Knowledge (XXG)

Zu Ting

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513:—but Lady Lu and Mu Tipo opposed. He therefore entered an alliance with Empress Hu's brothers Hu Junyu (胡君瑜) and Hu Junbi (胡君璧), promoting them and hoping that they would assist him. He also had his associate Li Bolü (麗伯律) accuse Mu Tipo's associate Wang Zichong (王子沖) of accepting bribes—knowing that if Wang were convicted, both Mu Tipo and Lady Lu would be implicated. Lady Lu, however, figured out what was happening, and found ways to have Hu Junyu and Hu Junbi demoted, and further had Empress Hu deposed in late 572 and replaced with Consort Mu. Zu began to suffer in his relations with Gao Wei, as the eunuchs were by now defaming him. When Gao Wei consulted Lady Lu and Han, both Lady Lu and Han used the opportunity to accuse Zu of crimes. Gao Wei, because he had sworn an oath to Zu earlier, spared him from death, but demoted him to the governorship of North Xu Province (北徐州, roughly modern 152:, and he wrote a number of pipa pieces and invited the young men and women to dance to the music. He spent much time seeking thrills with other junior officials Chen Yuankang (陳元康), Mu Zirong (穆子容), Ren Zhou (任冑), and Yuan Shiliang (元士亮), including gambling and luxury living. Once, when Gao Huan blamed him for embezzlement, he was able to deflect the blame to his superior Lu Zixian (陸子先) -- although he later admitted to his colleagues that he, not Lu, was responsible. Once, when he visited the house of the official Sima Shiyun (司馬世雲), he stole mirrors from Sima's house, and while others were ashamed for him, he himself did not seem ashamed. He also stole money from the general Dou Tai (竇泰), but despite Dou's discovery of the theft, Gao Huan did not punish him. 497:
Shirang (封士讓) make a secret submission indicating that when Hulü had brought the army close to Yecheng in 571, he was plotting a coup. Gao Wei believed it this time, and under Zu's suggestion, he awarded Hulü a horse, and then, as Hulü arrived at the palace to thank the emperor, he had his guard commander Liu Taozhi (劉桃枝) seize Hulü and strangle him to death. Hulü's clan was slaughtered except for his youngest son Hulü Zhong (斛律鍾), and Empress Hulü was deposed. Subsequently, Lady Lu tried to have her adoptive daughter
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news and prepared to defend themselves. Emperor Wucheng arrested Zu and interrogated him—and when seeing Emperor Wucheng, Zu accused He Shikai, Zhao, and Gao Wenyao of corruption, factionalism, and favoritism. Emperor Wucheng took the accusations personally and felt that Zu was assaulting his own competence. When Zu brought up the fact that he had an excessive number of ladies-in-waiting, he became even more infuriated. His anger grew even more heated when Zu first compared him to
178:, and he took Zu back on his staff. Gao Cheng himself was assassinated by his servant Lan Jing (蘭京) in 549. Chen Yuankang was severely injured while making a futile attempt to save Gao Cheng, and while he was dying, he dictated his will to Zu and asked Zu to relay it to his brothers Chen Shuchen (陳叔諶) and Chen Jiqu (陳季璩). Zu intentionally omitted some of the properties and embezzled them. When Chen Shuchen later became aware of this, he complained to the official 360:). Zu took the chance to ingratiate himself with Lu Lingxuan and her brother Lu Xida (陸悉達), suggesting that he would be willing to serve as their strategist—and at the same time, He Shikai also thought of the same idea, and therefore recalled Zu back to the capital and reconciled with him. When, subsequently, Gao Wei's uncle Hu Changren (胡長仁) the Prince of Longdong formed a failed plot to assassinate He Shikai, it was Zu who suggested citing the example of how 412:
and never got off the horse as demanded by customs of the time. Hulü angrily stated, "Who does he think he is?" Zu, realizing that Hulü disliked him, bribed Hulü's servant and asked the servant about Hulü's opinion of him. The servant stated, "Ever since you came into power, the Minister Prince each night sighed and stated, "With a blind man in power, the empire will surely be destroyed." Meanwhile, Mu had once requested to marry Hulü's daughter by a
210:. As Emperor Wenxuan, he remembered Zu Ting's talent and recalled him to serve in his administration, putting him in charge of drafting edicts. However, he eventually again removed Zu from office for embezzlement. Whenever he saw Zu, he often referred to him as "the thief," for which Zu bore a grudge. It was probably during Emperor Wenxuan's reign when Zu first befriended Emperor Wenxuan's younger brother 214:, the Prince of Changguang, as one of Zu's talents was making walnut oil for paintings, and he once offered walnut oil to Gao Zhan. When he did so, he commented, "According to fortunetelling principles, Your Royal Highness' bone structure shows great honor. I have once dreamed that you rode a dragon to heaven." Gao Zhan responded, "If that happened, I will make you, my brother, rich and powerful." 416:, but Hulü refused. Further, when Mu requested that Gao Wei grant him the public fields at Jinyang, Hulü publicly opposed the action as being detrimental to the grazing of the army's horses. Zu and Mu therefore both despited Hulü. They therefore fostered suspicion of Hulü in the emperor's mind, and that suspicion was exacerbated by the fact that Hulü's daughter and Gao Wei's wife 533:
would be impossible for him to battle them. Despite the lack of reinforcements (as Mu Tipo refused to send them, hoping that the rebels would kill Zu for him), Zu, after battling some half a month, defeated the rebels. Zu subsequently died while still serving as the governor of North Xu Province, but the year is not recorded in history.
271:(retired emperor), he continued to be in charge of important decisions. As both he and Zu were still resentful of Emperor Wenxuan (because Emperor Wenxuan often battered Emperor Wucheng, and because Emperor Wenxuan often referred to Zu as "the thief"), Zu, in order to flatter Emperor Wucheng, suggested that Emperor Wenxuan's 252:. Both Zu and He Shikai thereafter persuaded Emperor Wucheng that, in light of astrological signs that the emperor position should change and that it would be even more honored to be an emperor's father than to be emperor, he should pass the throne to Crown Prince Wei. Emperor Wucheng agreed, and did so in summer 565. 291:(顯祖) would appear to denote. (Emperor Wenxuan was in fact Northern Qi's first emperor, but Emperor Wucheng did not view him as a founder as he viewed their father Gao Huan as the true founder of the dynasty.) Around the new year 566, by Zu's suggestion, Emperor Wenxuan's posthumous name was changed to 375:
refused to side with him and was put under house arrest. After He Shikai's death, Zu formed a closer relationship with Lady Lu, and in winter 571, it was by her suggestion that Gao Wei removed Zhao Yanshen from his office and made him a provincial governor, replacing him with Zu. Subsequently, when
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In 567, the ambitious Zu, wanting further promotion, wrote petitions accusing He Shikai, Zhao Yanshen (趙彥深), and Gao Wenyao (高文遙) of crimes and requested his friend Liu Ti (劉逖), a secretary to the emperor, to submit the petitions for him. Liu refused, but He Shikai, Zhao, and Gao Wenyao received the
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became regent. On one occasion, Zu was to submit a list of minor officials who were to be promoted—and he submitted a list of people who had bribed him. This was discovered, and he was sentenced to death by hanging, but Gao Yang pardoned him. Not changing his ways, he again secretly sold volumes
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By summer 572, both Zu and Mu Tipo were in conflict with Hulü Guang. Hulü disliked Zu, and he often complained to his generals that Zu rarely consulted military generals. Once, when he was resting at a governmental building, Zu, who was blind, rode past him without realizing that Hulü was there,
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within a span of several months. Agrarian rebellions rose in Northern Xu Province as a response to the Chen attack, and the rebels soon approached the capital of the province. Zu made surprise attacks on the rebels—particularly surprising them because they knew that he was blind and thought it
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Both Zu and Lady Lu then reported the song to Gao Wei to further foster his suspicion of Hulü. Gao Wei consulted another favorite, Han Zhangluan, who believed that he should not suspect Hulü, so Gao Wei initially took no action. Zu, however, would not relent, and he had Hulü's subordinate Feng
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temple that Gao Huan had commissioned, the Dingguo Temple (定國寺), was completed. When Gao Huan asked Chen and Wen Zisheng (溫子昇) for recommendations on someone who would be able to write an appropriate text for the dedication tablet, Chen recommended Zu. Gao Huan ordered Zu to write the dedication
221:, Zu was recalled to the government to serve as a commandery governor—but he never actually took office, as Yang Yin, who commissioned him to that office, was killed in a coup. Instead, he again became an imperial document drafter. After Emperor Fei was deposed in 560 and replaced by his uncle 332:
In 568, Emperor Wucheng died. He Shikai continued to be the most powerful official at court, but, even though he defeated several officials who tried to have him removed in 569, he had to share power with a number of individuals, including several of the young emperor Gao Wei's favorites—his
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In 565, Zu persuaded He Shikai that his fortune was linked to that of Emperor Wucheng—that as the other officials despised him, once Emperor Wucheng died, he would be in a desperate situation. He suggested to He Shikai that the solution was to suggest that the emperor pass the throne to his
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Also in 566, Zu and He Shikai falsely accused Emperor Wucheng's nephew Gao Xiaowan (高孝琬), the Prince of Hejian, of using witchcraft against Emperor Wucheng and satirizing the retired emperor. Eventually, Emperor Wucheng arrested and tortured Gao Xiaowan, leading to his death.
131:. Zu Ting himself was, in his youth, known for his quick reactions and literary talent, and he eventually became a low-level official. He once wrote a beautifully written ode on behalf of the official Moqi Shouluogan (万俟受洛干) -- an ode that Eastern Wei's paramount general 135:
read and was impressed by, and he retained Zu to be a secretary on his staff. Once, Gao Huan dictated 36 items to Zu, and Zu was able to write all of them down later without missing any single item, earning him great praise from his colleagues. Zu was also fluent in the
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Meanwhile, Zu, controlling the government, wanted to reorganize it to make it more efficient, reducing duplication in official responsibilities and wastefulness. He also wanted to remove incompetent and/or corrupt officials as well as reducing the ranks of
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However, Zu was also known for being a free spirit who did not follow the expected societal norms. Because he was in charge of regulating commerce while serving as Gao Huan's secretary, he took many bribes. He liked playing the
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text, and Zu completed a beautifully written text within two days. On account of the well-written text and the speed in which it was written, Gao Huan retracted the sentence of hard labor, but still removed him from his post.
166:(華林遍略) and sold them for money so that he could gamble. He also embezzled from the imperial granary. Both Gao Cheng and Gao Huan were angry, and they whipped him and sentenced him to hard labor. At that time, however, a new 237:, and He Shikai had him leave the capital to serve as a commandery governor, but Emperor Wucheng soon summoned Zu back to the capital to again be in charge of imperial edicts, and on one occasion Zu served as an envoy to the 311:
and then pointed out that his accomplishments were far less. Emperor Wucheng battered and whipped him and sentenced him to hard labor, and subsequently had him confined to a dungeon in Guang Province (光州, roughly modern
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monk Tanxian (曇獻), Gao Wei put her under house arrest. Zu, further trying to ingratiate himself with Lady Lu, suggested that Lady Lu be made empress dowager (under the precedence that the predecessor dynasty
182:, but Yang pointed out to Chen Shuchen that as those properties appeared to be themselves ill-gotten gains, making the matter public would be bad for Chen Yuankang's memory, and so the matter was dropped. 225:, Zu drew the new emperor's ire by submitting secret petitions excessively; Emperor Xiaozhao ordered his secretaries to refuse further submissions by Zu, but did not appear to remove him from his office. 352:. Also in 569, Gao Wei, remembering Zu's contribution to his becoming emperor, released Zu from the dungeon in Guang Province and made him the governor of Hai Province (海州, roughly modern 233:
In 561, Emperor Xiaozhao died, and Gao Zhan became emperor (as Emperor Wucheng). He quickly promoted Zu, although this brought jealousy from Emperor Wucheng's most trusted official
194:, and was again sentenced to death by hanging. Gao Yang, impressed by his talent and unwilling to put him to death, spared him from the death penalty but removed him from his post. 376:
Lady Lu, whom Gao Yan also targeted in his plot, suggested Gao Wei kill Gao Yan, Gao Wei took Zu into the palace and consulted him—and it was Zu, citing the example of the
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the Prince of Langye, unable to stand the hold that He Shikai had on power, killed him by trickery, but subsequently failed in seizing power when the famed general
431:, wanting to try to exploit Gao Wei's suspicions, decided to try to create a sense that Hulü would rebel. He wrote two songs in couplets, one of which read: 596: 408:. Lady Lu in turn praised Zu as "the Master Statesman" and "National Treasure." (However, Gao Wei never actually made Lady Lu empress dowager.) 555: 56: 41:
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forced his uncle Bo Zhao (薄昭) to commit suicide to persuade Gao Wei to force Hu to commit suicide, as Gao Wei eventually did.
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seed oil was used as a lighting source in the dungeon, over time, the smoke from the burning of the oil made Zu blind.
30: 218: 548: 384:, poisoning his equally treasonous brother Ji Qingfu (姬慶父), who persuaded Gao Wei to have Gao Yan killed. 21: 606: 401: 611: 501:
made empress but was forced to compromise with Empress Dowager Hu to have Empress Dowager Hu's niece
560: 543: 481:), and the songs soon became popular. Zu, exploiting the situation himself, added two more lines: 361: 380:
killing his treasonous brother the Ji Xian (姬鮮) the Lord of Guan and Ji You (姬友), a prince of
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Also in 572, Chen launched a major attack on Northern Qi, capturing the area between the
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He sent spies to spread the songs near the Northern Qi capital Yecheng (鄴城, in modern
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dynasty (550–577). He was renowned for his literary and administrative talents.
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officials. (Indeed, Zu was said to understand a number of non-Han languages.)
521:). When Zu initially refused to leave the palace, Han had him dragged out. 413: 404:), going as far as suggesting that Lady Lu was as great as the female deity 334: 265:
Although Emperor Wucheng passed the throne to Gao Wei and assumed the title
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made empress, a proposal that she had to formally make jointly with Zu.
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During the reigns of Emperor Wenxuan, Emperor Fei, and Emperor Xiaozhao
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yield the throne to him in 550, ending Eastern Wei and establishing
514: 478: 299:, both of which were still complimentary but less so than before. 174:
After Gao Huan died in 547, Gao Cheng took over as Eastern Wei's
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After Emperor Wenxuan died in 559 and was succeeded by his son
15: 127:Zu Ting's father Zu Ying (祖瑩) was a general during 155:Later, when Zu served on the staff of Gao Huan's 391:was found to have carried on an affair with the 140:language, at that time a rarity for ethnically 287:) nor was he a founder (which his temple name 185:After Gao Cheng's death, Gao Cheng's brother 8: 491:The talkative woman will be unable to speak. 459:The high mountain will collapse on its own, 279:be degraded—because Emperor Wenxuan was not 387:Also in winter 571, after Gao Wei's mother 57:Learn how and when to remove this message 400:'s emperors often made their wet nurses 101: 7: 486:The blind man will bear a great axe, 367:In 571, Gao Wei's younger brother 14: 556:History of the Northern Dynasties 162:, he stole volumes from the book 597:Northern Qi government officials 20: 468:will stand straight on its own. 445:A bright moon will shine over 204:Emperor Xiaojing of Eastern Wei 261:Before Emperor Wucheng's death 229:During Emperor Wucheng's reign 1: 328:After Emperor Wucheng's death 295:(景烈), and his temple name to 112:(孝征), was an official of the 99:Mandarin pronunciation:  420:was not favored by Gao Wei. 440:will fly up to the heavens, 633: 68: 94: 29:Some of this article's 423:At the same time, the 402:nurse empress dowagers 344:, the guard commander 256:During Gao Wei's reign 327: 260: 255: 228: 617:Northern Qi writers 602:Northern Wei people 544:Book of Northern Qi 348:, and the official 389:Empress Dowager Hu 362:Emperor Wen of Han 67: 66: 59: 624: 499:Consort Mu Sheli 454:The other read: 223:Emperor Xiaozhao 104: 100: 96: 62: 55: 51: 48: 42: 24: 16: 632: 631: 627: 626: 625: 623: 622: 621: 587: 586: 539: 330: 322:Chinese cabbage 273:posthumous name 263: 258: 231: 200: 125: 98: 84: 63: 52: 46: 43: 40: 25: 12: 11: 5: 630: 628: 620: 619: 614: 609: 604: 599: 589: 588: 585: 584: 568:Zizhi Tongjian 564: 552: 538: 535: 494: 493: 488: 471: 470: 461: 452: 451: 442: 329: 326: 268:Taishang Huang 262: 259: 257: 254: 230: 227: 199: 196: 192:Hualin Pianlüe 164:Hualin Pianlüe 124: 121: 65: 64: 47:September 2022 31:listed sources 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 629: 618: 615: 613: 610: 608: 605: 603: 600: 598: 595: 594: 592: 582: 578: 574: 570: 569: 565: 562: 558: 557: 553: 550: 546: 545: 541: 540: 536: 534: 531: 527: 522: 520: 516: 512: 506: 504: 500: 492: 489: 487: 484: 483: 482: 480: 476: 469: 467: 462: 460: 457: 456: 455: 450: 448: 443: 441: 437: 434: 433: 432: 430: 426: 425:Northern Zhou 421: 419: 415: 409: 407: 403: 399: 394: 390: 385: 383: 379: 374: 370: 365: 363: 359: 355: 351: 347: 346:Han Zhangluan 343: 339: 336: 325: 323: 319: 315: 310: 304: 300: 298: 294: 290: 286: 282: 278: 274: 270: 269: 253: 251: 248: 242: 240: 236: 226: 224: 220: 215: 213: 209: 205: 202:Gao Yang had 197: 195: 193: 188: 183: 181: 177: 172: 169: 165: 161: 158: 157:heir apparent 153: 151: 145: 143: 139: 134: 130: 122: 120: 118: 115: 111: 108: 107:courtesy name 105:; ?-?), 103: 92: 88: 82: 81: 76: 72: 61: 58: 50: 38: 37: 32: 27: 23: 18: 17: 607:Pipa players 566: 554: 542: 523: 507: 495: 490: 485: 472: 463: 458: 453: 444: 439: 435: 429:Wei Xiaokuan 422: 418:Empress Hulü 410: 398:Northern Wei 386: 378:Duke of Zhou 366: 340:and her son 331: 305: 301: 296: 292: 288: 284: 280: 266: 264: 247:crown prince 243: 239:Chen dynasty 232: 216: 201: 191: 184: 173: 163: 154: 146: 126: 109: 86: 85: 78: 71:Chinese name 53: 44: 33: 612:570s deaths 530:Huai Rivers 354:Lianyungang 350:Gao Anagong 338:Lu Lingxuan 277:temple name 219:Emperor Fei 208:Northern Qi 129:Eastern Wei 117:Northern Qi 75:family name 34:may not be 591:Categories 537:References 503:Consort Hu 466:daimyo oak 436:A hundred 373:Hulü Guang 123:Background 414:concubine 335:wet nurse 235:He Shikai 160:Gao Cheng 110:Xiaozheng 571:, vols. 519:Shandong 447:Chang'an 427:general 393:Buddhist 318:Shandong 309:Xiang Yu 212:Gao Zhan 187:Gao Yang 180:Yang Yin 168:Buddhist 133:Gao Huan 69:In this 36:reliable 561:vol. 47 549:vol. 39 526:Yangtze 511:eunuchs 369:Gao Yan 358:Jiangsu 342:Mu Tipo 320:). As 297:Weizong 293:Jinglie 250:Gao Wei 190:of the 138:Xianbei 114:Chinese 91:Chinese 87:Zu Ting 475:Handan 314:Yantai 289:Xianzu 176:regent 93:: 73:, the 515:Linyi 479:Hebei 438:sheng 285:civil 528:and 464:The 406:Nüwa 283:(文, 275:and 150:pipa 581:171 577:170 573:169 281:wen 142:Han 77:is 593:: 579:, 575:, 559:, 547:, 517:, 477:, 382:Lu 356:, 316:, 241:. 97:; 95:祖珽 80:Zu 583:. 563:. 551:. 449:. 89:( 83:. 60:) 54:( 49:) 45:( 39:.

Index


listed sources
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Chinese name
family name
Zu
Chinese

courtesy name
Chinese
Northern Qi
Eastern Wei
Gao Huan
Xianbei
Han
pipa
heir apparent
Gao Cheng
Buddhist
regent
Yang Yin
Gao Yang
Emperor Xiaojing of Eastern Wei
Northern Qi
Gao Zhan
Emperor Fei
Emperor Xiaozhao
He Shikai
Chen dynasty

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