'Li Si' () (ca.
280 BC - September or October
208 BC) was the influential
Prime Minister (or Chancellor) of the feudal state and later of the dynasty of
Qin, between
246 BC and
208 BC. A famous
Legalist, he was also a notable
calligrapher.
Li Si served under two rulers:
Qin Shi Huang, king of Qin and later First Emperor of China -- and his son,
Qin Er Shi. A powerful minister, he was central to the state's policies, including those on military conquest, draconian centralization of state control, standardization of weights, measures and the written script, and persecution of
Confucianism.
Early Life
Li Si was originally from Shang Cai (上蔡) in the kingdom of
Chu. When he was young, he was a minor official in
Chu. According to the ''
Records of the Great Historian'', one day
Li Si observed that rats in the restroom were dirty and hungry but the rats in the barnhouse were well fed. He suddenly realized that "the values of people are determined by their social status." He made up his mind to take up politics as his career, which was a common choice for scholars not from noble family during the
Warring States Period. After having finished his education with the famous
Confucian thinker
Xun Zi, he moved to the most powerful state at that time -
Qin and tried to advance his political career there.
Career in Qin
During his stay in the state of
Qin,
Li Si became a guest of the prime minister
Lu Buwei (吕不韦) and got the chance to talk to the ruler of
Qin -
Qin Shi Huang.
Qin Shi Huang was impressed by
Li Si's view of how to unify
China. Having adopted
Li Si's proposal, the ruler of
Qin spent generously to lure intellects to the state of
Qin and sent out assassins to kill important scholars in other states.
According to the ''
Records of the Grand Historian'' (史记),
Li Si was responsible for the death of Han Fei. A minor prince in the state of Han, Han Fei was an excellent writer whose essays reached the attention of the king of Qin. When Qin made war on Han, Han Fei was dispatched as a diplomatic envoy to Qin. Li Si, who envied Han Fei's intellect, persuaded the Qin king that he could neither send Han Fei back (as his superior ability would be a threat to Qin) nor employ him (as his loyalty would not be to Qin). As a result, Han Fei was imprisoned, and Li Si convinced him to commit suicide by poisoning.
According to
Sima Qian, Li Si persuaded Qin Shi Huang to suppress intellectual dissent, and when
Confucian scholars protested, 460 of them were buried alive. Li Si himself penned the edict in 214 BC which ordered widespread destruction of historical records and literature in 213 BC, including key Confucian texts, which he thought detrimental to the welfare of the state.
Death
When
Qin Shi Huang died while away from the capital,
Li Si and the chief eunuch
Zhao Gao suppressed the late emperor's choice of successor, caused the crown prince to commit suicide, and installed another prince,
Qin Er Shi (229B.C-207B.C) in his place. During the tumultuous aftermath,
Zhao Gao convinced the new emperor to install his followers in official positions. When his power base was secure enough,
Zhao Gao then had
Li Si killed in 208 BC in a grisly manner -- being cut in half in public.
Li Si is mentioned in
Elias Canetti's novel:
Auto-da-fe (1935).
Contributions
A staunch believer in a highly bureacratic system,
Li Si is considered to have been central to the efficiency of the state of
Qin and the success of its military conquest. He was also instrumental in systemizing standard measures and currency in post-unified China. He further helped systemize the written Chinese language by promulgating as the imperial standard the
small seal script which had been in use in the state of
Qin all along. In this process, variant graphs within the Qin script were proscribed, as were variant scripts from the different regions which had been conquered. Contrary to popular belief, though,
Li Si did not "invent" small seal script.
See also
★
Burning of books and burying of scholars
References
★ Levi, Jean (1993). Han fei tzu (韩非子). In Loewe, Michael (ed., 1993). Early Chinese Texts: A Bibliographical Guide, pp.115-116. (Early China Special Monograph Series No. 2), Society for the Study of Early China, and the Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, ISBN 1-55729-043-1.
★ Michael, Franz (1986) China through the Ages: History of a Civilization. pp.53-67. Westview Press; SMC Publishing, Inc. Taipei. ISBN 0-86531-725-9; 957-638-190-8 (ppbk).
★ Nivison, David S. (1999). The Classical Philosophical Writings, pp. 745-812. In Loewe, Michael & Shaughnessy, Edward L.. The Cambridge History of Ancient China: From the Origins of Civilization to 221 B.C.. Cambridge University Press.