'Yan Zhitui' (, 531–591) was a
Chinese scholar,
calligrapher,
painter, musician, and government official who served four different Chinese states during the late
Southern and Northern Dynasties: the
Liang Dynasty in
southern China, the
Northern Qi and
Northern Zhou Dynasties of
northern China, and their successor state that reunified China, the
Sui Dynasty. Yan Zhitui was a supporter of
Buddhism in China despite criticism by many of his
Confucian-taught peers. Yan was also the first person in history to mention the use of
toilet paper.
[1]
Family background
After the fall of the
Jin Dynasty's capital city of
Chang'an, the Yan family migrated south below the
Yangtze River in the year 317. At the Eastern Jin's new capital of
Jiankang (modern-day
Nanjing) the Yan family became prominent amongst the elite families. The Yan family provided many officials that served the governments of the Eastern Jin Dynasty and the succeeding Liang Dynasty in southern China. There was one dissident of the Yan family, though; upon the transition of the
Southern Qi to Liang regimes in the year 502, Yan Zhitui's grandfather refused to serve the Liang court out of continuing loyalty to the Southern Qi. When
Emperor Wu of Liang assumed the throne and control over southern China, Zhitui's grandfather starved himself to death in an act of
piety towards the dynasty he once served.
[2] Despite this act of devotion from his grandfather, Zhitui's father decided to serve Emperor Wu and the new Liang Dynasty.
Life
Yan Zhitui's father died when he was only nine years old. Without a father figure to guide or support him, Zhitui was raised largely by the efforts of his elder brother.
In his teenage years, Zhitui served as a lowly court attendant in the southern capital at Jiankang. Yet when he was eighteen years old the infamous military general
Hou Jing came to power in southern China in a rebellion against the Liang Dynasty. Zhitui and a royal prince narrowly escaped
execution once they were made prisoners of Hou Jing.
In the year 552 Yan Zhitui fled to Jianling in what is today modern
Hubei, accompanying the Liang prince who he served prior to Hou Jing's revolt. This Liang prince established a rival court, yet it was destroyed when
Western Wei invaded from the north and captured Jianling in the year 554. At age twenty-four, Yan Zhitui now had become an enslaved
prisoner of war, carted off with 100,000 others to the Western Wei capital of Chang'an.
In 556 his family managed to escape Chang'an, and prepared to move east in hopes of returning to the Liang Dynasty over southern China. However, the
Chen Dynasty had since overthrown the Liang Dynasty in the south with the ascension of
Emperor Wu of Chen. Much like his grandfather who had refused to serve Liang once it usurped control from the Southern Qi state, Yan Zhitui decided not to serve the new Chen regime. Instead, Yan Zhitui was accepted in several court positions serving the Northern Qi Dynasty in northeastern China. Yet fate would have it that Yan would be forced to move again, this time after the
Northern Zhou defeated the Northern Qi in the year 577, supplanting it as the ruling dynasty over northern China. At age forty-six, Yan Zhitui moved back to Chang'an where he had once spent time in captivity. For the next several years he was not appointed to any governmental posts, and suffered for a brief time in a state of poverty. When the
Sui Dynasty headed by
Emperor Wen of Sui usurped control in the north from the Northern Zhou Dynasty, Yan Zhitui was once again given recognition and appointed to several scholarly and ministerial posts.
Written works
In his old age Yan also found time to work on a
dictionary and related literary projects. In his 26 chapter book ''Yanshi jiaxun'' 顏氏家訓 ("The Family Instructions of Master Yan") Yan Zhitui left an entire written compendium of his own philosophy and life-advice to his sons, advising them on which paths to take and which paths to avoid in order to gain success in life. He wrote that he formed many bad habits in life that took years to overcome because his elder brother had not been strict enough with him in the absence of their father.
He stressed the need to acquire a good education, since well-educated ministers were chosen for posts, while others who had prestigious family lines for centuries wound up working on farms or tending to horses in the stable if they were not properly educated.
Although he stressed the need for mastering calligraphy, painting, and playing the musical instrument of the
lute, he warned against them from practicing too much and gaining too much skill. This was because those of higher rank, in a degrading and humiliating fashion, could easily call upon them to constantly entertain and produce fanciful calligraphy, poetry, or a musical song on the spot.
Yan Zhitui was an
antiquarian when it came to the prized calligraphy in his family's collection, with written pieces in his possession that were originally penned by the masters of early calligraphy,
Wang Xizhi and his son
Wang Xianzhi.
In his writing, Yan Zhitui also supported
Buddhism. Yan defended it against many of his fellow peers who were staunch critics of the ideology, despite Yan's own strong emphasis on
Confucian learning and education. Yan also required of his sons that his funeral should be accompanied by Buddhist services, and persuaded his sons not to offer meat in traditional ancestral offerings.
Although he called upon his sons to observe and respect the teachings of Buddhism, he did not want them to lead a remote and isolated
monastic life, as he still had expectations that his sons should marry and have families of their own. He did, however, encourage them to:
Trivia
Although
paper had been known as a wrapping and padding material in China since the 2nd century BC,
[3] the first reference to the use of
toilet paper in human history was made by Yan Zhitui.
[4] In 589 AD Yan Zhitui wrote:
During the later
Tang Dynasty a
Muslim Arab traveler to China in the year 851 AD remarked:
See also
★
List of Chinese people
Notes
1. Needham, ''Science and Civilization'', 123.
2. Ebrey, 82.
3. Needham, 122.
4. Needham, 123.
References
★
East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History, , Patricia Buckley, Ebrey, Houghton-Mifflin, 2006,
★
Science and Civilization in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 1, Paper and Printing, , Joseph, Needham, Cambridge University Press, 1986,
External links
★
Yanshi jiaxun 顏氏家訓 "The Family Instructions of Master Yan"