Confucius of China
√ Enlish ┊ 中文简体
Confucius (born Kong Qiu, styled Zhong Ni) was born in the village of
Zou in the country of Lu in 551 B.C., a poor descendant of a deposed
noble family. As a child, he held make-believe temple rituals; as a
young adult, he quickly earned a reputation for fairness, politeness
and love of learning, and he was reputed to be quite tall. He traveled
extensively and studied at the imperial capital, Zhou, where he is said
to have met and spoke with Lao Zi, the founder of Daoism.
Upon his return to Lu, he gained renown as a teacher, but when he was
35, Duke Zhao of Lu led his country to war, was routed and fled to the
neighboring country of Qi; in the disorder following the battle,
Confucius followed. Duke Zhao frequently came to him for advice, but
upon counsel of one of his ministers, he decided against granting land
to Confucius and gradually stopped seeking his counsel. When other
nobles began plotting against Confucius' position, Duke Zhao refused to
intervene, and Confucius returned to Lu. But conditions there were no
better than before, and Confucius retired from public life to
concentrate on teaching and studying.
At age 50, he was approached by the Baron of Qi to help defend against
a rebellion, but he declined. He was later made a city magistrate by
the new Duke of Lu, and under his administration the city flourished;
he was promoted several times, eventually becoming Grand Secretary of
Justice and, at age 56, Chief Minister of Lu. Neighboring countries
began to worry that Lu would become too powerful, and they sent
messengers with gifts and dancers to distract the duke during a
sacrifice holiday. When the duke abandoned his duties to receive the
messengers, Confucius resigned and left the country.
Confucius spent the next five years wandering China with his disciples,
finding that his presence at royal courts was rarely tolerated for long
before nobles would begin plotting to drive him out or have him killed.
He was arrested once and jailed for five days, and at 62 he was
pursued, along with his disciples, into the countryside by a band of
soldiers sent by jealous nobles, until he was able to send a messenger
to the sympathetic king of a nearby country, who sent his own soldiers
to rescue them. Once again, Confucius was to be given land but was
denied it upon counsel of another high minister. After further
wanderings, he eventually returned to Lu at age 67. Although he was
welcomed there and chose to remain, he was not offered public office
again, nor did he seek it. Instead he spent the rest of his years
teaching and, finally, writing. He died at 72.
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