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中國哲學書電子化計劃 數據維基
-> 周亮工

周亮工[查看正文] [修改] [查看歷史]
ctext:793879

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typeperson
name周亮工
name-style元亮晚晴簃詩匯·卷二十》:周亮工,字元亮,一字減齋,號櫟園,祥符人。
born1612
died1672
authority-cbdb65797
authority-sinica9261
authority-viaf62915460
authority-wikidataQ1017028
link-wikipedia_zh周亮工
link-wikipedia_enZhou_Lianggong
周亮工(1612年 - 1672年),字元亮,號櫟園減齋。河南祥符(今開封市)人,原籍江西金溪,初文人。

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以上介紹摘自維基百科;若有錯漏,敬請在維基百科上修改來源條目
Zhou Lianggong's portrait

Zhou Lianggong (周亮工 Zhōu Liànggōng|w=Chou Liang-kung, 1612–1672) was a Chinese poet, calligrapher, essayist, and art historian who was born in Kaifeng and had long family ties to Nanjing.

He passed his Jinshi degree in 1640, becoming a magistrate in Weixian, Shandong where he defended the city from attack from Manchu Qing army led by Abatai. He escaped to Beijing, but fled to Nanjing after the city was attacked by Li Zicheng's rebel forces. After Prince Dodo took Nanjing for the Qing dynasty, Zhou began serving the Qing. He would however take his place in the new Manchu regime in a variety of official capacities. In 1655, he was accused of official corruption by the Governor General of Fujian and Zhejiang Tongtai and finally faced imprisonment in Fuzhou, where he edited his poetry collection Laigutang Ji (賴古堂集). He was in jail when Koxinga's forces attacked, and he was temporarily released to lead the defense. Zhou was eventually granted amnesty in 1661, Zhou again served as an official, acting as grain intendant of Nanjing. In December 1669 he hosts a party, and over twenty Nanjing-affiliated painters and poets gathered there. He was accused again of corruption in 1669. His sentence was hanging, but he was again given amnesty and released during the general amnesty of 1670.

Late in life, he destroyed many of his writings, but not those of his many associates, whose work he guided and edited. Among his surviving works is a collection of jottings known as Yinshuwu Shuying (因树屋书影), a work he compiled in prison, and a remarkable collection of letters, Chidu Xinchao (尺牍新抄). The collection of letters was a democratic undertaking. Many of the collected letters are by those who aided in the compilation. In a real sense, Zhou was chief editor. In the immediate years after his death, Zhou was considered a writer of the first rank. By the 18th century, he and other writers who had served two dynasties were then considered of a lower level. In the late 18th century, his works were considered anathema by the ruling monarch.

以上介紹摘自維基百科;若有錯漏,敬請在維基百科上修改來源條目

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