ Li (2008), pp. 26–27.
  9. ^ Chittick (2003), p. 174.
  10. ^ Hinsch (1988), p. 139.
  11. ^ Pankenier (1995), pp. 123–124, 129.
  12. ^ Allan (2007), p. 38.
  13. ^ Li (2008), pp. 30–31.
  14. ^ Allan (2007), p. 39.
  15. ^ Allan (2007), pp. 13, 33.
  16. ^ Zhao (2009).
  17. ^ Pines (2008), p. 3.
  18. ^ Allan (2007), p. 40.
  19. ^ Song (2019), pp. 515–516.
  20. ^ Shaughnessy (1989), p. 54.
  21. ^ Li (2008), pp. 294–295.
  22. ^ Shaughnessy (1993), pp. 58–59.
  23. ^ Li (2008), p. 34.
  24. ^ Pines (2004), p. 23.
  25. ^ Pines (2006), pp. 18–21.
  26. ^ Pines (2006), p. 19.
  27. ^ Pines (2004), p. 16.
  28. ^ Pines (2008), p. 22.
  29. ^ Dull (1983), pp. 313–317.
  30. ^ Sørensen (2010), p. 15.
  31. ^ Goldin (2000), pp. 78–79.
  32. ^ Wang (2001), p. 20.
  33. ^ Nylan (2007), p. 72.
  34. ^ Sukhu (2006), p. 120.
  35. ^ Sukhu (2006), p. 133.
  36. ^ Chen and Pei, vol. 2, pp. 63–64.
  37. ^ Chen and Pei, vol. 2, pp. 62–75.
  38. ^ Chen and Pei, vol. 2, pp. 62, 66–68.
  39. ^ Farmer (2001), pp. 51–52.
  40. ^ Chittick (1998), p. 48.
  41. ^ Yong (1782), vol. 45, p. 17.
  42. ^ Rogers (1968), pp. 61–62.
  43. ^ Mote (1999), pp. 8–10.
  44. ^ Mote (1999), p. 819.
  45. ^ Mote (1999), p. 637.
  46. ^ Mencius. (2004). Mencius. Lau, D.C. (Dim Cheuk) (Rev. ed.). London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140449716. OCLC 56648867.
  47. ^ Cartwright, Mark (2017-07-25). "Mandate of Heaven". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  48. ^ Marquis, Christopher; Qiao, Kunyuan (2022). Mao and Markets: The Communist Roots of Chinese Enterprise. New Haven: Yale University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctv3006z6k. ISBN 978-0-300-26883-6. JSTOR j.ctv3006z6k. OCLC 1348572572. S2CID 253067190.
  49. ^ Pines (2008), pp. 15–16.
  50. ^ Pines (2008), pp. 19–20.
  51. ^ Pines (2008), pp. 20–22.
  52. ^ Pines (2008), p. 24.
  53. ^ Ming-sho Ho, Challenging Beijing's Mandate of Heaven: Taiwan's Sunflower Movement and Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement (Temple University Press, 2019).
  54. ^ Thomas B. Gold, "Occupy Central/Sunflower: Popular Resistance in Greater China." Foreign Policy Research Institute E-Notes (Oct. 2014) online 2019-10-30 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ Stefon, Matt. "de". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
  56. ^ Harari (2015), p. 220.
  57. ^ Jenkins, Brian. "Why the North Vietnamese will keep fighting" (PDF). RAND. (PDF) from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 5, 2015.
  58. ^ Noh (2014).
  59. ^ "South Korea's President Lost the 'Mandate of Heaven'". from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  60. ^ Woodside 1971, p. 9.
  61. ^ Woodside 1971, pp. 234–237.
  62. ^ Dull 1990, p. 59.

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Further reading Edit

  • T'ang Chün-i (1962). "The T'ien Ming [Heavenly Ordinance] in Pre-Ch'in China". Philosophy East and West. University of Hawaiʻi Press. 11 (4): 195–218. doi:10.2307/1397023. JSTOR 1397023.
  • T'ang Chün-i (1962). "The T'ien Ming [Heavenly Ordinance] in Pre-Ch'in China II". Philosophy East and West. University of Hawaiʻi Press. 12 (1): 29–49. doi:10.2307/1397244. JSTOR 1397244.

See also Edit

mandate, heaven, tianming, redirects, here, other, uses, tianming, disambiguation, this, article, about, chinese, concept, legitimacy, rulers, similar, concept, western, culture, divine, right, kings, chinese, 天命, pinyin, tiānmìng, wade, giles, ming, heaven, c. Tianming redirects here For other uses see Tianming disambiguation This article is about the Chinese concept of the legitimacy of rulers For the similar concept in Western culture see Divine right of kings The Mandate of Heaven Chinese 天命 pinyin Tianming Wade Giles T ien ming lit Heaven s command is a Chinese political ideology that was used in ancient and imperial China to legitimize the rule of the King or Emperor of China 1 According to this doctrine heaven 天 Tian bestows its mandate a on a virtuous ruler This ruler the Son of Heaven was the supreme universal monarch who ruled Tianxia 天下 all under heaven the world 3 If a ruler was overthrown this was interpreted as an indication that the ruler was unworthy and had lost the mandate 4 It was also a common belief that natural disasters such as famine and flood were divine retributions bearing signs of Heaven s displeasure with the ruler so there would often be revolts following major disasters as the people saw these calamities as signs that the Mandate of Heaven had been withdrawn 5 Mandate of HeavenTraditional Chinese天命Simplified Chinese天命Literal meaning Heaven s command TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTianmingBopomofoㄊㄧㄢ ㄇㄧㄥˋGwoyeu RomatzyhTianminqWade GilesT ien ming IPA tʰjɛ nmi ŋ Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationTinmihngJyutpingTin1 ming6IPA tʰiːn meŋ Southern MinHokkien POJThian bengTai loThian bingMiddle ChineseMiddle Chinesetʰen mjae ng Old ChineseBaxter Sagart 2014 l ˁi n m riŋ sZhengzhang qʰl iːn mreŋsA brief flow chart depicting the flow of auctoritas in the transfer of the Mandate of Heaven at the transition of dynastic cycles 6 The Mandate of Heaven does not require a legitimate ruler to be of noble birth depending instead on how well that person can rule Chinese dynasties such as the Han and Ming were founded by men of common origins but they were seen as having succeeded because they had gained the Mandate of Heaven Retaining the mandate is contingent on the just and able performance of the rulers and their heirs Corollary to the concept of the Mandate of Heaven was the right of rebellion against an unjust ruler The Mandate of Heaven was often invoked by philosophers and scholars in China as a way to curtail the abuse of power by the ruler in a system that had few other checks Chinese historians interpreted a successful revolt as evidence that Heaven had withdrawn its mandate from the ruler Throughout Chinese history times of poverty and natural disasters were often taken as signs that heaven considered the incumbent ruler unjust and thus in need of replacement The concept of the Mandate of Heaven also extends to the ruler s family having divine rights 1 and was first used to support the rule of the kings of the Zhou dynasty 1046 256 BCE to legitimize their overthrow of the earlier Shang dynasty c 1600 1046 BCE It was used throughout the history of China to legitimize the successful overthrow and installation of new emperors including by non Han Chinese dynasties such as the Qing 1636 1912 The Mandate of Heaven has been called the Zhou dynasty s most important contribution to Chinese political thought 7 but it coexisted and interfaced with other theories of sovereign legitimacy including abdication to the worthy and five phases theory Contents 1 History 1 1 Transition between the Shang and the Zhou 1 2 Eastern Zhou 1 3 Qin and Han dynasties 1 4 Era of disunity 1 5 Five Dynasties period 1 6 Qing dynasty 2 The right to rule and the right of rebellion 3 Influence 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Citations 4 3 Sources 4 4 Further reading 5 See alsoHistory EditTransition between the Shang and the Zhou Edit The prosperous Shang dynasty saw its rule filled with multiple outstanding accomplishments Notably the dynasty lasted for a considerable time during which 31 kings ruled over an extended period of 17 generations The rule of the Shang kings has been described as hegemonic Royal authority flowed from the person of the king enforced by his military Neighbouring clans were allied through marriage and adopted into the Shang ancestral temple 8 A poem about the last years of the Shang dynasty reads Heaven sends down death and disorder famine comes repeatedly 9 Paleoclimatic data show a long term period of cooling in the northern hemisphere which reached its maximum right around the fall of the Shang 10 In 1059 BCE two unusual celestial phenomena took place in May the densest clustering in five hundred years time of the five planets visible to the naked eye could be seen in the constellation of Cancer and a few seasons later Comet 1P Halley appeared 11 One or more of these 12 was interpreted by the powerful Lord of Zhou as a visible sign indicating supernatural approval 13 Early records such as the inscription on the Da Yu ding employ language more descriptive than theoretical the great command in the sky 天有大令 14 b Although both the Shang and Zhou claimed divine ancestry 15 the Zhou were the first to use the concept of the Mandate of Heaven to explain their right to assume rule and presumed that the only way to hold the mandate was to rule well in the eyes of Heaven They also stated that the Shang came into power because the Xia had lost their mandate which had then been bestowed upon the Shang leading to the fall of the Xia and the rise of the Shang 16 The Xia gave precedent and legitimacy to the Zhou s own rebellion 17 No Western Zhou bronze inscriptions mention the Xia or any other dynasty preceding the Shang 18 The Zhou believed that the Shang ruling house had become morally corrupt and that the Shang leaders loss of virtue entitled their own house to take over 19 The overthrow of the Shang Dynasty they said was in accordance with the mandate given by Heaven Even at the time of the inauguration ritual of third generation King Kang of Zhou the royal command read out to the new king explicitly stated the belief that Heaven had changed its mandate 20 In the political theory of the Zhou legitimate authority flowed directly from Heaven to their founding dynast King Wen Although he did not live to see the Zhou conquest of Shang his legitimacy passed to his heirs 21 Early on in the dynasty there was some debate as to whether Heaven s mandate had fallen to the senior sons of King Wen s line or to the house of Zhou as a group as exemplified by an exchange surviving in the classic Book of Documents 22 Eastern Zhou Edit The Zhou dynasty was marked by early success and expansion until the death on campaign of King Kang s successor King Zhao of Zhou 23 During the ensuing centuries central authority waned overall driven by socioeconomic pressures This culminated in a succession crisis which saw the aristocracy split between two competing candidates for a number of years When the crisis resolved the royal house retained only a tiny amount of land and no real military power This marked the beginning of the Eastern Zhou During the decline of the royal house although real power was wrested from their grasp their divine legitimacy was not brought into question and even with the king reduced to something of a figurehead his prestige remained supreme as Heaven s eldest son 24 However there is epigraphic evidence that in private the rulers of the state of Qin which would go on to conquer everyone else and become the first dynasty of the imperial era held that their ancestors had received Heaven s mandate As early as the 600s BCE multiple inscriptions attest to this idea 25 It is unclear whether the Qin rulers meant they believed they had celestial approval to replace the Zhou kings whether they believed themselves the appointed heirs of the Zhou should the royal line come to an end 26 or whether their receipt of Heaven s mandate was construed as issuing through the Zhou king to give them legitimate authority over their own lands 27 Qin and Han dynasties Edit When the Zhou dynasty did come to an end Qin absorbed the remainder of their lands as well as those of all their competitors The Mandate of Heaven did not play a direct part in their public relations going unmentioned in all surviving material 28 The Qin dynasty was not long lived after the death of first emperor Qin Shihuang widespread revolts by prisoners peasants unhappy soldiers ambitious minor officials and remnants of the recently defeated aristocracy rapidly downfell the central government 29 The ensuing Chu Han contention ended with the success of Liu Bang and establishment of the Han dynasty Surviving historical documents from the Han dynasty paint the preceding Qin in a deeply unfavourable light emphasising tyrannical policies the incompetence of the second emperor and giving an account of illegitimate birth for the first emperor 30 31 In this portrayal it is clear the Qin had lost the Mandate if they had ever possessed it to begin with It was an uncomfortable fact that Han founder Liu Bang rose to power from a background outside the aristocracy and achieved victory through military accomplishments To accommodate this Liu Bang was ascribed a magical birth and later a divine ancestry 32 33 When Wang Mang took power at the end of the western Han he used the acceptance of the theory of Heaven s Mandate to his advantage Auspicious unusual events were said to portend Heaven s choosing a new heir so Wang fabricated omens indicating that Heaven had changed its mandate and that it had chosen him 34 Following the restoration of the Han house to power the Mandate of Heaven stood on uncertain grounds Some theorists decoupled judgements of virtue from the mandate seeing it primarily as inherited through ancestry while others abandoned the concept altogether in favour of five phases theories 35 Era of disunity Edit The final Han emperor abdicated to the powerful minister Cao Pi in CE 220 and in this transfer of power the idea of Heaven s mandate played a large role The court prognosticator Xu Zhi 許芝 enumerated in a lengthy memorandum the signs he had located in divinatory and historical texts showing that Cao Pi s Wei should succeed the Han 36 A sequence of written statements by various officials followed culminating in Emperor Xian of Han s formal announcement of abdication and Cao Pi s accession 37 The announcement of abdication explicitly mentioned that the mandate of Heaven was not permanent and no one argued that the virtue of the house of Han had not been in decline for some time 38 In the eyes of these authors Heaven s mandate followed virtue 39 While the idea that Cao Wei was Heaven s legitimate successor predominated for several centuries the alternate theory that Heaven s mandate instead fell to the rival state of Shu Han was first articulated by Xi Zuochi in the 300s 40 and was universally accepted by the much later Song dynasty 41 The last Wei emperor abdicated in turn to the Western Jin This dynasty soon lost control of northern China to non Han ethnic groups and in the literature of the southern dynasties that followed there began to appear an object called the State Transmitting Seal This magical talisman was the physical manifestation of Heaven s mandate tied up in the fortunes of ruling families allowing the exiled southern aristocracy to retain their sense of cultural superiority and maintain the validity of Heaven s mandate in the face of counterfactual political reality 42 Five Dynasties period Edit Main article Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period there was no dominant Chinese dynasty that ruled all of China This created a problem for the Song dynasty that followed as they wanted to legitimize their rule by establishing a clear transmission of the Mandate from the Tang through to the Song The scholar official Xue Juzheng compiled the Old History of the Five Dynasties 五代史 during the 960s and 970s after the Song dynasty had taken northern China from the last of the Five Dynasties the Later Zhou A major purpose of the book was to establish justification for the transference of the Mandate of Heaven through these five dynasties and thus to the Song dynasty He argued that these dynasties met certain vital criteria to be considered as having attained the Mandate of Heaven despite never having ruled all of China One is that they all ruled the traditional Chinese heartland However there were certain other areas where these dynasties all clearly fell short The brutal behavior of Zhu Wen and his Later Liang was a source of considerable embarrassment and thus there was pressure to exclude them from the Mandate The following three dynasties the Later Tang Later Jin and Later Han were all non Han Chinese dynasties with rulers from the Shatuo ethnic minority Additionally none of them were able to defeat the powerful states to the south and unify the entire Chinese realm However Xue Juzheng concluded that the Mandate had indeed passed through each of the Five Dynasties and thus onto the Song Dynasty when it conquered the last of those dynasties 43 Qing dynasty Edit Main article Transition from Ming to Qing The Qing dynasty was established by the Manchus who conquered the China proper Nurhaci who was regarded the founding father of the Qing dynasty was originally a vassalage to the Ming dynasty and later rebelled against the Ming with the Seven Grievances But according to the Qing rulers it was the peasant rebels led by Li Zicheng who overthrew the Ming and so the Qing were not responsible for the destruction of the Ming dynasty Instead the Qing argued they had obtained the Mandate of Heaven by defeating the many rebels and bandits that the Ming had failed to control and restoring stability to the empire 44 Just as stability was a sign of Heaven s favor difficulties were a sign of Heaven s displeasure Thus emperors in the Qing and earlier dynasties often interpreted natural disasters during their reigns as reasons to reflect on their failures to act and govern correctly 45 The right to rule and the right of rebellion EditMencius stated that 46 The people are of supreme importance the altars of soil and grain come next last comes the ruler That is why he who gains the confidence of the multitudinous people will be Emperor When a local lord endangers the altars of soil and grain he should be replaced When the sacrificial animals are sleek the offerings are clean and the sacrifices are observed at due times and yet floods and droughts come by the agency of heaven then the altars should be replaced Mencius 盡心下 Thus the Mandate of Heaven does not confer an unconditional right to rule To retain the Mandate of Heaven a ruler s performance had to be just and effective and not excessively expand and maintain power outside the nation s borders 47 The people retained a right to rebel 48 39 Of the political philosophers of the Warring States period Mencius was perhaps the most radically revolutionary deliberately eliding any distinction between overthrowing a wicked ruler and punishing a common criminal 49 The more conservative Xunzi writing not much later regarded rebellion as the apical manifestation of an unfit ruler s ineptitude only justified if already inevitable 50 Meanwhile the authoritarian Han Feizi rejected entirely the concept of a just rebellion going as far as denouncing such culture heroes as Tang of Shang and Wu of Zhou rebels who founded successful empires 51 By the time of the Han dynasty the right to rebellion was a politically sensitive topic as the Han rulers could neither deny their own history as being birthed in rebellion nor embrace the idea that they should themselves be overthrown 52 The right of rebellion against an unjust ruler has been a part of Chinese political philosophy ever since the Zhou dynasty and the successful rebellion was interpreted by Chinese historians as evidence that divine approval had passed on to the successive dynasty The Right of Rebellion is not coded into any official law Rather rebellion is always outlawed and severely punished but is still a positive right grounded in the Chinese moral system Often it is used as a justification for actions to overthrow a previous dynasty after a rebellion has been successful and a new dynastic rule has been established Since the winner is the one who determines who has obtained the Mandate of Heaven and who has lost it some Chinese scholars consider it to be a sort of victor s justice best characterized in the popular Chinese saying The winner becomes king the loser becomes outlaw Chinese 成者爲王 敗者爲寇 Due to this it is considered that Chinese historical accounts of the fall of a dynasty and the rise of a new one must be handled with caution Chinese traditional historical compilation methods produce accounts that tend to fit their account to the theory emphasizing aspects tending to prove that the old dynasty lost the Mandate of Heaven and the new one gained it and de emphasizing other aspects citation needed In the 20th and 21st centuries Confucianist elements of student rebellions often claimed the Mandate of Heaven has been forfeited as demonstrated by their large scale activism with notable instances including the 2014 Sunflower Student Movement in Taiwan and the 2014 and 2019 Hong Kong protests 53 54 In imperial times Chinese emperors invoked de by striving to be good influences and performing rituals to benefit their status and keep the Mandate of Heaven 55 Also the Mandate could not be given to several emperors or rulers at once 56 Influence EditBecause of China s influence in medieval times the concept of the Mandate of Heaven spread to other East Asian countries as a justification for rule by divine political legitimacy 57 In Korea the kingdom of Goguryeo one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea adopted the Chinese concept of tianxia which was based on Mandate of Heaven however in Goguryeo it was changed to be based on divine ancestry The kingdom of Silla is also said to have adopted the Mandate of Heaven 58 but the earliest records are from Joseon Dynasty which made the Mandate of Heaven an enduring state ideology 59 The ideology was also adopted in Vietnam known in Vietnamese as Thien mệnh Chữ Han 天命 A divine mandate gave the Vietnamese emperor the right to rule based not on his lineage but on his competence to govern 60 The later and more centralized Vietnamese dynasties adopted Confucianism as the state ideology which led to the creation of a Vietnamese tributary system in Southeast Asia that was modeled after the Chinese Sinocentric system in East Asia 61 In Japan the title Son of Heaven was interpreted literally where the monarch was referred to as a demigod deity or living god chosen by the gods and goddesses of heaven 62 Eventually the Japanese government found the concept ideologically problematic preferring not to have divine political legitimacy that was conditional and that could be withdrawn The Japanese Taihō Code formulated in 703 was largely an adaptation of the governmental system of the Tang dynasty but the Mandate of Heaven was specifically omitted citation needed References EditNotes Edit The mandate of Heaven s Mandate is the same word 命 the sovereign used to appoint an aristocratic relative to rule a regional state In this sense the relation between Heaven and the sovereign was analogous to the relation between the sovereign and the regional lord 2 The early word here for command 令 ling had either not yet diverged from the modern version 命 ming or was written to express the same word Citations Edit a b Harari 2015 p 219 von Falkenhausen 1996 p 9 Ebrey 2010 p 179 Nylan 2007 p 75 Szczepanski Kallie What Is the Mandate of Heaven in China About Education Archived from the original on October 8 2014 Retrieved December 4 2015 Lai 2002 p 95 Chen 2002 p 291 Li 2008 pp 26 27 Chittick 2003 p 174 Hinsch 1988 p 139 Pankenier 1995 pp 123 124 129 Allan 2007 p 38 Li 2008 pp 30 31 Allan 2007 p 39 Allan 2007 pp 13 33 Zhao 2009 Pines 2008 p 3 Allan 2007 p 40 Song 2019 pp 515 516 Shaughnessy 1989 p 54 Li 2008 pp 294 295 Shaughnessy 1993 pp 58 59 Li 2008 p 34 Pines 2004 p 23 Pines 2006 pp 18 21 Pines 2006 p 19 Pines 2004 p 16 Pines 2008 p 22 Dull 1983 pp 313 317 Sorensen 2010 p 15 Goldin 2000 pp 78 79 Wang 2001 p 20 Nylan 2007 p 72 Sukhu 2006 p 120 Sukhu 2006 p 133 Chen and Pei vol 2 pp 63 64 Chen and Pei vol 2 pp 62 75 Chen and Pei vol 2 pp 62 66 68 Farmer 2001 pp 51 52 Chittick 1998 p 48 Yong 1782 vol 45 p 17 Rogers 1968 pp 61 62 Mote 1999 pp 8 10 Mote 1999 p 819 Mote 1999 p 637 Mencius 2004 Mencius Lau D C Dim Cheuk Rev ed London Penguin ISBN 978 0140449716 OCLC 56648867 Cartwright Mark 2017 07 25 Mandate of Heaven World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2023 04 28 Marquis Christopher Qiao Kunyuan 2022 Mao and Markets The Communist Roots of Chinese Enterprise New Haven Yale University Press doi 10 2307 j ctv3006z6k ISBN 978 0 300 26883 6 JSTOR j ctv3006z6k OCLC 1348572572 S2CID 253067190 Pines 2008 pp 15 16 Pines 2008 pp 19 20 Pines 2008 pp 20 22 Pines 2008 p 24 Ming sho Ho Challenging Beijing s Mandate of Heaven Taiwan s Sunflower Movement and Hong Kong s Umbrella Movement Temple University Press 2019 Thomas B Gold Occupy Central Sunflower Popular Resistance in Greater China Foreign Policy Research Institute E Notes Oct 2014 online Archived 2019 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Stefon Matt de Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 23 Harari 2015 p 220 Jenkins Brian Why the North Vietnamese will keep fighting PDF RAND Archived PDF from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 5 2015 Noh 2014 South Korea s President Lost the Mandate of Heaven Archived from the original on 2017 12 01 Retrieved 2017 11 30 Woodside 1971 p 9 Woodside 1971 pp 234 237 Dull 1990 p 59 Sources Edit Allan Sarah 2007 On the identity of Shang Di 上帝 and the origin of the concept of a Celestial Mandate Tian Ming 天命 Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 31 1 46 doi 10 1017 S0362502800001796 JSTOR 23354211 S2CID 159662391 Chen Sanping 2002 Son of Heaven and Son of God Interactions among Ancient Asiatic Cultures regarding Sacral Kingship and Theophoric Names Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 3 Cambridge University Press 12 3 289 325 doi 10 1017 S1356186302000330 JSTOR 25188290 S2CID 163065574 Chen Shou 1977 429 Pei Songzhi ed Annotations to Records of the Three Kingdoms 三國志注 Taipei Dingwen Printing Chittick Andrew 1998 Dynastic Legitimacy during the Eastern Chin Hsi Tso ch ih and the Problem of Huan Wen Asia Major Academica Sinica 11 1 21 52 JSTOR 41645534 Chittick Andrew 2003 The life and legacy of Liu Biao governor warlord and imperial pretender in late Han China Journal of Asian History Harrassowitz Verlag 37 2 155 186 JSTOR 41933339 Dull Jack 1983 Anti Qin Rebels No Peasant Leaders Here Modern China Sage Publications 9 3 285 318 doi 10 1177 009770048300900302 JSTOR 188992 S2CID 143585546 Dull Jack 1990 The Evolution of Government in China Heritage of China Contemporary Perspectives on Chinese Civilization University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06441 6 Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2010 1996 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 12433 1 Farmer J Michael 2001 What s in a Name On the Appellative Shu in Early Medieval Chinese Historiography Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 1 44 59 doi 10 2307 606728 JSTOR 606728 Goldin Paul Rikita 2000 Personal Names in Early China A Research Note Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 1 77 81 doi 10 2307 604887 JSTOR 604887 Harari Yuval Noah 2015 Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind Translated by Harari Yuval Noah Purcell John Watzman Haim London Penguin Random House UK ISBN 978 0 09 959008 8 OCLC 910498369 Hinsch Bret 1988 Climatic change and history in China Journal of Asian History Harrassowitz Verlag 29 2 131 159 JSTOR 41930720 Jiang Yonglin 2011 The Mandate of Heaven and The Great Ming Code Asian Law Series Vol 21 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0295990651 Lai Hongyi Harry 2002 The Life Span of Unified Regimes in China China Review Chinese University of Hong Kong Press 2 2 93 124 JSTOR 23462051 Lee Jen der 2014 Crime and Punishment The Case of Liu Hui in the Wei Shu Early Medieval China A Sourcebook New York Columbia University Press pp 156 165 ISBN 978 0 231 15987 6 archived from the original on 2023 04 20 retrieved 2021 08 09 Li Feng 2008 Bureaucracy and the State in Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88447 1 Mote F W 1999 Imperial China 900 1800 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01212 7 Noh Tae don 2014 Korea s Ancient Koguryŏ Kingdom A Socio Political History Translated by John Huston Brill ISBN 9789004262690 Archived from the original on 2020 08 30 Retrieved 2021 02 27 Nylan Michael 2007 Empire in the Classical Era in China 304 BC AD 316 Oriens Extremus Harrassowitz Verlag 46 48 83 JSTOR 24047664 Pankenier David W 1995 The cosmo political background of Heaven s Mandate Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 20 121 176 doi 10 1017 S0362502800004466 JSTOR 23351765 S2CID 157710102 Pines Yuri 2004 The question of interpretation Qin history in light of new epigraphic sources Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 29 1 44 doi 10 1017 S0362502800007082 JSTOR 23354539 S2CID 163441973 Pines Yuri 2006 Biases and their Sources Qin history in the Shiji Oriens Extremus Harrassowitz Verlag 45 10 34 JSTOR 24047638 Pines Yuri 2008 To Rebel is Justified The Image of Zhouxin and the Legitimacy of Rebellion in the Chinese Political Tradition Oriens Extremus Harrassowitz Verlag 47 1 24 JSTOR 24048044 Rogers Michael C 1968 The Myth of the Battle of the Fei River A D 383 T oung Pao Lieden Brill 54 1 3 50 72 doi 10 1163 156853268X00024 JSTOR 4527704 Shaughnessy Edward L 1989 The Role of Grand Protector Shi in the Consolidation of the Zhou Conquest Ars Orientalis The Smithsonian Institution 19 51 77 JSTOR 4629387 Shaughnessy Edward L 1993 The Duke of Zhou s Retirement in the East and the Beginnings of the Ministerial Monarch Debate in Chinese Political Philosophy Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 18 41 72 doi 10 1017 S0362502800001486 JSTOR 23351745 S2CID 163103754 Song Yunwoo 2019 The Emergence of the Notion of Predetermined Fate in Early China Dao A Journal of Comparative Philosophy Springer 18 4 509 529 doi 10 1007 s11712 019 09684 1 S2CID 213932724 Sorensen AErenlund 2010 How the First Emperor unified the minds of contemporary historians the inadequate source criticism in modern historical works about the Chinese bronze age Monumenta Serica Taylor amp Francis 58 1 30 doi 10 1179 mon 2010 58 1 001 JSTOR 41417876 S2CID 152767331 Sukhu Gopal 2006 Yao Shun and prefiguration the origins and ideology of the Han imperial genealogy Early China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 30 91 153 doi 10 1017 S0362502800002194 JSTOR 23354260 S2CID 171295656 von Falkenhausen Lothar 1996 The Concept of Wen in the Ancient Chinese Ancestral Cult Chinese Literature Essays Articles Reviews CLEAR 18 1 22 doi 10 2307 495623 JSTOR 495623 Wang Aihe 2001 Creators of an Emperor The Political Group behind the Founding of the Han Empire Asia Major Academica Sinica 14 1 19 50 JSTOR 41645568 Woodside Alexander 1971 Vietnam and the Chinese Model A Comparative Study of Vietnamese and Chinese Government in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 93721 5 Yong Rong 永瑢 et al eds 1931 1782 四庫全書總目提要 Annotated Bibliography of the Four Treasuries Vol 10 Shanghai Commercial Press Zhao Dingxin November 2009 The Mandate of Heaven and Performance Legitimation in Historical and Contemporary China American Behavioral Scientist Sage Publications 53 3 416 433 doi 10 1177 0002764209338800 S2CID 145376213 Further reading Edit T ang Chun i 1962 The T ien Ming Heavenly Ordinance in Pre Ch in China Philosophy East and West University of Hawaiʻi Press 11 4 195 218 doi 10 2307 1397023 JSTOR 1397023 T ang Chun i 1962 The T ien Ming Heavenly Ordinance in Pre Ch in China II Philosophy East and West University of Hawaiʻi Press 12 1 29 49 doi 10 2307 1397244 JSTOR 1397244 See also EditInteractions Between Heaven and Mankind Monarchy of China East Asian cultural sphere Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mandate of Heaven amp oldid 1176160200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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