Du Hongjian
Du Hongjian (杜鴻漸; 709 – December 13, 769[1]), courtesy name Zhisun (之巽), formally Duke Wenxian of Wei (衛文憲公), was a Chinese Buddhist monk and politician during the Tang dynasty who served as a chancellor during the reign of Emperor Daizong. He was known, and much criticized by traditional Chinese historians, for his devotion to Buddhism, one manifestation of which was his patronage of the Chan master Wuzhu.[2]
Background
Du Hongjian was born in 709, during the second reign of Emperor Zhongzong. His family was from Pu Prefecture (濮州, roughly modern Heze, Shandong) and claimed its ancestry from the Qin dynasty general Du He (杜赫), and traced itself to a line of officials during the Northern Wei, Northern Qi, Sui dynasty, and Tang dynasty. It was said that the clan's members were on such good terms that it did not divide for five generations down to Du Xian. Both Du Hongjian's great-grandfather Du Yikuan (杜義寬) and grandfather Du Chengzhi (杜承志) were low level officials. His father Du Pengju (杜鵬舉) served as a prefectural prefect and was known for his knowledge as a physician—knowledge he learned because his mother was frequently ill—in addition to being an official.[3] Du Pengju's cousin Du Xian served as a chancellor during the reign of Emperor Zhongzong's nephew Emperor Xuanzong. Du Hongjian had at least one older brother, Du Lingyuan (杜靈瑗).[4][5]
Du Hongjian himself was said to be intelligent and studious. After he passed the
Support of Li Heng as emperor
In 755, the general
Once they arrived in Lingwu, Du and another imperial official who had accompanied Li Heng, Pei Mian, advocated that Li Heng should take the throne in light of the emergency the empire was facing. Li Heng agreed, and he was declared emperor (as Emperor Suzong)—an act that Emperor Xuanzong later recognized. He made Du Zhongshu Sheren (中書舍人), a mid-level official at the legislative bureau of government (中書省)[6] and soon made him the deputy minister of defense (武部侍郎, Wubu Shilang).[7]
During Emperor Suzong's reign
In 757, Emperor Suzong made Du Hongjian the military governor of Hexi Circuit (河西, headquartered in modern
During Emperor Daizong's reign
In 762, both Emperor Xuanzong (then Taishang Huang (retired emperor)) and Emperor Suzong died in rapid succession, and Emperor Suzong's son Emperor Daizong took the throne. Du Hongjian was put in charge of the burials of Emperors Xuanzong and Suzong. After the two emperors were buried, he was given the honorific title of Guanglu Daifu (光祿大夫) and created the Duke of Wei. In 764, Emperor Daizong made him the deputy minister of defense again (now with the title Bingbu Shilang (兵部侍郎)) and gave him the designation Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi (同中書門下平章事), making him a chancellor de facto. He was soon also made Zhongshu Shilang (中書侍郎), the deputy head of the legislative bureau. In 765, when Emperor Daizong entered into a peace treaty with Tufan, he had Du and fellow chancellor Yuan Zai sign the treaty with the Tufan emissary.[9]
In 766, after Xichuan Circuit (西川, headquartered in modern Chengdu) was thrown into a state of civil war after the military governor Guo Ying'ai (郭英乂) was killed by the military officer
In 769, Emperor Daizong wanted to put Du in charge of Luoyang, to replace Wang. Du declined, citing an illness, and was allowed not to go to Luoyang.
Liu Xu, the lead editor of the Old Book of Tang, commented about Du:[7]
Du Hongjian had the achievement of preserving the state but was not capable of defending cities. However, I disagree with the criticism at the time of how he had commissioned Cui Gan. At that time, Cui was able to resist Bo Zhenjie[11] to the south and defeat Zhang Xiancheng to the north. He needed to be dealt with in finesse, not by power. That Cui eventually paid allegiance to the empire was indeed by Du's strategy; if Du had attacked him, he would have been a serious bandit to deal with. However, his worship of the Buddha to seek good fortune and his associations with others to foster his power are no ways for a gentleman to act.
Notes
- ^ a b [1][dead link]
- OCLC 1162217769.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link - ^ a b New Book of Tang, vol. 126.
- ^ New Book of Tang, vol. 72.1.
- ^ The table of the chancellors' family trees in the New Book of Tang, vol. 72.1, actually listed another older brother and gave his name as Du Fengju (杜鳳舉), but as it would have been highly unusual for father and son to share one character in their name by that point due to naming taboo, and particularly because Du Pengju's and Du Fengju's names were parallel in form to each other, suggesting that they were brothers rather than father and son, Du Fengju was probably an uncle, not a brother, of Du Hongju.
- ^ a b Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 218.
- ^ a b c d e f Old Book of Tang, vol. 108.
- ^ Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 221.
- ^ Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 223.
- ^ a b Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 224.
- ^ Zhenjie was apparently an alternative name for Bo Maolin.
References
- Old Book of Tang, vol. 108.
- New Book of Tang, vol. 126.
- Zizhi Tongjian, vols. 218, 221, 223, 224.