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Qingli Reforms

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Qingli New Deal
Simplified Chinese
Traditional Chinese
ResultFailure
Other namesMinor Reforms
Qingli New Deal
Qingli New Policies

The Qingli Reforms or Qingli New Deal[1] (simplified Chinese: 庆历新政; traditional Chinese: 慶曆新政; pinyin: Qìnglì xīnzhèng), or Qingli New Policies,[2] also called Minor Reforms[3] (小改革),[4] took place in China’s Song dynasty under the leadership of Fan Zhongyan and Ouyang Xiu.[5] Taking place from 1043 to 1045 and so called for falling in the 1041-1048 era of the same name, it was a short-lived attempt to introduce reforms into the traditional way of conducting governmental affairs in China. It was a precursor to a grander effort three decades later led by Wang Anshi.

Qingli Reforms was the first political reform of the Northern Song Dynasty,[6] which lasted for one year and four months, eventually ended in failure. After the failure of the reform, Fan Zhongyan was deported to Dengzhou.[7]

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Transcription

Fan Zhongyan

Fan Zhongyan was prefect of Kaifeng, the imperial capital during the Northern Song era, in the 1030s. However, he was demoted to regional posts for criticizing the Chief Councillor. In 1040, the Liao and Western Xia to the north threatened Song security. Fan was brought back to organize a strong defense.

Ouyang Xiu

Ouyang Xiu was posted to Kaifeng four years after passing his jinshi examination in 1030. He began his association with Fan from this time in Kaifeng. Like Fan, he also was demoted. After Fan's demotion, Ouyang criticized Fan's principle critic, resulting in being sent to a minor post in Hubei. Like Fan, he was brought back to the capital in the 1040s where he was assigned to work on cataloguing the entire imperial library.

Ten-Point Memorial

Fan Zhongyan submitted a ten-point memorial in which he outlined his reform objectives. They can be divided into three categories:

  1. Administrative efficiency
  2. Strengthen local governments
  3. Strengthen defense

Implementation

The first measure undertaken was to allow competent officials to stay in one post for more than three years and for unable or treacherous officials to be removed more easily. Sons and relatives of state officials were banned from automatically inheriting the post of their father. The importance of poetry in the imperial examinations was reduced in favour of essays and the Confucian classics. Supervision over officials in the provinces responsible for the transport of tax grains was increased and appointed directly by the central government. Land allotted to officials was redistributed more adequately. Agricultural productivity was enhanced by the construction of dykes and canals to improve irrigation. Troops garrisoned around the capital was to engage in agriculture and be trained in a more effective way. Service corvée was to be reduced. Proclamations and edicts issued by the court were to be followed by imminent implementation, with an greater control over their implementation.[8]

Many of these reforms were put into effect in the two-year period from 1043 to 1045. However, without the full support of the emperor, there never was complete implementation of the reforms. Not long after they began, backlash from groups of officials, large land owners, and the wealthy in general resulted in the dismissal Fan Zhongyan and Fu Bi in 1045.

The Imperial University was created as part of the reforms for the education of the children of commoners and low-ranking officials. It was the only institution that survived the reversal of the reforms.[9]

Legacy

Wang Anshi would take up the banner of reform in the 1070s, not only pushing for many of the Qingli Reforms, but going even further. However, while they remained in place longer than the Qingli Reforms, with the exception of some reforms to the examination system, this reform effort similarly met a dead end.

See also

References

  1. ^ Xu Lili (2017-03-23). "Ideals and Losses of a Generation: The Political Direction of the "Fan Zhongyan Group" after the Qingli New Deal (1044-1067)". CNKI.
  2. ^ Asaf Goldschmidt (8 October 2008). The Evolution of Chinese Medicine: Song Dynasty, 960–1200. Routledge. pp. 46–. ISBN 978-1-134-09181-2.
  3. ^ "Ritual Controversy over the Zhaomu Sequence in Imperial Ancestral Rites in Song China (960-1279)" (PDF). 13 May 2015 – via CORE.
  4. ^ "How did Yan Zhenqing surpass Wang Xizhi?". Interface News. Jan 25, 2019.
  5. ^ Fang Wang (22 April 2016). Geo-Architecture and Landscape in China's Geographic and Historic Context: Volume 1 Geo-Architecture Wandering in the Landscape. Springer. pp. 91–. ISBN 978-981-10-0483-4.
  6. ^ Li Chunqing (1995). Utopia and poetry: ancient Chinese scholarly culture and literary values. Beijing Normal University Press. ISBN 978-7-303-04166-4.
  7. ^ Zhao Dongyan (1 April 2013). Chinese Dynasties' Internal Controversies: A Lament for the Change of Law. Liaoning Nationalities Press. pp. 62–. ISBN 978-7-205-07621-4.
  8. ^ "Song Period Event History (www.chinaknowledge.de)".
  9. ^ Chaffee, John; Twitchett, Denis, eds. (2015). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 5, Part Two: Sung China, 960-1279. Cambridge University Press. p. 294. ISBN 9780521243308.

Further reading

This page was last edited on 25 March 2023, at 14:58
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