Difference between revisions of "Emperor Huizong of Song" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Chinese Emperor
 
{{Chinese Emperor
 
|image_name=[[Image:huizong.jpg|center|250px]]
 
|image_name=[[Image:huizong.jpg|center|250px]]
|birth=2 November, 1082
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|birth=November 2, 1082
|death=4 June, 1135
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|death=June 4, 1135
 
|family_name=Zhao ([[wikt:趙|趙]])
 
|family_name=Zhao ([[wikt:趙|趙]])
|begin_reign=24 February, 1100
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|begin_reign=February 24, 1100
|end_reign=18 January, 1126¹
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|end_reign=January 18, 1126¹
 
|dynasty=[[Song Dynasty|Song]] ([[wikt:宋|宋]])
 
|dynasty=[[Song Dynasty|Song]] ([[wikt:宋|宋]])
 
|given_name=Ji ([[wikt:佶|佶]])
 
|given_name=Ji ([[wikt:佶|佶]])
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|posthumous_name_short=Never used short
 
|posthumous_name_short=Never used short
 
|posthumous_name_full=Emperor Tishen Hedao Junlie<br />Xungong Shengwen Rende<br />Xianci Xianxiao Huangdi²<br />體神合道駿烈遜功聖文仁德<br />憲慈顯孝皇帝
 
|posthumous_name_full=Emperor Tishen Hedao Junlie<br />Xungong Shengwen Rende<br />Xianci Xianxiao Huangdi²<br />體神合道駿烈遜功聖文仁德<br />憲慈顯孝皇帝
 +
 
|notes=''General note: Dates given here are in the [[Julian calendar]].<br />They are not in the [[proleptic Gregorian calendar]].<br />———<br />1. Abdicated in favor of his son, and was granted the title [[Taishang Huang]] ''(太上皇)''.<br />Was demoted to the rank of commoner by the [[Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234|Jin]] on March 20, 1127.<br />2. Given in 1143.''
 
|notes=''General note: Dates given here are in the [[Julian calendar]].<br />They are not in the [[proleptic Gregorian calendar]].<br />———<br />1. Abdicated in favor of his son, and was granted the title [[Taishang Huang]] ''(太上皇)''.<br />Was demoted to the rank of commoner by the [[Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234|Jin]] on March 20, 1127.<br />2. Given in 1143.''
 
}}
 
}}
'''Emperor Huizong''' (November 2, 1082 – June 4, 1135) was the eighth and one of the most famous emperors of the [[Song Dynasty (960-1279)|Song Dynasty]] of [[China]], with a personal life spent amidst luxury, sophistication and art but ending in tragedy.
+
'''Emperor Huizong''' (November 2, 1082 – June 4, 1135; r. 1100-1126) was the eighth and one of the most famous emperors of the [[Song Dynasty (960-1279)|Song Dynasty]] of [[China]]. Huizong was artistic and extremely talented. He wrote poems of his own, was known as an avid painter, created his own [[calligraphy]] style, played the [[guqin]], had interests in [[architecture]] and garden design, and even wrote treatises on medicine and Daoism.<ref>Ebrey, 165.</ref> He was a collector of [[painting]]s, calligraphies, and [[antique]]s of previous Chinese eras, acquiring large collections of each for his amusement. He personally supervised the production of fine porcelain and the training of court artists. Huizong was famed for his promotion of [[Taoism]], and was one of the three Chinese emperors to prohibit [[Buddhism]].  
  
Born '''Zhao Ji''', he was the 11th son of [[Emperor Shenzong of Song China|Emperor Shenzong]]. In February 1100 his older half-brother [[Emperor Zhezong of Song China|Emperor Zhezong]] (哲宗) died childless, and Huizong succeeded him the next day as emperor. He reigned from 1100 to 1126.
+
Involved with other pursuits, Huizong neglected the army, so the Song China became increasingly weak and at the mercy of foreign enemies. They were unable to defend themselves against the incursions of the [[Jurchen]], and in January 1127, known as the [[Jingkang Incident]], the Jin entered the capital of Bianliang ([[Kaifeng]]), and took Huizong, his son Emperor Qinzong, and the entire imperial court and harem captive. Huizong was deported to northern [[Manchuria]], where he spent the last eight years of his life as a captive and died in miserable circumstances. Today, his works of art are on display in museums and collections all over the world; his painting, ''Peaches, Bamboo and Oriole,'' sold for RMB 61.16 million (US$ 7.33 million) at the China Guardian 2005 Spring Auction.<ref>China Today,  Imperial Kilns of the Song Dynasty.</ref>
  
Huizong was famed for his promotion of [[Taoism]], and was one of the three Chinese emperors to prohibit [[Buddhism]]. He was also a skilled [[poetry|poet]], [[painting|painter]], [[calligraphy|calligrapher]], and [[musician]]. He sponsored numerous artists at his court, and the catalogue of his imperial painting collection lists over 6,000 known paintings.<ref name="ebrey cambridge 149">Ebrey, Cambridge, 149.</ref>
+
==Life==
 +
Emperor Huizong, the eighth and one of the most famous emperors of the [[Song Dynasty (960-1279)|Song Dynasty]] of [[China]], was born Zhao Ji on November 2, 1082, the eleventh son of [[Emperor Shenzong of Song China|Emperor Shenzong]]. In February 1100, his older half-brother [[Emperor Zhezong of Song China|Emperor Zhezong]] (哲宗) died childless, and Huizong succeeded him the next day as emperor. He reigned from 1100 to 1126.
  
His [[temple name]] means "Honorary Ancestor."
+
Huizong, besides partaking in state affairs that favored the reformers and conservatives in the [[Song Dynasty |Reformist party]]), was a cultured leader who spent much of his time admiring the arts. He was a collector of [[painting]]s, [[calligraphy|calligraphies]], and [[antique]]s of previous Chinese eras, acquiring large collections of each for his amusement. He wrote poems of his own, was known as an avid painter, created his own calligraphy style, had interests in architecture and garden design, and even wrote treatises on [[medicine]] and [[Daoism]].<ref>Ebrey, 165.</ref> He assembled an entourage of court painters who were first subjected to an examination to qualify as official artists of the court, and made reforms to the music that was played at court. Like many learned men of his age, he was a polymath.  
  
==Biography==
+
During Huizong’s reign, the greatly enlarged scholar-official class was deeply divided by factional strife, and was unable to agree on foreign policy or on how to deal with China’s aggressive neighbors to the north.  
Emperor Huizong of Song, besides his partaking in state affairs that favored the Reformist party (refer to section on reformers and conservatives in [[Song Dynasty]]), was a cultured leader who spent much of his time admiring the arts. He was a collector of [[painting]]s, [[calligraphy|calligraphies]], and [[antique]]s of previous Chinese eras, building huge collections of each for his amusement. He wrote poems of his own, was known as an avid painter, created his own calligraphy style, had interests in architecture and garden design, and even wrote treatises on medicine and Daoism.<ref name="ebrey 165">Ebrey, 165.</ref> He assembled an entourage of court painters that were first pre-screened in an examination to enter as official artists of the court, and made reforms to court music that was played.<ref name="ebrey 165"/> Like many learned men of his age, he was quite a polymath personality. However, his reign would be forever scarred by the decisions made (by council given to him) on handling foreign policy, as the end of his reign marked a period of disaster for Song China.
 
  
A true artist, Huizong neglected the army, and Song China became increasingly weak and at the mercy of foreign enemies. When the [[Jurchen]] of [[Manchuria]] founded the [[Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234|Jin Dynasty]] and attacked the [[Liao Dynasty|Liao]] kingdom to the north of the Song empire, the Song court allied with the Jin and attacked the Liao from the south. This succeeded in destroying the Liao kingdom, a long time enemy of the Song. However, an enemy even more formidable, the Jin, was now on the northern border. Not content with the annexation of the Liao kingdom, and measuring rightly the weakness of the Song empire, the Jin soon declared war on their former ally, and by the beginning of 1126 they crossed the [[Yellow River]] and came in sight of [[Kaifeng]], the capital of the Song empire. Stricken with panic, Huizong abdicated on January 18, 1126 in favor of his son who became [[Emperor Qinzong of Song China|Emperor Qinzong]] (欽宗).  
+
Involved with other pursuits, Huizong neglected the army, and Song China became increasingly weak and at the mercy of foreign enemies. When the [[Jurchen]] of [[Manchuria]] founded the [[Jin Dynasty]] (1115–1234) and attacked the [[Liao Dynasty|Liao]] kingdom to the north of the Song empire, the Song court allied with the Jin and attacked the Liao from the south. They succeeded in destroying the Liao kingdom, a long-time enemy of the Song, but this victory left an even more formidable threat, the Jin, on the northern border. Not content with the annexation of the Liao kingdom, and correctly appraising the weakness of the Song empire, the Jin soon declared war on their former ally, and by the beginning of 1126, they had crossed the [[Yellow River]] and come in sight of Bianliang ([[Kaifeng]]), the capital of the Song empire. Stricken with panic, Huizong abdicated on January 18, 1126, in favor of his son, who became [[Emperor Qinzong of Song China|Emperor Qinzong]] (欽宗).  
  
[[Image:Momohatozu.jpg|thumb|left|180px|''Pigeon on a Peach Branch'', by Emperor Huizong.]]
+
[[Image:Momohatozu.jpg|thumb|left|180px|''Pigeon on a Peach Branch,'' by Emperor Huizong.]]
Overcoming the walls of Kaifeng was a difficult undertaking for the Jin cavalry, and this, conjugated with fierce resistance from some Chinese officials who had not totally lost their temper like Huizong, resulted in the Jin raising the siege of Kaifeng and returning north. The Song empire, however, had to sign a humiliating treaty with the Jin, agreeing to pay a colossal war indemnity and to give a [[tribute]] to Jin every year.
+
The Jin cavalry had found that overcoming the walls of Kaifeng was a difficult undertaking, and encountered fierce resistance from some Chinese officials who had not despaired like Huizong. As a result, the Jin raised the siege of Kaifeng and returned north, after forcing the Song empire to sign a humiliating treaty which required the payment of a colossal war indemnity and the giving of [[tribute]] to Jin every year.
  
But even such humiliating terms could not save the hopeless Song empire. Within a matter of months, the Jin were back south again, and this time they were determined to overcome the walls of Kaifeng. After a bitter siege, the Jin eventually entered Kaifeng on January 9, 1127, and many days of looting, rapes, and massacre followed. Huizong, his son Emperor Qinzong, as well as the entire imperial court and harem were captured by the Jin in the [[Jingkang Incident]]. One of the sons of Huizong managed to escape to Southern China where, after many years of struggle, he would establish the [[Southern Song Dynasty]], of which he was the first emperor, [[Emperor Gaozong of Song|Emperor Gaozong]] (高宗).
+
Even the acceptance of such humiliating terms could not save the Song empire. Within a matter of months, the Jin came south again, and this time they were determined to overcome the walls of Kaifeng. After a bitter siege, the Jin eventually entered Kaifeng on January 9, 1127, and many days of [[looting]], [[rape]]s, and [[massacre]] followed. Huizong, his son, Emperor Qinzong, as well as the entire imperial court and harem were captured by the Jin in the [[Jingkang Incident]]. One of the sons of Huizong managed to escape to Southern China where, after many years of struggle, he established the [[Southern Song Dynasty]], of which he was the first emperor, [[Emperor Gaozong of Song|Emperor Gaozong]] (高宗).
  
Huizong and Qinzong were demoted to the rank of commoners by the Jin on March 20, 1127. Then on May 10, 1127, Huizong was deported to northern Manchuria, where he spent the last eight years of his life as a captive. The man who once had been the most powerful ruler on earth and had lived in opulence and art died a broken man in faraway northern Manchuria in June 1135, at the age of 52.
+
Huizong and Qinzong were demoted to the rank of commoners by the Jin on March 20, 1127. Then, on May 10, 1127, Huizong was deported to northern [[Manchuria]], where he spent the last eight years of his life as a captive in the small city of Wuguo (in present-day Yilan County, Heilongjiang Province). He spent his last days clad only in a goatskin, huddled in a tiny cellar, unable to eat as his son, Zhao Heng, looked on hopelessly. In the delirium of his dying hours, Emperor Huizong fancied he saw flames firing a kiln of fine porcelain, a satisfying and familiar sight; at that moment, his desire was not fine porcelain, but the warmth of the flames that fired it. He died June 4, 1135, at the age of fifty-two.<ref>Ibid.</ref> His [[temple name]] means "Honorary Ancestor."
 +
In 1135, the northern part of the Song Empire was occupied by Jin armies.
  
 
==Art, calligraphy, music, and culture==
 
==Art, calligraphy, music, and culture==
[[Image:Songhuizong8.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Song Huizong's "Ting Qin Tu" (Chinese: [[wikt:聽|聽]][[wikt:琴|琴]][[wikt:圖|圖]], literally "Listening to the Qin"]]
+
[[Image:Songhuizong8.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Song Huizong's "Ting Qin Tu" (Chinese: [[wikt:聽|聽]][[wikt:琴|琴]][[wikt:圖|圖]], literally, "Listening to the Qin"]]
  
Huizong was a great [[Chinese painting|painter]], [[Chinese poetry|poet]], and [[East Asian calligraphy|calligrapher]]. He was also a player of the ''[[guqin]]'' (as exemplified by his famous painting 聽琴圖 ''Listening to the Qin''); he also had a ''Wanqin Tang'' 『萬琴堂』 ("10,000 Qin Hall") in his palace.
+
Chinese historians have always been ambivalent about Emperor Huizong. As a ruler he was incompetent, and allowed his advisers to make decisions which hastened the demise of his empire, but his artistic talents and achievements were unparalleled. Huizong was famed for his promotion of [[Taoism]], and was one of the three Chinese emperors to prohibit [[Buddhism]]. He was also a skilled [[poetry|poet]], [[painting|painter]], [[calligraphy|calligrapher]], and [[musician]]. He sponsored numerous artists at his court, and the catalog of his imperial painting collection lists over 6,000 known paintings.<ref>Ebrey, Cambridge, 149.</ref>
  
The primary subjects of his paintings are [[bird]]s and [[flower]]s. Among is works is ''Five-Colored [[Parakeet]] on Blossoming [[Apricot]] Tree''. He also recopied [[Zhang Xuan]]'s painting ''Court Ladies Preparing Newly-Woven [[Silk]]'', and Emperor Huizong's reproduction is the only copy of that painting that survives today.
+
Huizong was a great [[Chinese painting|painter]], [[Chinese poetry|poet]], and [[East Asian calligraphy|calligrapher]]. He also played the ''[[guqin]]'' (as exemplified by his famous painting 聽琴圖, ''Listening to the Qin''); in his palace, he had a ''Wanqin Tang'' 『萬琴堂』 ("10,000 Qin Hall").
 +
The primary subjects of his paintings are [[bird]]s and [[flower]]s. Among his works is, ''Five-Colored [[Parakeet]] on Blossoming [[Apricot]] Tree''. He also recopied [[Zhang Xuan]]'s painting, ''Court Ladies Preparing Newly-Woven [[Silk]],'' and Emperor Huizong's reproduction is the only copy of that painting that survives today. His painting, ''Peaches, Bamboo, and Oriole,'' sold for RMB 61.16 million (US$ 7.33 million) at the China Guardian 2005 Spring Auction.<ref>The Metropolitan Museum of Art, [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/nsong/hod_1981.278.htm China, 500–1000 C.E.] Retrieved December 16, 2007.</ref>
  
 
He invented the "Slender Gold" ([[wikt:瘦|瘦]][[wikt:金|金]][[wikt:體|體]]) style of calligraphy. The name "Slender Gold" came from the fact that Huizong's writing resembled gold filament, twisted and turned.
 
He invented the "Slender Gold" ([[wikt:瘦|瘦]][[wikt:金|金]][[wikt:體|體]]) style of calligraphy. The name "Slender Gold" came from the fact that Huizong's writing resembled gold filament, twisted and turned.
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His era name of Xuanhe is also used to describe a style of mounting paintings in scroll format. In this style, black borders are added between some of the silk planes.
 
His era name of Xuanhe is also used to describe a style of mounting paintings in scroll format. In this style, black borders are added between some of the silk planes.
  
In 1114, following a request from Emperor [[Yejong of Goryeo|Yejong]] of the Korean court of [[Goryeo]], Huizong sent to the palace in the Goryeo capital at [[Kaesong|Gaeseong]] a set of musical instruments to be used for royal banquet music. Two years later, in 1116, he sent another, even larger gift of musical instruments (numbering 428 in total) to the Korean court, this time ''[[yayue]]'' instruments, beginning that nation's tradition of ''[[aak]]''.[http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:1Mcsx29352wJ:www.worldmusiccentre.com/uploads/cdime/howard2001.PDF+huizong+1114+korea&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=5]
+
In 1114, following a request from Emperor [[Yejong of Goryeo|Yejong]] of the Korean court of [[Goryeo]], Huizong sent to the palace in the Goryeo capital at [[Kaesong|Gaeseong]] a set of musical instruments to be used for royal banquet music. Two years later, in 1116, he sent another, even larger gift of musical instruments (numbering 428 in total) to the Korean court, this time ''[[yayue]]'' instruments, beginning that nation's tradition of ''[[aak]]''.<ref>Kieth Howard, [http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:1Mcsx29352wJ:www.worldmusiccentre.com/uploads/cdime/howard2001.PDF+huizong+1114+korea&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=5 Korean Music.] Retrieved December 16, 2007.</ref>
 +
Huizong was a great [[tea]] enthusiast. He himself wrote the famous, ''[[Treatise on Tea]],'' the most detailed and masterful description of the Song dynasty sophisticated style of [[tea ceremony]]. He was also an expert on bronze ware, and oddly shaped stones.
 +
 
 +
==Ceramics==
 +
No other Chinese ruler had ever devoted so much time to ceramics. Emperor Huizong personally supervised porcelain production at the Guan, Ru and Jun kilns, three of the Song Dynasty’s five most famous kilns (the other two are the Ge and Ding kilns.) 
 +
Porcelain was produced by the Ru kiln between 1086 and 1106, exclusively for imperial use. It was produced on a small scale by a small number of artisans, and there are believed to be just sixty pieces of Ru porcelain extant. Of all ancient Chinese ceramics, those made in the Ru kilns are the most precious, mainly because they are so rare. A mere fragment of Ru kiln porcelain sells for RMB 1,000 (about US$ 122). Emperor Huizong personally oversaw the selection of craftsmen and materials involved in porcelain production. He emphasized aesthetics rather than practicality; Ru kiln ceramics were small and exquisitely fashioned, seldom exceeding 20 centimeters in height, and were stationery or purely decorative items, such as brush washers, incense burners, and vases. Emperor Huizong was the first to produce porcelain whose shape imitated bronze. Ru Kilns stopped production after the Jin invasion; the artisans fled to the south, but were unable to reproduce the same results using different materials in a different climate.
 +
 
 +
Pottery from the Jun kiln also caught the attention of Emperor Huizong, and was designated solely for imperial use, after which its techniques became highly advanced. The most prominent characteristic of Jun porcelain was its flambé blue-green and purple-red glaze that, in the process of firing, produced unexpected changes in color and pattern. No matter how many vessels were fired in the same kiln, each piece was unique. The origins of China’s crackled glaze porcelains are attributed to the reign of Emperor Huizong. An accident during the firing of a Jun kiln caused it to remain closed until the kiln had cooled down. When the artisans opened the kiln, they heard cracking sounds and expected to find all the pottery broken. Instead, the pieces were intact, and the glaze surface was full of cracks but smooth to the touch, producing a pleasing ring when tapped. Emperor Huizong was delighted with this new feature and ordered more in the same style.
  
Huizong was also a great [[tea]] enthusiast. He himself wrote the famous [[Treatise on Tea]], the most detailed and masterful description of the Song dynasty sophisticated style of [[tea ceremony]].
+
Song Dynasty Guan kilns were located near the imperial palace and managed directly by the imperial court. In his later years, Emperor Huizong became a devotee of Taoism and developed a preference for hazy shades of gray, shunning intricate patterns in bright colors. He favored elegance and simplicity, to signify his transcendence of worldliness and attainment of enlightenment. Under his personal instructions, Guan kiln artisans paid great attention to color and achieved a distinctive degree of glaze density.<ref>Ibid.</ref>
  
 
==Era names==
 
==Era names==
 
 
The [[era name]]s of his reign were:
 
The [[era name]]s of his reign were:
 
*Jianzhongjingguo (建中靖國 Jiànzhōngjìngguó) 1101
 
*Jianzhongjingguo (建中靖國 Jiànzhōngjìngguó) 1101
Line 58: Line 67:
 
*Chonghe (重和 Chónghé) 1118-1119
 
*Chonghe (重和 Chónghé) 1118-1119
 
*Xuanhe (宣和 Xuānhé) 1119-1125
 
*Xuanhe (宣和 Xuānhé) 1119-1125
 
==See also==
 
 
*[[List of Song Emperors]]
 
*[[Architecture of the Song Dynasty]]
 
*[[Culture of the Song Dynasty]]
 
*[[Economy of the Song Dynasty]]
 
*[[History of the Song Dynasty]]
 
*[[Society of the Song Dynasty]]
 
*[[Technology of the Song Dynasty]]
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<div class="references-small">
 
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
</div>
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). ''The Cambridge Illustrated History of China''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-66991-X (paperback).
+
*Ebrey, Patricia B. ''The Cambridge Illustrated History of China''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 052166991X
*Ebrey, Walthall, and Palais (2006). ''East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History''. Boston: Houghton and Mifflin.
+
*Ebrey, Patricia B., Anne Walthall, and James B. Palais. ''East Asia a Cultural, Social, and Political History.'' Cengage Learning, 2005. ISBN 0618133844
:''Please see:'' [[Guqin#References|References section in the guqin article]] for a full list of references used in all qin related articles.
+
*Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, and Maggie Bickford. ''Emperor Huizong and Late Northern Song China the Politics of Culture and the Culture of Politics.'' Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.  
 
+
*Li, Tang. ''Song Huizong.'' Xianggang: Xianggang hong ye shu ju, 1964.
 +
*Little, Stephen, and Shawn Eichman. ''Taoism and the Arts of China.'' Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 2000.  ISBN 0520227840.
  
 
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{{Song emperors}}
 
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{{Qin list}}
 
{{Qin list}}
  
 
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[[Category:biography]]
 
 
[[Category:Song Dynasty emperors|Huizong]]
 
[[Category:Chinese calligraphers|Huizong]]
 
[[Category:Chinese painters|Huizong]]
 
[[Category:Bird artists]]
 
[[Category:Guqin|Huizong]]
 
  
 
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{{Credits|Emperor_Huizong_of_Song|166703858}}

Latest revision as of 10:25, 21 January 2023

Huizong.jpg
Emperor Huizong of Song
Birth and death: November 2, 1082–June 4, 1135
Family name: Zhao (趙)
Given name: Ji (佶)
Dates of reign: February 24, 1100–January 18, 1126¹
Dynasty: Song (宋)
Temple name: Huizong (徽宗)
Posthumous name:
(short) 
Never used short
Posthumous name:
(full) 
Emperor Tishen Hedao Junlie
Xungong Shengwen Rende
Xianci Xianxiao Huangdi²
體神合道駿烈遜功聖文仁德
憲慈顯孝皇帝
General note: Dates given here are in the Julian calendar.
They are not in the proleptic Gregorian calendar.
———
1. Abdicated in favor of his son, and was granted the title Taishang Huang
(太上皇).
Was demoted to the rank of commoner by the Jin on March 20, 1127.
2. Given in 1143.

Emperor Huizong (November 2, 1082 – June 4, 1135; r. 1100-1126) was the eighth and one of the most famous emperors of the Song Dynasty of China. Huizong was artistic and extremely talented. He wrote poems of his own, was known as an avid painter, created his own calligraphy style, played the guqin, had interests in architecture and garden design, and even wrote treatises on medicine and Daoism.[1] He was a collector of paintings, calligraphies, and antiques of previous Chinese eras, acquiring large collections of each for his amusement. He personally supervised the production of fine porcelain and the training of court artists. Huizong was famed for his promotion of Taoism, and was one of the three Chinese emperors to prohibit Buddhism.

Involved with other pursuits, Huizong neglected the army, so the Song China became increasingly weak and at the mercy of foreign enemies. They were unable to defend themselves against the incursions of the Jurchen, and in January 1127, known as the Jingkang Incident, the Jin entered the capital of Bianliang (Kaifeng), and took Huizong, his son Emperor Qinzong, and the entire imperial court and harem captive. Huizong was deported to northern Manchuria, where he spent the last eight years of his life as a captive and died in miserable circumstances. Today, his works of art are on display in museums and collections all over the world; his painting, Peaches, Bamboo and Oriole, sold for RMB 61.16 million (US$ 7.33 million) at the China Guardian 2005 Spring Auction.[2]

Life

Emperor Huizong, the eighth and one of the most famous emperors of the Song Dynasty of China, was born Zhao Ji on November 2, 1082, the eleventh son of Emperor Shenzong. In February 1100, his older half-brother Emperor Zhezong (哲宗) died childless, and Huizong succeeded him the next day as emperor. He reigned from 1100 to 1126.

Huizong, besides partaking in state affairs that favored the reformers and conservatives in the Reformist party), was a cultured leader who spent much of his time admiring the arts. He was a collector of paintings, calligraphies, and antiques of previous Chinese eras, acquiring large collections of each for his amusement. He wrote poems of his own, was known as an avid painter, created his own calligraphy style, had interests in architecture and garden design, and even wrote treatises on medicine and Daoism.[3] He assembled an entourage of court painters who were first subjected to an examination to qualify as official artists of the court, and made reforms to the music that was played at court. Like many learned men of his age, he was a polymath.

During Huizong’s reign, the greatly enlarged scholar-official class was deeply divided by factional strife, and was unable to agree on foreign policy or on how to deal with China’s aggressive neighbors to the north.

Involved with other pursuits, Huizong neglected the army, and Song China became increasingly weak and at the mercy of foreign enemies. When the Jurchen of Manchuria founded the Jin Dynasty (1115–1234) and attacked the Liao kingdom to the north of the Song empire, the Song court allied with the Jin and attacked the Liao from the south. They succeeded in destroying the Liao kingdom, a long-time enemy of the Song, but this victory left an even more formidable threat, the Jin, on the northern border. Not content with the annexation of the Liao kingdom, and correctly appraising the weakness of the Song empire, the Jin soon declared war on their former ally, and by the beginning of 1126, they had crossed the Yellow River and come in sight of Bianliang (Kaifeng), the capital of the Song empire. Stricken with panic, Huizong abdicated on January 18, 1126, in favor of his son, who became Emperor Qinzong (欽宗).

Pigeon on a Peach Branch, by Emperor Huizong.

The Jin cavalry had found that overcoming the walls of Kaifeng was a difficult undertaking, and encountered fierce resistance from some Chinese officials who had not despaired like Huizong. As a result, the Jin raised the siege of Kaifeng and returned north, after forcing the Song empire to sign a humiliating treaty which required the payment of a colossal war indemnity and the giving of tribute to Jin every year.

Even the acceptance of such humiliating terms could not save the Song empire. Within a matter of months, the Jin came south again, and this time they were determined to overcome the walls of Kaifeng. After a bitter siege, the Jin eventually entered Kaifeng on January 9, 1127, and many days of looting, rapes, and massacre followed. Huizong, his son, Emperor Qinzong, as well as the entire imperial court and harem were captured by the Jin in the Jingkang Incident. One of the sons of Huizong managed to escape to Southern China where, after many years of struggle, he established the Southern Song Dynasty, of which he was the first emperor, Emperor Gaozong (高宗).

Huizong and Qinzong were demoted to the rank of commoners by the Jin on March 20, 1127. Then, on May 10, 1127, Huizong was deported to northern Manchuria, where he spent the last eight years of his life as a captive in the small city of Wuguo (in present-day Yilan County, Heilongjiang Province). He spent his last days clad only in a goatskin, huddled in a tiny cellar, unable to eat as his son, Zhao Heng, looked on hopelessly. In the delirium of his dying hours, Emperor Huizong fancied he saw flames firing a kiln of fine porcelain, a satisfying and familiar sight; at that moment, his desire was not fine porcelain, but the warmth of the flames that fired it. He died June 4, 1135, at the age of fifty-two.[4] His temple name means "Honorary Ancestor." In 1135, the northern part of the Song Empire was occupied by Jin armies.

Art, calligraphy, music, and culture

Song Huizong's "Ting Qin Tu" (Chinese: 聽琴圖, literally, "Listening to the Qin"

Chinese historians have always been ambivalent about Emperor Huizong. As a ruler he was incompetent, and allowed his advisers to make decisions which hastened the demise of his empire, but his artistic talents and achievements were unparalleled. Huizong was famed for his promotion of Taoism, and was one of the three Chinese emperors to prohibit Buddhism. He was also a skilled poet, painter, calligrapher, and musician. He sponsored numerous artists at his court, and the catalog of his imperial painting collection lists over 6,000 known paintings.[5]

Huizong was a great painter, poet, and calligrapher. He also played the guqin (as exemplified by his famous painting 聽琴圖, Listening to the Qin); in his palace, he had a Wanqin Tang 『萬琴堂』 ("10,000 Qin Hall"). The primary subjects of his paintings are birds and flowers. Among his works is, Five-Colored Parakeet on Blossoming Apricot Tree. He also recopied Zhang Xuan's painting, Court Ladies Preparing Newly-Woven Silk, and Emperor Huizong's reproduction is the only copy of that painting that survives today. His painting, Peaches, Bamboo, and Oriole, sold for RMB 61.16 million (US$ 7.33 million) at the China Guardian 2005 Spring Auction.[6]

He invented the "Slender Gold" (瘦金體) style of calligraphy. The name "Slender Gold" came from the fact that Huizong's writing resembled gold filament, twisted and turned.

His era name of Xuanhe is also used to describe a style of mounting paintings in scroll format. In this style, black borders are added between some of the silk planes.

In 1114, following a request from Emperor Yejong of the Korean court of Goryeo, Huizong sent to the palace in the Goryeo capital at Gaeseong a set of musical instruments to be used for royal banquet music. Two years later, in 1116, he sent another, even larger gift of musical instruments (numbering 428 in total) to the Korean court, this time yayue instruments, beginning that nation's tradition of aak.[7] Huizong was a great tea enthusiast. He himself wrote the famous, Treatise on Tea, the most detailed and masterful description of the Song dynasty sophisticated style of tea ceremony. He was also an expert on bronze ware, and oddly shaped stones.

Ceramics

No other Chinese ruler had ever devoted so much time to ceramics. Emperor Huizong personally supervised porcelain production at the Guan, Ru and Jun kilns, three of the Song Dynasty’s five most famous kilns (the other two are the Ge and Ding kilns.) Porcelain was produced by the Ru kiln between 1086 and 1106, exclusively for imperial use. It was produced on a small scale by a small number of artisans, and there are believed to be just sixty pieces of Ru porcelain extant. Of all ancient Chinese ceramics, those made in the Ru kilns are the most precious, mainly because they are so rare. A mere fragment of Ru kiln porcelain sells for RMB 1,000 (about US$ 122). Emperor Huizong personally oversaw the selection of craftsmen and materials involved in porcelain production. He emphasized aesthetics rather than practicality; Ru kiln ceramics were small and exquisitely fashioned, seldom exceeding 20 centimeters in height, and were stationery or purely decorative items, such as brush washers, incense burners, and vases. Emperor Huizong was the first to produce porcelain whose shape imitated bronze. Ru Kilns stopped production after the Jin invasion; the artisans fled to the south, but were unable to reproduce the same results using different materials in a different climate.

Pottery from the Jun kiln also caught the attention of Emperor Huizong, and was designated solely for imperial use, after which its techniques became highly advanced. The most prominent characteristic of Jun porcelain was its flambé blue-green and purple-red glaze that, in the process of firing, produced unexpected changes in color and pattern. No matter how many vessels were fired in the same kiln, each piece was unique. The origins of China’s crackled glaze porcelains are attributed to the reign of Emperor Huizong. An accident during the firing of a Jun kiln caused it to remain closed until the kiln had cooled down. When the artisans opened the kiln, they heard cracking sounds and expected to find all the pottery broken. Instead, the pieces were intact, and the glaze surface was full of cracks but smooth to the touch, producing a pleasing ring when tapped. Emperor Huizong was delighted with this new feature and ordered more in the same style.

Song Dynasty Guan kilns were located near the imperial palace and managed directly by the imperial court. In his later years, Emperor Huizong became a devotee of Taoism and developed a preference for hazy shades of gray, shunning intricate patterns in bright colors. He favored elegance and simplicity, to signify his transcendence of worldliness and attainment of enlightenment. Under his personal instructions, Guan kiln artisans paid great attention to color and achieved a distinctive degree of glaze density.[8]

Era names

The era names of his reign were:

  • Jianzhongjingguo (建中靖國 Jiànzhōngjìngguó) 1101
  • Chongning (崇寧 Chóngníng) 1102-1106
  • Daguan (大觀 Dàguān) 1107-1110
  • Zhenghe (政和 Zhènghé) 1111-1118
  • Chonghe (重和 Chónghé) 1118-1119
  • Xuanhe (宣和 Xuānhé) 1119-1125

Notes

  1. Ebrey, 165.
  2. China Today, Imperial Kilns of the Song Dynasty.
  3. Ebrey, 165.
  4. Ibid.
  5. Ebrey, Cambridge, 149.
  6. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, China, 500–1000 C.E. Retrieved December 16, 2007.
  7. Kieth Howard, Korean Music. Retrieved December 16, 2007.
  8. Ibid.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ebrey, Patricia B. The Cambridge Illustrated History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 052166991X
  • Ebrey, Patricia B., Anne Walthall, and James B. Palais. East Asia a Cultural, Social, and Political History. Cengage Learning, 2005. ISBN 0618133844
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, and Maggie Bickford. Emperor Huizong and Late Northern Song China the Politics of Culture and the Culture of Politics. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.
  • Li, Tang. Song Huizong. Xianggang: Xianggang hong ye shu ju, 1964.
  • Little, Stephen, and Shawn Eichman. Taoism and the Arts of China. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 2000. ISBN 0520227840.
Preceded by:
Emperor Zhezong
Emperor of the Song Dynasty
1100-1126
Succeeded by:
Emperor Qinzong
Guqin
古琴
Qin guzhuan.JPG
Aesthetics | Construction | Contemprary players | History | Literature | Notation | Playing technique | Popular culture | Qinpu | Schools
Societies | Strings | Tuning | Yaji
Melodies
Ao Ai | Guangling San | Hujia Shiba-pai | Jieshi Diao Youlan | Liu Shui | Meihua Sannong | Pingsha Luoyan | Xiao Xiang Shuiyun | Yangguan Sandie
Schools
Guangling | Jiuyi | Lingnan | Mei'an | Pucheng | Shu | Yushan | Zhe | Zhucheng
Societies
London Youlan Qin Society | New York Qin Society | North American Guqin Association
Historical personages
Bo Ya | Cai Wenji | Cai Yong | Confucius | Guo Chuwang | Ruan Ji | Emperor Song Huizong | Xi Kang | Zhu Quan
Players
Cheng Yu | Gong Yi | Guan Pinghu | Li Xiangting | Lin Youren | Wang Fei | Wu Jinglüe | Wu Zhaoji | Zeng Chengwei | Zha Fuxi | Zhang Ziqian

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