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Liu Zongyuan

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Chinese
  
柳宗元

Romanization
  
Leu Tson-nyioe

Died
  
819 AD, Liuzhou, China

IPA
  
[lju tsuŋhěn]

Role
  
Writer

Wade–Giles
  
Liu Tsung-yuan

Name
  
Liu Zongyuan

Hanyu Pinyin
  
Liu Zongyuan

Jyutping
  
Lau Zong-jyun


Liu Zongyuan httpsdanassaysfileswordpresscom200906liu


Similar People
  
Han Yu, Ouyang Xiu, Sima Guang, Guan Hanqing

034 reading buddhist classics with zhao at his temple by liu zongyuan hokkien


Liu Zongyuan (773 – 28 November 819) was a Chinese writer and poet who lived during the Tang Dynasty. Liu was born in present-day Yongji, Shanxi. Along with Han Yu, he was a founder of the Classical Prose Movement. He has been traditionally classed as one of the "Eight Great Prose Masters of the Tang and Song".

Contents

Liu Zongyuan River Snow

His courtesy name was Zihou.

Liu Zongyuan Liu Zongyuan Wikipedia

fisherman liu zongyuan


Early life

Liu Zongyuan Liu Zongyuan Customessaynet

Liu Zongyuan was born in 773.

Civil service career

Liu Zongyuan Liu Zongyuan

Liu Zongyuan's civil service career was initially successful; but, in 805, he fell out of favour with the imperial government because of his association with a failed reformist movement. He was exiled first to Yongzhou, Hunan, and then to Liuzhou, Guangxi, where he eventually became the city Governor. A park and temple in Liuzhou is dedicated to his memory. His exile allowed his literary career to flourish: he produced poems, fables, reflective travelogues and essays synthesizing elements of Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism.

Death

Liu Zongyuan Liu Zongyuan united architects essays

He died in 819.

Works

Liu's best-known travel pieces are the Eight Records of Excursions in Yongzhou (永州八游记). Around 180 of his poems are extant, of which five have been collected in the anthology Three Hundred Tang Poems. Some of his works celebrate his freedom from office, while others mourn his banishment.

One of his most famous poems is "Jiangxue" (江雪), sometimes translated into English as "Winter Snow" or "River Snow": this poem has been an inspiration to many works of Chinese painting.

Liu Zongyuan wrote Fei Guoyu (T: 非國語, S: 非国语, Argument against the Harangues of the Various States), a criticism of Guoyu. In response, Liu Zhang (劉 章, circa 1095-1177); Jiang Duanli (T: 江端禮, S: 江端礼); and Yu Pan (虞 槃 fl. 1300), Yu Ji's (虞 集, 1272-1348) younger brother, wrote texts titled Fei Fei Guoyu T: 非非國語, S: 非非国语; Argument against the Argument against the Harangues of the Various States) in opposition to Liu Zongyuan's essay.

Works cited

  • Chen, Jo-shui, Liu Tsung-yüan and Intellectual Change in T'ang China, 773-819, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. ISBN 0521419646.
  • Nienhauser Jr., William H.; Hartmann, Charles; Crawford, William Bruce; Walls, Jan W.; Neighbors, Lloyd, Liu Tsung-yüan, New York: Twayne Publishers Inc., 1973.
  • Ueki, Hisayuki; Uno, Naoto; Matsubara, Akira (1999). "Shijin to Shi no Shōgai (Ryū Sōgen)". In Matsuura, Tomohisa. Kanshi no Jiten 漢詩の事典 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Taishūkan Shoten. pp. 113–115. OCLC 41025662. 
  • References

    Liu Zongyuan Wikipedia