fbpx
Wikipedia

Yu the Great

Yu the Great (大禹) was a legendary king in ancient China who was famed for his introduction of flood control, his establishment of the Xia dynasty which inaugurated dynastic rule in China, and his upright moral character.[1][2] He figures prominently in the Chinese legend of "Great Yu Who Controlled the Waters" (Chinese: 大禹治水; pinyin: Dà Yǔ Zhì Shuǐ).

Yu
Song Dynasty depiction of Yu
King of the Xia dynasty
PredecessorShun
SuccessorQi
BornShiquan County
DiedMount Kuaiji
SpouseLady Tushan
IssueQi of Xia
FatherGun
MotherNüzhi
Chinese name
Chinese大禹

The dates which have been proposed for Yu's reign predate the oldest-known written records in China, the oracle bones of the late Shang dynasty, by nearly a millennium.[3] Yu's name was not inscribed on any artifacts which were produced during the proposed era in which he lived, nor was it inscribed on the later oracle bones; his name was first inscribed on vessels which date back to the Western Zhou period (c. 1045–771 BC).

The lack of substantial contemporary documentary evidence has caused some controversy over Yu's historicity. Thus, proponents of his existence theorize that stories about his life and reign were orally transmitted in various areas of China until they were eventually recorded during the Zhou dynasty,[4] while opponents of it believe that the figure existed in legend in a different form—as a god or a mythical beast—during the Xia dynasty, and morphed into a human figure by the start of the Zhou dynasty. Many of the stories about Yu were collected in Sima Qian's famous Records of the Grand Historian. Yu and other "sage-kings" of Ancient China were lauded for their virtues and morals by Confucius and other Chinese teachers.[5]

Yu is one of the few Chinese monarchs who is posthumously honored with the epithet "the Great".

Name

Shuowen Jiezi (121 BC) gives the earliest Chinese dictionary definition of yu : "a 'bug, reptile', from the 'animal trampling tracks' radical, a 'pictograph' (蟲也从厹象形)".[6]

Sinologist Axel Schuessler reconstructs 's Old Chinese pronunciation as *waɁ, and compares it to either Proto-Tibeto-Burman *was "bee; honey" or Proto-Waic *wak "insect" (further from Proto-Palaungic *ʋaːk).[7][8]

Ancestry and early life

 
Han dynasty depiction of Yu from the Wu Laing shrine.

Chinese sources uniformly asserted that Yu was the son of Gun (鯀) (lit. "big fish"),[9] though they differed on Gun's origins. According to Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, Yu's father was Gun, grandfather was Zhuanxu, great-grandfather was Changyi, and great-great-grandfather was the Yellow Emperor, Changyi & Gun being mere officials, not emperors.[10][11][12][13] Book of Han, quoting Lord Yu Imperial Lineage, stated that Yu's father Gun was a five-generation-descendant of Zhuanxu.[14] The Classic of Mountains and Seas stated that Yu's father Gun (also known as "White Horse" Báimǎ) was the son of Luómíng, who in turn was the son of the Yellow Emperor.[15]

Yu's father, Gun, was enfeoffed at Shiniu of Mount Wen (汶山), in modern-day Beichuan County, Sichuan Province; Yu was said to have been potentially born there,[16] though there are debates as to whether he was born in Shifang instead.[17] Yu's mother was of the Youxin clan (有莘氏) named either Nüzhi (女志) or Nüxi (女嬉). His surname was Si, later Xia after the state he was enfeoffed with, while his personal name was Wenming (文命), according to the Records of the Grand Historian.[18][19][20]

When Yu was a child, Emperor Yao enfeoffed Gun as lord of Chong, usually identified as the middle peak of Mount Song. Yu is thus believed to have grown up on the slopes of Mount Song, just south of the Yellow River.[21] He later married a woman from Mount Tu (塗山) who is generally referred to as Tushanshi (塗山氏; 'Lady Tushan').[22] They had a son named Qi, a name literally meaning "revelation".[22]

The location of Mount Tu has always been disputed. The two most probable locations are Mount Tu in Anhui Province and the Tu Peak of the Southern Mountain in Chongqing Municipality.[citation needed]

Personality

According to the Records of the Grand Historian, Yu was described as a credulous, hard working, quick witted person with moral.[23]

Great Yu controls the waters

During the reign of Emperor Yao, the Chinese heartland was frequently plagued by floods that prevented further economic and social development.[24] Yu's father, Gun, was tasked with devising a system to control the flooding. He spent more than nine years building a series of dikes and dams along the riverbanks, but all of this was ineffective, despite (or because of) the great number and size of these dikes and the use of a special self-expanding soil. As an adult, Yu continued his father's work and made a careful study of the river systems in an attempt to learn why his father's great efforts had failed.

Collaborating with Hou Ji, a semi-mythical agricultural master, Yu successfully devised a system of flood controls that were crucial in establishing the prosperity of the Chinese heartland. Instead of directly damming the rivers' flow, Yu made a system of irrigation canals which relieved floodwater into fields, as well as spending great effort dredging the riverbeds.[12] Yu is said to have eaten and slept with the common workers and spent most of his time personally assisting the work of dredging the silty beds of the rivers for the thirteen years the projects took to complete. The dredging and irrigation were successful, and allowed ancient Chinese culture to flourish along the Yellow River, Wei River, and other waterways of the Chinese heartland. The project earned Yu renown throughout Chinese history, and is referred to in Chinese history as "Great Yu Controls the Waters" (Chinese: 大禹治水; Chinese: 大禹治水; pinyin: Dà Yǔ Zhì Shuǐ; Jyutping: Daai3 Jyu5 Zi6 Seoi2). In particular, Mount Longmen along the Yellow River had a very narrow channel which blocked water from flowing freely east toward the ocean. Yu is said to have brought a large number of workers to open up this channel, which has been known ever since as "Yu's Gateway" (Chinese: 禹門口).[12]

Apocryphal stories

In a mythical version of this story, presented in Wang Jia's 4th-century AD work Shi Yi Ji, Yu is assisted in his work by a yellow dragon (黃龍) and a black turtle (玄龜) (not necessarily related to the Black Tortoise (玄武) in Chinese mythology).[25] Another local myth says that Yu created the Sanmenxia in the Yellow River by cutting a mountain ridge with a divine battle-axe to control flooding.[26] This is perhaps a reference to a meteorite stone—something hard enough to etch away at the hard bedrock of Mount Longmen.

Traditional stories say that Yu sacrificed a great deal of his body to control the floods. For example, his hands were said to be thickly callused, and his feet were completely covered with calluses. In one common story, Yu had only been married four days when he was given the task of fighting the flood. He said goodbye to his wife, saying that he did not know when he would return. During the thirteen years of flooding, he passed by his own family's doorstep three times, but each time he did not return inside his own home. The first time he passed, he heard that his wife was in labor. The second time he passed by, his son could already call out to his father. His family urged him to return home, but he said it was impossible as the flood was still going on. The third time Yu was passing by, his son was more than ten years old. Each time, Yu refused to go in the door, saying that as the flood was rendering countless number of people homeless, he could not rest.[22][27]

Yu supposedly killed Gonggong's minister Xiangliu, a nine-headed snake monster.

Nine Provinces

 
Map showing the Nine provinces defined by Yu the Great during the legendary flood

Emperor Shun, who reigned after Yao, was so impressed by Yu's engineering work and diligence that he passed the throne to Yu instead of to his own son. Yu is said to have initially declined the throne, but was so popular with other local lords and chiefs that he agreed to become the new emperor, at age 53. He established a capital at Anyi (Chinese: 安邑), the ruins of which are in modern Xia County in southern Shanxi Province, and founded what would be called the Xia dynasty, traditionally considered China's first dynasty.[28]

Yu's flood control work is said to have made him intimately familiar with all regions of what was then Han Chinese territory. According to his Yu Gong treatise in the Book of Documents, Yu divided the Chinese "world" into nine zhou or provinces. These were Jizhou (冀州), Yanzhou (兗州), Qingzhou (靑州), Xuzhou (徐州), Yangzhou (揚州), Jingzhou (荊州), Yuzhou (豫州), Liangzhou (梁州) and Yongzhou (雍州).[29]

According to the Rites of Zhou there was no Xuzhou or Liangzhou, instead there were Youzhou (幽州) and Bingzhou (並州), but according to the Erya there was no Qingzhou or Liangzhou, instead there was Youzhou (幽州) and Yingzhou (營州).[29] Either way there were nine divisions. Once he had received bronze from these nine territories, he created ding vessels called the Nine Tripod Cauldrons.[30] Yu then established his capital at Yang City (陽城).[31] it is said in the book of documents that the maio people rebelled under there leader but he treated them bad so many left he fought with yu who had the intention to kill him but after defeating him spared him and reformed him for 3 years he became wise and ruled well and the people came back. [32] the Bamboo Annals says Yu killed one of the northern leaders, Fangfeng (防風) to reinforce his hold on the throne.[33][34]

 
Yu mausoleum in Shaoxing

Death

 
Yu temple in Yu mausoleum

According to the Bamboo Annals, Yu ruled the Xia Dynasty for forty-five years and, according to Yue Jueshu (越絕書), he died from an illness.[34][35] It is said that he died at Mount Kuaiji, south of present-day Shaoxing, while on a hunting tour to the eastern frontier of his empire, and was buried there. The Yu mausoleum (大禹陵) known today was first built in the 6th century AD (Southern and Northern Dynasties period) in his honor.[36] It is located four kilometers southeast of Shaoxing city.[36] Most of the structure was rebuilt many times in later periods. The three main parts of the mausoleum are the Yu tomb (禹陵), temple (禹廟) and memorial (禹祠).[37] Sima Qian once "went to Kuaiji and explored the cave of Yu". The tomb faces east and west and has a grate gate, a canal and a pavilion for the Great Yu Tomb.[38] In many statues he is seen carrying an ancient hoe (耒耜). A number of emperors in imperial times traveled there to perform ceremonies in his honor, notably Qin Shi Huang.[35]

Historicity

Because no contemporary documentary evidence about Yu survives, there is some controversy as to the historicity of this figure. No inscriptions on artifacts dated to the supposed era of Yu, or the later oracle bones, contain any mention of Yu. The first archeological evidence of Yu comes from vessels made about a thousand years after his supposed death, during the Western Zhou dynasty.

The Doubting Antiquity School of early-20th-century historians, for example, theorized that Yu was not a person in the earliest legends, but rather a god or mythical beast who was connected with water and possibly with the mythical legend Dragon Kings and their control over water. According to this theory, Yu (as god or beast) was represented on ceremonial bronzes by the early Xia people, and by the start of the Zhou Dynasty, the legendary figure had morphed into the first man, who could control water, and it was only during the Zhou Dynasty that the legendary figures that now precede Yu were added to the orthodox legendary lineage. According to the Chinese legend Yu the Great was a man-god.

Archaeological evidence of a large outburst flood at Jishi Gorge on the Yellow River has been dated to about 1920 B.C. This coincides with new cultures all along the Yellow River. The water control problems after the initial flooding could plausibly have lasted for some twenty years. Wu and coauthors suggest that this supports the idea that the stories of Yu the Great may have originated from a historical person.[39]

Legacy

 
Yu and his fellow kings of the water immortals in a shrine at the Anping Tianhou Temple in Tainan on Taiwan

Yu was long regarded as an ideal ruler and kind of philosopher king by the ancient Chinese. Beichuan, Wenchuan, and Dujiangyan in Sichuan have all made claims to be his birthplace.[40]

Owing to his involvement in China's mythical Great Flood, Yu also came to be regarded as a water deity in Taoism and the Chinese folk religions. He is the head of the "Five Kings of the Water Immortals" honored in shrines in Matsu temples as protectors of ships in transit.[41]

His personal name eventually became a Chinese surname. The name was a simplification of minor kingdom , in modern-day Shandong. After its conquest by the state of Lu, its subjects adopted Yu as a surname.[42] According to Zhan Guo Ce, alcohol was invented during his reign by the brewer Yidi (儀狄). [43]

See also

References

  1. ^ Mungello, David E. (2009). The Great Encounter of China and the West, 1500–1800 (3 ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 97. ISBN 9780742557987.
  2. ^ Dai & Gong (2003), p. 40
  3. ^ Underhill, Anne P., ed. (2013). A Companion to Chinese Archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 317. ISBN 978-1-4443-3529-3.
  4. ^ Allan, Sarah (1991). The Shape of the Turtle: Myth, Art, and Cosmos in Early China. State University of New York Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-7914-9449-3.
  5. ^ Dai & Gong (2003), p. 36
  6. ^ Xu Shen, SWJZ "Vol 15 - Radical 厹"
  7. ^ Schuessler, Axel (2007). ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese. University of Hawaii Press. p. 588
  8. ^ Sidwell, Paul (2015). The Palaungic Languages: Classification, Reconstruction and Comparative Lexicon. München: Lincom Europa. p. 103
  9. ^ Kangxi Dictionary, vol. 15 "魚 radical 7" quote: "鯀:《唐韻》《集韻》《正韻》𠀤古本切,音袞。《說文》魚也。《玉篇》大魚也。又《書·堯典》於,鯀哉。《傳》鯀,崇伯之名。《釋文》禹父也。《廣韻》亦作鮌。"
  10. ^ Sima Qian, Shiji, "Annals of Xia" quote: "禹之父曰鯀,鯀之父曰帝顓頊,顓頊之父曰昌意,昌意之父曰黃帝。禹者,黃帝之玄孫而帝顓頊之孫也。禹之曾大父昌意及父鯀皆不得在帝位,為人臣。"
  11. ^ Book of Generations' Origins (世本) "Xia" quote: "顓頊生鯀。…… 鯀為顓頊子。…… 顓頊生𩩌,𩩌生高密,是為禹也。
  12. ^ a b c Dai & Gong (2003), p. 38
  13. ^ Zynews.com. "Zynews.com." Xia dynasty brief history. Retrieved on 2010-09-18.
  14. ^ Hanshu "Chapter on Regulations and Calendars B" text: "伯禹帝系曰,顓頊五世而生鯀,鯀生禹"
  15. ^ Shanhaijing vol. 18 "黄帝生駱明,駱明生白馬,白馬是為鯀。"
  16. ^ "Jiangsu.gov.cn." 四川省汶川縣情及人文地理. (Chinese) Retrieved on 2010-09-18.
  17. ^ Scta.gov.cn. "Scta.gov.cn." (Chinese) Retrieved on 2010-09-18.
  18. ^ Shiji, "Annals of Xia" "夏禹,名曰文命。"
  19. ^ Sima Qian's discussion on "Annals of Xia" in Records of the Grand Historian: "禹爲姒姓,其後分封,用國爲姓,故有夏后氏、有扈氏、有男氏、斟尋氏、彤城氏、襃氏、費氏、杞氏、繒氏、辛氏、冥氏、斟戈氏/斟灌氏" translation: "Yu was surnamed Si, he later was enfeoffed [and] used the nation['s appellation] as surname. Thence [we] have the surnames: Xiahou (lit. "Lord Xia"), Youhu, Younan, Zhenxun, Tongcheng, Bao, Fei, Qi, Zeng, Xin, Ming, Zhenge/Zhenguan"
  20. ^ Shiji "Annals of the Five Emperors" "帝禹為夏后而別氏,姓姒氏。"
  21. ^ Hubeiwater.gov.cn. Hubeiwater.gov.cn 大禹三过家门而不入与洪湖抗洪十字歌的精神浅谈. (Chinese). Retrieved on 2010-09-18.
  22. ^ a b c Wang (2006), p. 18
  23. ^ Records of he Grand Historian, 禹爲人敏給克勤;其惪不違,其仁可親,其言可信;聲爲律,身爲度,稱以出
  24. ^ Lu, Xing. Rhetoric in ancient China, fifth to third century, B.C.E.: a comparison with classical Greek rhetoric. [1998] (1998). Univ of South Carolina Press publishing. ISBN 1-57003-216-5, ISBN 978-1-57003-216-5. p 46–47.
  25. ^ Lewis, Mark Edward (2006), The flood myths of early China, SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture, SUNY Press, pp. 104–105, 191–192, ISBN 0-7914-6663-9 (especially, notes 90 and 97). The relevant text is in Shi Yi Ji, Chapter 2: "黃龍曳尾於前,玄龜負青泥於後", etc.
  26. ^ Destguides.com. "Destguides.com". Sanmenxia. Retrieved on 2010-09-26.
  27. ^ Wang (2006), p. 19
  28. ^ Wang (2006), p. 21
  29. ^ a b Ng Saam-sing 吾三省. (2008). Zong-guok Man-faa Bui-ging Bat-cin Ci 中國文化背景八千詞. Hong Kong: Seong Mou Jan Syu Gwun 商務印書館(香港). ISBN 962-07-1846-1, ISBN 978-962-07-1846-5. p 37.
  30. ^ Bjaaland Welch, Patricia. [2008] (2008). Chinese art: a guide to motifs and visual imagery. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 0-8048-3864-X, 9780804838641. p 262.
  31. ^ 李玉潔. [2003] (2003). 中國早期國家性質. 知書房出版集團. ISBN 986-7938-17-8, ISBN 978-986-7938-17-6.
  32. ^ Confucius (2014). The Most Venerable Book (Shang Shu). Penguin Books, Limited. ISBN 978-0-14-119746-3.
  33. ^ 王仲孚. [1996] (1996). 中國上古史專題研究. 五南圖書出版股份有限公司. ISBN 957-11-1290-9, ISBN 978-957-11-1290-9. p 392.
  34. ^ a b Bamboo Annals Xia chapter
  35. ^ a b . Chinaculture.org. Archived from the original on 2010-09-11. Retrieved 2010-09-26.
  36. ^ a b China.org.cn. "China.org.cn." Yu Mausoleum. Retrieved on 2010-09-26.
  37. ^ lvyou.eco.gov.cn. "lvyou.eco.gov.cn." 治水英雄大禹的葬地:大禹陵. Retrieved on 2010-09-26.
  38. ^ "Yu mausoleum".
  39. ^ Qinglong Wu; et al. (2016). "Outburst flood at 1920 BCE supports historicity of China's Great Flood and the Xia dynasty". Science. 353 (6299): 579–582. Bibcode:2016Sci...353..579W. doi:10.1126/science.aaf0842. PMID 27493183. S2CID 206646492.
  40. ^ Sichuan.scol.com.cn. "Scol.com.cn." 发现西羌古道有关遗迹大禹故乡迷雾更浓 . Retrieved on 2010-09-26.
  41. ^ "Shuexian Deities", Official site, Tainan: Grand Matsu Temple, 2007.
  42. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland
  43. ^ Zhan Guo Ce,book23,Strategies of Wei,曰:「昔者,帝女〉令〈作酒而美,進之禹,禹飲而甘之,遂疏儀狄,絕旨酒."

Sources

  • 戴逸 (Dai Yi); 龔書鐸 (Gōng Shūduó) (2003). 中國通史. 史前 夏 商 西周 [History of China. Illustrated student edition]. Intelligence Press. ISBN 962-8792-80-6.
  • 王恆偉 (Wang Hengwei) (2006). "Yuan Gu Zhi Chunqiu" 遠古至春秋 [Ancient times to the Spring and Autumn period]. Zhongguo Lishi Jiangtang 中國歷史講堂 [Chinese history lectures]. Zhonghua Book Company (中華書局). ISBN 962-8885-24-3.
Yu the Great
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of China Succeeded by


great, 大禹, legendary, king, ancient, china, famed, introduction, flood, control, establishment, dynasty, which, inaugurated, dynastic, rule, china, upright, moral, character, figures, prominently, chinese, legend, great, controlled, waters, chinese, 大禹治水, piny. Yu the Great 大禹 was a legendary king in ancient China who was famed for his introduction of flood control his establishment of the Xia dynasty which inaugurated dynastic rule in China and his upright moral character 1 2 He figures prominently in the Chinese legend of Great Yu Who Controlled the Waters Chinese 大禹治水 pinyin Da Yǔ Zhi Shuǐ Yu禹Song Dynasty depiction of YuKing of the Xia dynastyPredecessorShunSuccessorQiBornShiquan CountyDiedMount KuaijiSpouseLady TushanIssueQi of XiaFatherGunMotherNuzhiChinese nameChinese大禹TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDa YǔGwoyeu RomatzyhDah YeuWade GilesTa4 Yu3IPA ta y Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationDaaih YuhJyutpingDaai6 Jyu5IPA ta ːi jy ː Southern MinHokkien POJTai i Tai uOld ChineseBaxter Sagart 2014 lˤat s ɢʷraʔThe dates which have been proposed for Yu s reign predate the oldest known written records in China the oracle bones of the late Shang dynasty by nearly a millennium 3 Yu s name was not inscribed on any artifacts which were produced during the proposed era in which he lived nor was it inscribed on the later oracle bones his name was first inscribed on vessels which date back to the Western Zhou period c 1045 771 BC The lack of substantial contemporary documentary evidence has caused some controversy over Yu s historicity Thus proponents of his existence theorize that stories about his life and reign were orally transmitted in various areas of China until they were eventually recorded during the Zhou dynasty 4 while opponents of it believe that the figure existed in legend in a different form as a god or a mythical beast during the Xia dynasty and morphed into a human figure by the start of the Zhou dynasty Many of the stories about Yu were collected in Sima Qian s famous Records of the Grand Historian Yu and other sage kings of Ancient China were lauded for their virtues and morals by Confucius and other Chinese teachers 5 Yu is one of the few Chinese monarchs who is posthumously honored with the epithet the Great Contents 1 Name 2 Ancestry and early life 3 Personality 4 Great Yu controls the waters 4 1 Apocryphal stories 5 Nine Provinces 6 Death 7 Historicity 8 Legacy 9 See also 10 References 11 SourcesName EditShuowen Jiezi 121 BC gives the earliest Chinese dictionary definition of yu 禹 a bug reptile from the animal trampling tracks radical a pictograph 蟲也从厹象形 6 Sinologist Axel Schuessler reconstructs 禹 s Old Chinese pronunciation as waɁ and compares it to either Proto Tibeto Burman was bee honey or Proto Waic wak insect further from Proto Palaungic ʋaːk 7 8 Ancestry and early life EditFor a family tree see Family tree of ancient Chinese emperors Han dynasty depiction of Yu from the Wu Laing shrine Chinese sources uniformly asserted that Yu was the son of Gun 鯀 lit big fish 9 though they differed on Gun s origins According to Sima Qian s Records of the Grand Historian Yu s father was Gun grandfather was Zhuanxu great grandfather was Changyi and great great grandfather was the Yellow Emperor Changyi amp Gun being mere officials not emperors 10 11 12 13 Book of Han quoting Lord Yu Imperial Lineage stated that Yu s father Gun was a five generation descendant of Zhuanxu 14 The Classic of Mountains and Seas stated that Yu s father Gun also known as White Horse Baimǎ was the son of Luoming who in turn was the son of the Yellow Emperor 15 Yu s father Gun was enfeoffed at Shiniu of Mount Wen 汶山 in modern day Beichuan County Sichuan Province Yu was said to have been potentially born there 16 though there are debates as to whether he was born in Shifang instead 17 Yu s mother was of the Youxin clan 有莘氏 named either Nuzhi 女志 or Nuxi 女嬉 His surname was Si later Xia after the state he was enfeoffed with while his personal name was Wenming 文命 according to the Records of the Grand Historian 18 19 20 When Yu was a child Emperor Yao enfeoffed Gun as lord of Chong usually identified as the middle peak of Mount Song Yu is thus believed to have grown up on the slopes of Mount Song just south of the Yellow River 21 He later married a woman from Mount Tu 塗山 who is generally referred to as Tushanshi 塗山氏 Lady Tushan 22 They had a son named Qi a name literally meaning revelation 22 The location of Mount Tu has always been disputed The two most probable locations are Mount Tu in Anhui Province and the Tu Peak of the Southern Mountain in Chongqing Municipality citation needed Personality EditAccording to the Records of the Grand Historian Yu was described as a credulous hard working quick witted person with moral 23 Great Yu controls the waters EditMain article Great Flood China During the reign of Emperor Yao the Chinese heartland was frequently plagued by floods that prevented further economic and social development 24 Yu s father Gun was tasked with devising a system to control the flooding He spent more than nine years building a series of dikes and dams along the riverbanks but all of this was ineffective despite or because of the great number and size of these dikes and the use of a special self expanding soil As an adult Yu continued his father s work and made a careful study of the river systems in an attempt to learn why his father s great efforts had failed Collaborating with Hou Ji a semi mythical agricultural master Yu successfully devised a system of flood controls that were crucial in establishing the prosperity of the Chinese heartland Instead of directly damming the rivers flow Yu made a system of irrigation canals which relieved floodwater into fields as well as spending great effort dredging the riverbeds 12 Yu is said to have eaten and slept with the common workers and spent most of his time personally assisting the work of dredging the silty beds of the rivers for the thirteen years the projects took to complete The dredging and irrigation were successful and allowed ancient Chinese culture to flourish along the Yellow River Wei River and other waterways of the Chinese heartland The project earned Yu renown throughout Chinese history and is referred to in Chinese history as Great Yu Controls the Waters Chinese 大禹治水 Chinese 大禹治水 pinyin Da Yǔ Zhi Shuǐ Jyutping Daai3 Jyu5 Zi6 Seoi2 In particular Mount Longmen along the Yellow River had a very narrow channel which blocked water from flowing freely east toward the ocean Yu is said to have brought a large number of workers to open up this channel which has been known ever since as Yu s Gateway Chinese 禹門口 12 Apocryphal stories Edit In a mythical version of this story presented in Wang Jia s 4th century AD work Shi Yi Ji Yu is assisted in his work by a yellow dragon 黃龍 and a black turtle 玄龜 not necessarily related to the Black Tortoise 玄武 in Chinese mythology 25 Another local myth says that Yu created the Sanmenxia in the Yellow River by cutting a mountain ridge with a divine battle axe to control flooding 26 This is perhaps a reference to a meteorite stone something hard enough to etch away at the hard bedrock of Mount Longmen Traditional stories say that Yu sacrificed a great deal of his body to control the floods For example his hands were said to be thickly callused and his feet were completely covered with calluses In one common story Yu had only been married four days when he was given the task of fighting the flood He said goodbye to his wife saying that he did not know when he would return During the thirteen years of flooding he passed by his own family s doorstep three times but each time he did not return inside his own home The first time he passed he heard that his wife was in labor The second time he passed by his son could already call out to his father His family urged him to return home but he said it was impossible as the flood was still going on The third time Yu was passing by his son was more than ten years old Each time Yu refused to go in the door saying that as the flood was rendering countless number of people homeless he could not rest 22 27 Yu supposedly killed Gonggong s minister Xiangliu a nine headed snake monster Nine Provinces EditMain articles Yu Gong Nine Provinces and Nine Tripod Cauldrons Map showing the Nine provinces defined by Yu the Great during the legendary flood Emperor Shun who reigned after Yao was so impressed by Yu s engineering work and diligence that he passed the throne to Yu instead of to his own son Yu is said to have initially declined the throne but was so popular with other local lords and chiefs that he agreed to become the new emperor at age 53 He established a capital at Anyi Chinese 安邑 the ruins of which are in modern Xia County in southern Shanxi Province and founded what would be called the Xia dynasty traditionally considered China s first dynasty 28 Yu s flood control work is said to have made him intimately familiar with all regions of what was then Han Chinese territory According to his Yu Gong treatise in the Book of Documents Yu divided the Chinese world into nine zhou or provinces These were Jizhou 冀州 Yanzhou 兗州 Qingzhou 靑州 Xuzhou 徐州 Yangzhou 揚州 Jingzhou 荊州 Yuzhou 豫州 Liangzhou 梁州 and Yongzhou 雍州 29 According to the Rites of Zhou there was no Xuzhou or Liangzhou instead there were Youzhou 幽州 and Bingzhou 並州 but according to the Erya there was no Qingzhou or Liangzhou instead there was Youzhou 幽州 and Yingzhou 營州 29 Either way there were nine divisions Once he had received bronze from these nine territories he created ding vessels called the Nine Tripod Cauldrons 30 Yu then established his capital at Yang City 陽城 31 it is said in the book of documents that the maio people rebelled under there leader but he treated them bad so many left he fought with yu who had the intention to kill him but after defeating him spared him and reformed him for 3 years he became wise and ruled well and the people came back 32 the Bamboo Annals says Yu killed one of the northern leaders Fangfeng 防風 to reinforce his hold on the throne 33 34 Yu mausoleum in ShaoxingDeath Edit Yu temple in Yu mausoleum According to the Bamboo Annals Yu ruled the Xia Dynasty for forty five years and according to Yue Jueshu 越絕書 he died from an illness 34 35 It is said that he died at Mount Kuaiji south of present day Shaoxing while on a hunting tour to the eastern frontier of his empire and was buried there The Yu mausoleum 大禹陵 known today was first built in the 6th century AD Southern and Northern Dynasties period in his honor 36 It is located four kilometers southeast of Shaoxing city 36 Most of the structure was rebuilt many times in later periods The three main parts of the mausoleum are the Yu tomb 禹陵 temple 禹廟 and memorial 禹祠 37 Sima Qian once went to Kuaiji and explored the cave of Yu The tomb faces east and west and has a grate gate a canal and a pavilion for the Great Yu Tomb 38 In many statues he is seen carrying an ancient hoe 耒耜 A number of emperors in imperial times traveled there to perform ceremonies in his honor notably Qin Shi Huang 35 Historicity EditBecause no contemporary documentary evidence about Yu survives there is some controversy as to the historicity of this figure No inscriptions on artifacts dated to the supposed era of Yu or the later oracle bones contain any mention of Yu The first archeological evidence of Yu comes from vessels made about a thousand years after his supposed death during the Western Zhou dynasty The Doubting Antiquity School of early 20th century historians for example theorized that Yu was not a person in the earliest legends but rather a god or mythical beast who was connected with water and possibly with the mythical legend Dragon Kings and their control over water According to this theory Yu as god or beast was represented on ceremonial bronzes by the early Xia people and by the start of the Zhou Dynasty the legendary figure had morphed into the first man who could control water and it was only during the Zhou Dynasty that the legendary figures that now precede Yu were added to the orthodox legendary lineage According to the Chinese legend Yu the Great was a man god Archaeological evidence of a large outburst flood at Jishi Gorge on the Yellow River has been dated to about 1920 B C This coincides with new cultures all along the Yellow River The water control problems after the initial flooding could plausibly have lasted for some twenty years Wu and coauthors suggest that this supports the idea that the stories of Yu the Great may have originated from a historical person 39 Legacy Edit Yu and his fellow kings of the water immortals in a shrine at the Anping Tianhou Temple in Tainan on Taiwan Yu was long regarded as an ideal ruler and kind of philosopher king by the ancient Chinese Beichuan Wenchuan and Dujiangyan in Sichuan have all made claims to be his birthplace 40 Owing to his involvement in China s mythical Great Flood Yu also came to be regarded as a water deity in Taoism and the Chinese folk religions He is the head of the Five Kings of the Water Immortals honored in shrines in Matsu temples as protectors of ships in transit 41 His personal name eventually became a Chinese surname The name was a simplification of minor kingdom 鄅 in modern day Shandong After its conquest by the state of Lu its subjects adopted Yu as a surname 42 According to Zhan Guo Ce alcohol was invented during his reign by the brewer Yidi 儀狄 43 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yu the Great China portal Biography portalFamily tree of ancient Chinese emperors Flood myth Great Flood China Natural disasters in China Yubu Rishu Xi Zhong the minister claimed to have served for the emperor and invented the chariot according to some Chinese sourcesReferences Edit Mungello David E 2009 The Great Encounter of China and the West 1500 1800 3 ed Rowman amp Littlefield p 97 ISBN 9780742557987 Dai amp Gong 2003 p 40 Underhill Anne P ed 2013 A Companion to Chinese Archaeology Wiley Blackwell p 317 ISBN 978 1 4443 3529 3 Allan Sarah 1991 The Shape of the Turtle Myth Art and Cosmos in Early China State University of New York Press p 21 ISBN 978 0 7914 9449 3 Dai amp Gong 2003 p 36 Xu Shen SWJZ Vol 15 Radical 厹 Schuessler Axel 2007 ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese University of Hawaii Press p 588 Sidwell Paul 2015 The Palaungic Languages Classification Reconstruction and Comparative Lexicon Munchen Lincom Europa p 103 Kangxi Dictionary vol 15 魚 radical 7 quote 鯀 唐韻 集韻 正韻 𠀤古本切 音袞 說文 魚也 玉篇 大魚也 又 書 堯典 於 鯀哉 傳 鯀 崇伯之名 釋文 禹父也 廣韻 亦作鮌 Sima Qian Shiji Annals of Xia quote 禹之父曰鯀 鯀之父曰帝顓頊 顓頊之父曰昌意 昌意之父曰黃帝 禹者 黃帝之玄孫而帝顓頊之孫也 禹之曾大父昌意及父鯀皆不得在帝位 為人臣 Book of Generations Origins 世本 Xia quote 顓頊生鯀 鯀為顓頊子 顓頊生𩩌 𩩌生高密 是為禹也 a b c Dai amp Gong 2003 p 38 Zynews com Zynews com Xia dynasty brief history Retrieved on 2010 09 18 Hanshu Chapter on Regulations and Calendars B text 伯禹帝系曰 顓頊五世而生鯀 鯀生禹 Shanhaijing vol 18 黄帝生駱明 駱明生白馬 白馬是為鯀 Jiangsu gov cn 四川省汶川縣情及人文地理 Chinese Retrieved on 2010 09 18 Scta gov cn Scta gov cn Chinese Retrieved on 2010 09 18 Shiji Annals of Xia 夏禹 名曰文命 Sima Qian s discussion on Annals of Xia in Records of the Grand Historian 禹爲姒姓 其後分封 用國爲姓 故有夏后氏 有扈氏 有男氏 斟尋氏 彤城氏 襃氏 費氏 杞氏 繒氏 辛氏 冥氏 斟戈氏 斟灌氏 translation Yu was surnamed Si he later was enfeoffed and used the nation s appellation as surname Thence we have the surnames Xiahou lit Lord Xia Youhu Younan Zhenxun Tongcheng Bao Fei Qi Zeng Xin Ming Zhenge Zhenguan Shiji Annals of the Five Emperors 帝禹為夏后而別氏 姓姒氏 Hubeiwater gov cn Hubeiwater gov cn 大禹三过家门而不入与洪湖抗洪十字歌的精神浅谈 Chinese Retrieved on 2010 09 18 a b c Wang 2006 p 18 Records of he Grand Historian 禹爲人敏給克勤 其惪不違 其仁可親 其言可信 聲爲律 身爲度 稱以出 Lu Xing Rhetoric in ancient China fifth to third century B C E a comparison with classical Greek rhetoric 1998 1998 Univ of South Carolina Press publishing ISBN 1 57003 216 5 ISBN 978 1 57003 216 5 p 46 47 Lewis Mark Edward 2006 The flood myths of early China SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture SUNY Press pp 104 105 191 192 ISBN 0 7914 6663 9 especially notes 90 and 97 The relevant text is in Shi Yi Ji Chapter 2 黃龍曳尾於前 玄龜負青泥於後 etc Destguides com Destguides com Sanmenxia Retrieved on 2010 09 26 Wang 2006 p 19 Wang 2006 p 21 a b Ng Saam sing 吾三省 2008 Zong guok Man faa Bui ging Bat cin Ci 中國文化背景八千詞 Hong Kong Seong Mou Jan Syu Gwun 商務印書館 香港 ISBN 962 07 1846 1 ISBN 978 962 07 1846 5 p 37 Bjaaland Welch Patricia 2008 2008 Chinese art a guide to motifs and visual imagery Tuttle Publishing ISBN 0 8048 3864 X 9780804838641 p 262 李玉潔 2003 2003 中國早期國家性質 知書房出版集團 ISBN 986 7938 17 8 ISBN 978 986 7938 17 6 Confucius 2014 The Most Venerable Book Shang Shu Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 119746 3 王仲孚 1996 1996 中國上古史專題研究 五南圖書出版股份有限公司 ISBN 957 11 1290 9 ISBN 978 957 11 1290 9 p 392 a b Bamboo Annals Xia chapter a b 大禹祭典 Chinaculture org Archived from the original on 2010 09 11 Retrieved 2010 09 26 a b China org cn China org cn Yu Mausoleum Retrieved on 2010 09 26 lvyou eco gov cn lvyou eco gov cn 治水英雄大禹的葬地 大禹陵 Retrieved on 2010 09 26 Yu mausoleum Qinglong Wu et al 2016 Outburst flood at 1920 BCE supports historicity of China s Great Flood and the Xia dynasty Science 353 6299 579 582 Bibcode 2016Sci 353 579W doi 10 1126 science aaf0842 PMID 27493183 S2CID 206646492 Sichuan scol com cn Scol com cn 发现西羌古道有关遗迹大禹故乡迷雾更浓 Retrieved on 2010 09 26 Shuexian Deities Official site Tainan Grand Matsu Temple 2007 The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland Zhan Guo Ce book23 Strategies of Wei 曰 昔者 帝女 令 作酒而美 進之禹 禹飲而甘之 遂疏儀狄 絕旨酒 Sources Edit戴逸 Dai Yi 龔書鐸 Gōng Shuduo 2003 中國通史 史前 夏 商 西周 History of China Illustrated student edition Intelligence Press ISBN 962 8792 80 6 王恆偉 Wang Hengwei 2006 Yuan Gu Zhi Chunqiu 遠古至春秋 Ancient times to the Spring and Autumn period Zhongguo Lishi Jiangtang 中國歷史講堂 Chinese history lectures Zhonghua Book Company 中華書局 ISBN 962 8885 24 3 Yu the GreatXia dynastyRegnal titlesPreceded byEmperor Shun King of China Succeeded byQi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yu the Great amp oldid 1130996271, 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.