Tag: Zhang Anshi

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 196): Legacy of Huo Guang

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 17 Scroll 25 (continued)

    Maoling Museum, Shaanxi Province

    The 4th year of Emperor Xuan’s Di’jie Era (66 B.C. continued)

    At first, the Huo clan gave themselves over to extravagance. Xu Fu, a scholar of Maoling, said: “The fall of the Huo family is certain. Extravagance breeds immodesty; immodesty leads to disrespect for superiors. Disrespect for superiors is a departure from the Way. When a man stands above others, the multitude will surely resent him. The House of Huo held power long and many there were who bore them ill will. The realm resented them, and yet they further acted in defiance of the Way; if they were not to perish, what would they wait for!”

    He submitted a memorial, saying: “The power of the Huo clan has reached its zenith. Your Majesty, while cherishing them, should restrain them in due time, lest they bring calamity upon themselves.” This memorial was thrice laid before the Emperor, yet it was withheld without reply.

    When the Huo clan was later executed, those who had exposed their crimes were all enfeoffed. Someone then submitted another memorial on behalf of Xu Fu:

    “I have heard that when a guest sees the host’s hearth placed too near the firewood, he advises moving the fuel to prevent disaster. The host remains silent, and before long, a fire indeed breaks out. The neighbors rush to extinguish it, and the blaze is finally put out. The host slaughters cattle and prepares a feast to thank them; those whose faces were scorched by the flames receive foremost honor, and all are rewarded according to their service—save the one who warned them beforehand.

    “The people say to the host: ‘Had you heeded the guest’s counsel, there would have been no fire, no need for cattle or feasts, and no danger to life. Now you reward those burnt by the flames, but the one who urged you to move the fuel receives nothing. Is it right to honor only those who suffered burns, and not the one who would have prevented the blaze?’ The host, realizing his fault, then acknowledges the guest’s merit.

    “So too with Xu Fu of Maoling. He memorialized repeatedly, warning of rising danger within the Huo clan and urging timely restraint. Had his counsel been accepted, there would have been no need for territorial divisions or the expense of new enfeoffments, and the officials would not have suffered rebellion and extermination. Now that the matter has run its course, Xu Fu alone has received no recognition. May Your Majesty consider this, and reward him beyond those who bore the scorch of the flames.”

    The Emperor granted the scholar Xu Fu ten bolts of silk, and later appointed him Court Attendant.

    When the Emperor first ascended the throne, he went to present respects at the temple of Emperor Gaozu. The Grand General Huo Guang rode in the imperial carriage, and the Emperor felt inwardly alarmed, as though thorns pressed upon his back. Later, the General of Chariots and Cavalry, Zhang Anshi, replaced Huo Guang in the carriage. With Zhang Anshi beside him, the Emperor was at ease and no longer afraid, for this Zhang Anshi was one in whom he placed intimate trust. When Huo Guang died, and his house was eventually exterminated, the people said that the downfall of the Huo clan began from that carriage seat. Twelve years later, Empress Dowager Huo was removed to the Yunlin Palace, where she took her own life.

    Ban Gu wrote in praise of Huo Guang: Huo Guang accepted the entrusted charge of aiding a child-sovereign, bearing the weight of the Han realm, rectifying government, securing the Altars of Earth and Grain, sustaining Emperor Zhao, and establishing Emperor Xuan. To compare him with the Duke of Zhou or Ah Heng(Yi Yin) is no exaggeration! Yet Huo Guang did not study the Classics deeply and lacked clarity in the greater Way. He concealed the wickedness of his treacherous wife and raised his daughter to the throne as empress. Lost in excessive desires, he opened the gate to calamity and invited ruin upon his clan. Within three years of his death, his treasures were scattered and his lineage annihilated. How lamentable!

    Sima Guang’s commentary: Huo Guang’s service to the Han may be called loyal. Yet he could not preserve his own house. Why? The instruments of authority are tools of the ruler. When a minister clings to them long and does not return them, he will rarely avoid harming himself.

    Emperor Zhao, at fourteen years of age, already perceived the deceit of Shangguan Jie; assuredly he could have managed affairs of state. Emperor Xuan ascended the throne at nineteen, possessing intelligence, resolution, and knowledge of the people’s suffering. Yet Huo Guang held power unyieldingly, never knowing when to withdraw, and filled the court with his kin, so that resentment accumulated above and discontent spread below. The people gnashed their teeth and cast hidden glances, awaiting their moment. That he did not meet disaster in life was already fortune; how, then, could his descendants—driven by hubris and excess—avoid it?

    Even so, Emperor Xuan rewarded his descendants with noble titles, rich stipends, command of great commanderies, and presence at court. That would have been enough to requite his service. Yet he further entrusted the Huo clan with the governance of state and the power of armies. As grievances piled and penalties increased, fear and suspicion grew, and plots were born. Thus, this calamity was not solely the Huo clan’s doing; Emperor Xuan too nourished its roots.

    In former days, when Dou Jiao rebelled in Chu, King Zhuang exterminated his clan, yet he spared the Remonstration Officer, Dou Kehuang, so that good counsel should not be wholly lost. Though the crimes of Huo Xian, Huo Yu, and Huo Yunwere egregious, the loyal legacy of Huo Guang should not have gone without oblation. To leave the clan with no heir—this was Emperor Xuan’s mercilessness!

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 195): Down with Gang of Huo

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 17 Scroll 25 (continued)

    A Park in Dingtao (Shanyang), Shandong Province

    The 4th year of Emperor Xuan’s Di’jie Era (66 B.C.)

    In February of spring, the Emperor enfeoffed his maternal grandmother as Lady of Bo’ping. His maternal uncles were likewise ennobled: Wang Wugu was made Marquis of Ping’chang, and Wang Wu was made Marquis of Le’chang.

    In May of summer, hailstones the size of chicken eggs fell in Shanyang and Jiyin. Floodwaters rose to two feet and five inches. More than twenty persons died, and all birds in flight perished.

    An edict was issued: “Henceforth, those who shelter and conceal their parents, wives who shelter and conceal their husbands, and grandchildren who shelter and conceal their grandparents shall not be prosecuted.”

    Liu Wen, grandson of Prince Hui of Guangchuan, was appointed Prince of Guangchuan.

    At this time, Grand Madame Huo Xian, together with Huo Yu, Huo Shan, and Huo Yun, perceived that their authority was declining. They often gathered to lament and reproach themselves. Huo Shan said: “Now the Chancellor holds the reins of power, and the Emperor trusts him. He has overturned the statutes established by the Grand General, constantly exposing the General’s faults. Many Confucian scholars come from poor families, traveling far to the capital and enduring hunger and cold. They delight in haughty and reckless speech, heedless of taboos—such men the Grand General despised. Yet His Majesty takes pleasure in conversing with them, and all compose responses to the Emperor’s inquiries, frequently disparaging our clan.

    “Some even submitted memorials accusing our brothers of arrogance and unrestrained conduct; this wounded me deeply. I suppressed the reports and did not present them to the Emperor. But the informers have grown ever more crafty, submitting sealed memorials without cease. His Majesty commands the Chief of the Palace Secretariat to retrieve them directly, bypassing the Secretariat entirely, further diminishing his trust in me. Moreover, rumors circulate among the common people that ‘the Huo family poisoned Empress Xu.’ Could such a thing be true?”

    Huo Xian, stricken with fear, at once revealed the truth to Huo Yu, Huo Shan, and Huo Yun. They were stunned and cried out: “If this is so, why did you not tell us sooner? The Emperor’s dismissal and dispersal of the sons-in-law of our house were all because of this. The matter is grave, and the punishment will be heavy. What course remains for us?” Thus the shadows of treachery began to gather.

    A close associate of Li Jing—maternal uncle to Huo Yun—named Zhang She observed the panic within Huo Yun’s household. He said to Li Jing: “The Chancellor and the Marquis of Ping’en now hold full power. You should have Grand Madame Xian petition the Empress Dowager to remove these two first. Thereafter, depose His Majesty and establish a new Son of Heaven—such matters lie within the reach of the Empress Dowager.”

    A man of Chang’an named Zhang Zhang reported this plot. The Minister of Justice and the Bearer of the Mace took up the case, and Zhang She and his accomplices were arrested.

    Later, an imperial edict ordered the arrests suspended. Huo Shan and the others grew still more fearful and conferred among themselves: “The Emperor hesitates only out of filial reverence for the Empress Dowager; otherwise, matters would already have gone to the end. This bodes ill. The restraint will not last—once it breaks, our clan will be annihilated. It is better to act first.” They bade their daughters warn their husbands. The husbands all replied: “There is nowhere for us to flee or hide!”

    Li Jing was charged with illicit dealings with the feudal lords, and his testimony implicated the Huo clan. An edict was issued: “Huo Yun and Huo Shan are unfit to remain in the capital. Let them be stripped of office and retire to their fiefs.”

    Zhang Chang, Prefect of Shanyang, submitted a memorial:

    “I have heard that Prince Ji You rendered meritorious service to Lu, Zhao Cui contributed greatly to Jin, and Tian Wan achieved for Qi. All were amply rewarded by their states, and their descendants shared in the benefit. Yet in the end, the Tian clan usurped Qi, the Zhao clan partitioned Jin, and the Ji clan manipulated Lu. Therefore Confucius composed the Spring and Autumn Annals to trace rise and decline, censuring most severely the hereditary aggrandizement of noble houses.

    “Recently, the Grand General made resolute plans, secured the ancestral temples, and brought order to the realm—his merits are not insignificant. The Duke of Zhou governed for seven years, yet the Grand General held authority for twenty, controlling the fate of the empire. At the height of his power, he shook Heaven and Earth, disturbing the harmony of yin and yang. The court advisers should have submitted a frank memorial, saying: ‘Your Majesty has already rewarded the Grand General to the fullest for his service. Of late, the regent ministers have dominated affairs, and the power of the nobility has grown excessive; the boundary between ruler and subject is no longer distinct. It is fitting to remove the three marquises of the Huo clan from power and send them back to their fief; as for the Guard General, Zhang Anshi, grant him a cane and a tea table for retirement, consult him on occasion, and treat him with courtesy, appointing him as mentor to the Son of Heaven, with a marquis title.’

    “Your Majesty should then have issued an edict declining their proposal, expressing gratitude for past achievements. The ministers, asserting righteousness, would repeatedly press their case until it was accepted. The world would regard Your Majesty as mindful of past achievements, and the officials as discerning in principle. The Huo clan would have no grounds for resentment in generations to come.

    “Now, the court hears no upright words, and the Emperor issues decrees alone. This is no prudent course. The two marquises have already departed the capital, and the feelings of the people do not differ by much. In my humble estimation, Grand Marshal Huo Yu and his subordinates are likely gripped by fear. When those close to the throne feel insecure, it won’t be an ideal situation.

    “I, Zhang Chang, dare to speak first and expose the root of the matter. Yet I stand alone in this distant commandery, unable to pursue the argument further. I beseech Your Majesty to examine my words with care.”

    The Emperor greatly approved his proposal, but did not summon him.

    The households of Huo Yu, Huo Shan, and the others were repeatedly troubled by uncanny portents, which filled them with grief and dread. Huo Shan said, “The Chancellor has arbitrarily reduced the offerings in the ancestral temple—lambs, pigs, and even frogs. This may be the source of these calamities.” They conspired to have the Empress Dowager Shangguan host a banquet for Lady Bo’ping, the Emperor’s maternal grandmother, summoning the Chancellor, the Marquis of Ping’en(Xu Guanghan), and their subordinates. Their plan was that Fan Mingyou and Deng Guanghan, acting under the Empress Dowager’s command, would execute them during the feast, afterward depose the Emperor, and set Huo Yu upon the throne. The scheme was spoken of, but no action was taken.

    Before it could be carried out, Huo Yun was appointed Prefect of Xuantu, and Ren Xuan was sent as Prefect of Dai Commandery. When the plot came to light, in July of autumn, Huo Yun, Huo Shan, and Fan Mingyou took their own lives. Grand Madame Huo Xian, Huo Yu, Deng Guanghan, and others were arrested. Huo Yu was executed by waist-chopping; Huo Xian, her daughters, and her brothers were put to death. All connected with the Huo clan shared their fate, and several dozen households were exterminated. The Grand Coachman Du Yannian, because of past dealings with the Huo family, was also dismissed from office.

    On August 1, Empress Huo was deposed and confined in the Zhao’tai Palace. On August 17, an imperial edict enfeoffed Zhang Zhang, Court Guard Dong Zhong, Left Assistant to the Secretariat Yang Yun, and the Privy Counselors Jin Anshang and Shi Gao—all of whom had aided in exposing the conspiracy. Yang Yun was the son of the former Chancellor Yang Chang; Jin Anshang was nephew to the late General of Chariots and Cavalry Jin Midi; and Shi Gao was nephew to Lady Shi, grandmother of the Emperor.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 192): Stepping out of the Shadow of Huo Guang

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 16 Scroll 24 (continued)

    A Book On Huo Guang

    The 2nd year of Emperor Xuan’s Di’jie Era (68 B.C.)

    In the spring, Huo Guang fell gravely ill. The Emperor went in person to visit him, wept at his side, and inquired after his health status. Huo Guang memorialized his gratitude, requesting that three thousand households be divided from his fief and given to his grandnephew Huo Shan, Commandant of Chariots, so that Huo Shan might continue the sacrifices of his deceased elder brother Huo Qubing. On that same day, Huo Guang’s son, Huo Yu, was appointed General of the Right.

    On March 8, Huo Guang died. The Emperor and the Empress Dowager themselves attended his funeral. A minister of two-thousand-picul rank was appointed to oversee the construction of his tomb, which was made in the manner of the imperial household, with a hearse and sepulcher of full honor. He was posthumously styled Marquis of Xuancheng. Troops of the Three-He commanderies—Henan, Henei, and Hedong—were sent to open the ground, inter his coffin, and raise his mound. Three hundred households were settled in his tomb-park, with officers appointed to tend and sacrifice. An edict decreed that his descendants should preserve their rank and fiefs for generations, exempt from levy and corvée.

    The Grand Master of Censorate, Wei Xiang, submitted a sealed memorial, saying: “The state has newly lost its Grand General. It is fitting to exalt and advance meritorious ministers, that no high office remain vacant, and that the frontier states may be reassured, so as to prevent contention for power. It is proper that the General of Chariots and Cavalry, Zhang Anshi, be appointed Grand General, and relieved of his post as Chamberlain. His son, Zhang Yanshou, may then assume the office of Chamberlain.”

    The Emperor inclined to this counsel. On April 17, Zhang Anshi was made Grand Marshal and General of Chariots and Cavalry, also the Recorder of the State Secretariat.

    That year phoenixes gathered in Lu, and a multitude of birds followed. A general amnesty was proclaimed throughout the realm.

    To honor and reward the virtue of the late Grand General, the Emperor enfeoffed Huo Shan, grandson of Huo Qubing, as Marquis of Leping, and made him Director of the State Secretariat and Commandant of Chariots.

    Wei Xiang, the Grand Master of Censorate, submitted a sealed memorial through Lord of Changcheng, Xu Guanghan, saying:

    “The Spring and Autumn Annals reproach the ministers of the realm: in Song the royal kindred held sway for three generations, and in Lu the Jisun usurped power; both brought peril to their states. Since the Houyuan reign of Emperor Wu, the system of rewards has slipped from the court’s control, and the governance of the realm has lain in the hands of mighty ministers. Now Huo Guang is dead, but his son again holds the post of General of the Right, and his brother’s grandson controls the central command. Brothers, brothers-in-law, and kinsmen fill the armies with power. Grand Madame Xian and all her daughters enter the Changxin Palace by day and by night, ordering its gates to be opened at will, indulging in luxury and extravagance. If their power is not diminished, if their influence is not checked, hidden plots may arise, and the foundation of the state will not be secure. It is fitting to pare down their strength, to prevent calamity in time, and to safeguard the heritage of the meritorious.”

    By custom, all petitions required two copies, one marked “duplicate,” first read in the State Secretariat, and if containing disfavor, withheld. Wei Xiang proposed, through Xu Guanghan, that he be allowed to present his memorial without the duplicate, so that it could not be obstructed. The Emperor approved, appointed Wei Xiang additionally as Palace Liaison, and accepted all his counsel.

    The Emperor himself, having been raised among the people, well understood their hardships. After the death of Huo Guang he took direct charge of the government, scrutinizing affairs with diligence, and holding hearings every five days. From the Chancellor to the lowest officials, all submitted reports and were examined for their merit. The achievements of the Privy Counselors and Secretariat officers were richly rewarded, extending even to their descendants, and this became a precedent faithfully observed. Thus the administration was orderly, the protocols complete, and from top to bottom harmony prevailed, with no trace of neglect.

    When appointing provincial inspectors, commandery prefects, and princely ministers, the Emperor himself inquired into their worth, observed their talents, and later judged their deeds to test their words. If speech and action did not accord, their hearts were revealed. He often said: “The people’s peace in their fields, and the lessening of their sighs and sorrows, come from upright governance. Of those who share with Us this charge, none are weightier than the ministers of two-thousand-picul rank.”

    He deemed the commandery prefect the root of order, and held that frequent removals disturbed the people. When the people knew their governors were settled long-term, and could not be deceived, they willingly followed the laws and teachings.

    Thus, when inspectors of the provinces showed skill in rule, the Emperor by edict praised and encouraged them, increased their stipends, bestowed gold, and raised their rank to that of Inner Marquis. When offices stood vacant, he appointed men from those recommended.

    Therefore, in the time of Han, virtuous officials flourished, and this age was acclaimed as a time of  renaissance.

    Upon the death of the Xiongnu Chanyu Huyandi, his younger brother, the Left Tuqi King, ascended the throne, taking the title Xulüquanqu Chanyu. He raised the daughter of the Right Grand General to be Grand Yanzhi, and deposed the former favorite, Zhuànqú Yanzhi. The Left Grand Zuqu, her father, nursed resentment.

    At this time the Han, deeming the Xiongnu no longer a threat, withdrew garrisons from the frontier towns to give rest to the people. The Chanyu rejoiced, and with his nobles resolved to seek peace and marriage with the Han. But the Left Grand Zuqu opposed it, saying: “Formerly, when Han envoys came, they brought soldiers with them. If we now imitate the Han, we too should first dispatch troops.” He then proposed to go forth with the Huluzi King, each leading ten thousand horses, to hunt along the southern border, and when they joined, to cross into Han soil together.

    Before they reached their march, three riders defected to the Han and disclosed the plan. The Emperor forthwith mobilized the border cavalry, sending the Military Supervisor under the Grand General Zhizhong, with four other commanders, to lead five thousand cavalry in three divisions, patrolling several hundred li beyond the passes. Each captured scores of men before returning. The Xiongnu, alarmed at the loss of their three riders, dared not advance and withdrew.

    That year the Xiongnu suffered famine. Of men and herds, six or seven in ten perished. They set two hosts, each of ten thousand horses, to guard against Han incursion. In autumn, led by their chiefs, thousands of the Xiru tribesmen, who had once submitted to the Xiongnu, were driven south with their flocks. They fought the Xiongnu at Otuo, and were bloodily repulsed. At length they broke through, descended south, and surrendered to the Han.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 187): Leapfrogging to The Throne

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 16 Scroll 24 (continued)

    Old City of Qi, Zibo(Qiansheng), Shandong Province 

    The 1st year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanping Era (74 B.C. continued)

    After the deposition of the Prince of Changyi, the choice of successor was debated among the senior ministers, including Huo Guang and Zhang Anshi. As no decision was yet reached, Bing Ji submitted a memorial to Huo Guang, saying:

    “Grand General, you served Emperor Wu, bearing the charge of raising his heir from infancy, entrusted with the care of the entire realm. When Emperor Zhao passed away untimely, leaving no heir, fear and unease spread throughout the empire. On the day of the funeral, for the sake of the great enterprise, a successor was hastily chosen; but perceiving the choice amiss, he was deposed for the greater cause, and all under Heaven assented. At this juncture, the fate of the state, the ancestral temples, and the lives of the people depend upon your judgment.

    “I have listened to the voices of the people and observed the discourse regarding the princes of the imperial clan, yet have heard no worthy name outside the court. Meanwhile, within the harem by posthumous decree, the Imperial Great-Grandson Liu Bingyi has been fostered, reared under the care of the inner palace and his maternal great grandmother. When I once served at the commandery prison, I beheld him as a child. Now he is eighteen or nineteen years of age, well versed in the Confucian classics, of comely talent and serene bearing.

    “I earnestly entreat the General, considering the highest righteousness, to seek the judgment of the tortoise oracle; if it proves auspicious, then let him be appointed attendant to the Empress Dowager and enter the palace, so that all under Heaven may behold him. Then, with the world’s gaze upon him, the final decision may be made, to the blessing of the empire.”

    Du Yannian also discerned the virtue of the Imperial Great-Grandson, and urged Huo Guang and Zhang Anshi to establish him as successor.

    In July of autumn, Huo Guang, seated in the court, convened with the Chancellor Yang Chang and the ministers to deliberate, and together they memorialized, saying: “The Great-Grandson of Emperor Wu, Liu Bingyi, is now eighteen years of age. He has been instructed in the Book of Songs, the Analects, and the Classic of Filial Piety. He himself practices frugality, kindness, and benevolence. He is fit to succeed Emperor Zhao, to continue the sacrifices of the ancestral temples, and to nurture the people. We memorialize this, even at the cost of our lives.”

    The Empress Dowager decreed: “It is permitted.”

    Huo Guang sent the Minister of the Imperial Clan, Liu De, to the residence of the Imperial Great-Grandson at Shangguanli, where he was bathed and robed in imperial garments. The Grand Coachman dispatched a light carriage to escort him to the Ministry of the Imperial Clan.

    On July 25, Liu Bingyi entered Weiyang Palace, audience with the Empress Dowager, and was ennobled as Marquis of Yangwu.

    Afterward the court officials presented the imperial seal and ribbon, and he was formally enthroned as Emperor. He went to offer sacrifice at the Temple of Emperor Gaozu, and honored the Empress Dowager with the title of Grand Empress Dowager.

    The Imperial Censor Yan Yannian accused Huo Guang, submitting a memorandum, saying: “General Huo has deposed and established an emperor of his own will, not in accord with the rites of a loyal minister. This is not fitting.” Though the charge was dismissed, the officials of the court ever after revered and feared Yan Yannian.

    On August 5, Yang Chang, Marquis of Anping, died.

    In September, a general amnesty was proclaimed throughout the empire. 

    On September 5, Cai Yi was appointed Chancellor.

    Earlier, the daughter of Xu Guanghan had been wedded to the Imperial Great-Grandson Liu Bingyi. After one year she bore him a son, Liu Shi. Within a few months thereafter, the Great-Grandson became Emperor, and the house of Xu grew in influence. At that time the General Huo Guang had a young daughter, kin to the Empress Dowager. When the choice of an empress was under discussion, some secretly inclined toward Huo Guang’s daughter, but none dared to speak openly.

    The Emperor thereupon issued a decree, seeking for the old sword he had carried in his obscurity. The wise among the ministers discerned his inkling, and proposed the daughter of Xu Guanghan as the Empress. On November 9, Consort Xu(Jieyu[Lady of Handsome Fairness]) was established as Empress. Later, Huo Guang judged Xu Guanghan, who had been punished by castration, unfit to hold the title of a head of state. After one year, he was enfeoffed as Lord of Changcheng.

    The Grand Empress Dowager returned to dwell in Changle Palace, where guards were stationed for the first time.

    The 1st year of Emperor Xuan’s Benshi Era (73 B.C.)

    In the spring, an imperial decree ordered the ministers to deliberate on the merit of securing the imperial succession and continuing the ancestral sacrifices. The Grand General Huo Guang was augmented with a fief of seventeen thousand households, in addition to his former twenty thousand. The Chariot and Cavalry General, Zhang Anshi, Marquis of Fuping, together with ten others of lesser rank, all received increases of fief. Five men were enfeoffed as marquises, and eight were created Inner Marquises.

    The Grand General Huo Guang prostrated himself, humbly petitioning to return the affairs of state to the Emperor, but the Emperor refused, insisting that he continued his duty. He decreed that all matters must first be presented to Huo Guang for judgment, and only then submitted for imperial sanction.

    From the time of Emperor Zhao, Huo Guang’s son Huo Yu, and his elder brother Huo Qubing’s grandson, Huo Yun, both served as Generals of the Household. Huo Yun’s younger brother, Huo Shan, was Commandant of Chariots and Privy Counselor, commanding troops of the northern and southern tribes. Two sons-in-law of Huo Guang held the posts of Guard Commandants of the Eastern and Western Palaces. His kinsmen by blood and marriage—brothers, sons-in-law, and grandsons—crowded the court, filling the offices of administrators, grandees, commandants, and palace liaisons. Thus they formed a tightly bound faction.

    As the power of Huo Guang grew, especially after the deposition of the Prince of Changyi, his authority became ever more preeminent. In court audiences the Emperor humbled his bearing, withdrew his countenance, and displayed undue deference toward him.

    On April 10, in summer, there was an earthquake.

    In May, phoenixes gathered in Jiaodong and Qiansheng. A general amnesty was proclaimed throughout the empire, and the collection of land taxes and levies was suspended.

    In June, an imperial decree was issued, saying: “The former Crown Prince, who lies at rest in Hu County, has neither been granted a posthumous name nor received annual sacrifice. Let there be discussion on bestowing a posthumous title and establishing an estate for his tomb garden.”

    The officials in charge memorialized, saying: “According to the rites, when one inherits the title of a man, he must be accounted his son; thus the sacrifices to his true parents must cease, in order to honor the ancestral line. Now Your Majesty, as the descendant of Emperor Zhao, inherits the sacrifices of the imperial temple. We propose that the posthumous title of Your Majesty’s  true(biological) father be Prince Dao, and of Your Majesty’s  true(biological) mother be Queen Dao. Further, that the former Crown Prince, Your Majesty’s true grandsire, be posthumously named Crown Prince Li, and his consort, Lady Shi, be styled Madame Li.”

    All these were accordingly reburied with their proper honors.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 186): It Takes A Nation to Raise An Imperial Great-Grandson

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 16 Scroll 24 (continued)

    The Kingdom of Lu

    The 1st year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanping Era (74 B.C. continued)

    Huo Guang, directing that memorials of state be submitted to the Eastern Palace, judged that the Empress Dowager should be instructed in the Confucian classics. He commanded Xiahou Sheng to expound the Book of Documents to her. Xiahou Sheng was then promoted to Privy Treasurer of Changxin Palace, and ennobled as Marquis Within the Passes.

    In former times, Crown Prince Liu Ju, born of Empress Wei, had taken to wife a Lady Shi of the kingdom of Lu, and she bore him a son, Liu Jin, styled the Emperor’s Grandson Shi. The Grandson Shi took to wife a Lady Wang of Zhuo Commandery, and she bore a son Liu Bingyi, who was styled the Imperial Great-Grandson. When the Great-Grandson was but a few months old, he was implicated in the witchcraft affair. The three sons and one daughter of the Crown Prince, with their wives and concubines, all perished in that calamity. Only the Great-Grandson survived, yet he too was cast into the commandery prison.

    At that time, Bing Ji, former Associate Minister of Justice of Lu, was charged by decree to investigate the witchcraft case. Knowing the Crown Prince to be guiltless, he grieved for the unjust suffering of the Imperial Great-Grandson. He chose trustworthy and compassionate women among the inmates—Hu Zu of Weicheng and Guo Zhengqing of Huaiyang—to nourish the child, and placed him in a drier and cleaner cell. Bing Ji himself came every other day to inspect.

    The witchcraft case dragged on unresolved. When Emperor Wu fell ill, he often lodged at the Changyang and Wuzha Palaces. Astrologers declared that an imperial aura arose within the prison at Chang’an. Emperor Wu therefore ordered that all prisoners there be executed, without regard to guilt or crime.

    One night the palace usher Guo Rang came with men to the commandery prison, but Bing Ji refused to open the gates, saying: “Within is the Imperial Great-Grandson. To kill the innocent is unlawful; how much more the close kin of the Emperor!” He barred the gates until dawn. Guo Rang returned and impeached Bing Ji.

    When Emperor Wu awoke and heard, he said: “This is Heaven’s intervention.” He issued a general amnesty, and only those imprisoned in the commandery residence were spared—preserved through the loyal protection of Bing Ji.

    Later, Bing Ji, deeming it unfitting that the Imperial Great-Grandson should remain in prison, instructed the warden Shei Ru to present a letter to the Intendant of Jingzhao. Shei Ru, together with Hu Zu, carried the letter, but the Intendant refused to receive it and sent them back. When the time came for Hu Zu’s release, the Imperial Great-Grandson clung to her with longing. Bing Ji then spent his own wealth to persuade Hu Zu to remain, and with Guo Zhengqing she continued to rear the child. After some months, Hu Zu was permitted to depart.

    Thereafter the county treasurer reported to Bing Ji that no decree authorized provisions for the Imperial Great-Grandson. Bing Ji again drew upon his own purse, each month supplying rice and meat. When the child fell ill, he arranged for wet-nurses without ceasing, and himself oversaw the use of medicines. Many times by such care Bing Ji drew the Imperial Great-Grandson back from the brink of death.

    When Bing Ji learned that Consort Shi, grandmother of the Great-Grandson, had a mother Zhenjun and a brother Shi Gong, he sent the child in a carriage and entrusted him to them. The aged Zhenjun, beholding her sole great grandson, was moved with compassion, and took upon herself the burden of nurture, cherishing him with utmost care.

    Later an imperial decree commanded that the Imperial Great-Grandson be raised within the inner palace, his name entered in the register of the Minister of the Imperial Clan. At that time Zhang He was Director of the Inner Palace. He had once served Crown Prince Liu Ju, and out of remembrance for former grace, pitied the orphaned scion. He tended the Imperial Great-Grandson with devotion, sustaining him and instructing him at his own expense. When the Great-Grandson reached maturity, Zhang He, seeking to strengthen his household bond, proposed to wed his granddaughter to him.

    At that time Emperor Zhao had just come of age. His stature was eight feet two inches. Zhang He’s younger brother, Zhang Anshi, served as General of the Right and assisted in the government. When he heard that Zhang He praised the Imperial Great-Grandson and even thought to marry his granddaughter to him, he grew angry and said: “The Imperial Great-Grandson is but a remnant scion of Crown Prince Liu Ju and Empress Wei. It is fortunate enough that the state sustains him with the livelihood of a commoner. How can you speak of wedding him to our granddaughter?” Zhang He, hearing this, abandoned the plan.

    At that time there was a clerk of the weaving chamber within the harem, eunuch Xu Guanghan. Zhang He gave a banquet and invited him. When the wine was deep, Zhang He said: “The Imperial Great-Grandson is a kin to the Emperor. At the least, he will bear the rank of Marquis Within the Passes. He would be a worthy match for your daughter.” Xu Guanghan agreed. On the morrow, when Xu’s wife heard of it, she was wroth; yet Zhang He pressed the matter, and in the end the marriage was made. Zhang He himself bore the expense of the dowry.

    Thus the Imperial Great-Grandson relied upon the support of Xu Guanghan and his brethren, together with his grandmother’s house, the Shi clan. He received instruction in the Book of Songs from Fu Zhongweng of Donghai. Though he was quick of wit and ardent in study, he also delighted in knight-errant’s hobbies, such as cockfighting and dog-racing. In this he came to know the ways of good and evil among the people, and to discern the success and failure of local administration.

    He roamed often through the counties and commanderies, visiting ancient tombs, and explored widely the Three Metropolitan regions of Jingzhao, Pingyi, and Fufeng. Once he met hardship near Lianshao Salt Lake, and he especially liked the counties of Du and Hu, and would often reside at Xiadu City. When entering court, he lodged in the quarter of Shangguanli outside the capital of Chang’an.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 185): Weiyang Palace Putsch

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 16 Scroll 24 (continued)

    Weiyang Palace Imagined

    The 1st year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanping Era (74 B.C. continued)

    When the Prince of Changyi came to pay homage to the Empress Dowager, and was about to depart in his carriage toward the Wenshi Chamber, eunuchs held each door along the way. As the Prince entered, the doors were shut behind him, and the ministers of Changyi were barred from entry. The Prince asked: “What does this mean?” 

    The Grand General knelt and said: “The Empress Dowager has issued an edict, prohibiting the ministers of Changyi from entering.”

    The Prince said: “Take things calmly and slowly. Why cause alarm and frighten men?”

    Huo Guang thereupon ordered the ministers of Changyi expelled, and placed them outside the Golden Horse Gate. The General of Chariots and Cavalry, Zhang Anshi, led the Feathered Forest Cavalry, seized more than two hundred of the Prince’s minions, and delivered them to the Ministry of Justice for trial.

    Huo Guang commanded the eunuchs who had formerly served Emperor Zhao to guard the Prince, saying: “Be ever watchful! Should he die or take his own life, I would be accused of regicide, and the whole empire would be betrayed.”

    The Prince, still unaware of his deposition, said to those about him: “How could my ministers and attendants be guilty? Why has the Grand General seized them all?”

    Soon the Empress Dowager summoned the Prince of Changyi. When he heard the summons, the Prince was fearful, saying: “What offense have I committed, that I should be summoned?”

    The Empress Dowager, in a pearl vest, sat in a resplendent robe within the command tent. Several hundred attendants bearing arms stood about her, and guards with weapons were arrayed at the gates. The ministers entered the hall in order. The Prince of Changyi was called forward to hear the edict.

    Huo Guang and the ministers submitted a memorial of impeachment, and the Chief of the State Secretariat read it aloud:

    “Chancellor Yang Chang and the ministers, prostrate, dare to address the Empress Dowager: The late Emperor Zhao was cut off in youth, leaving no heir. The Prince of Changyi was summoned to perform the mourning rites, yet he donned mourning garb without true grief. He cast aside the rules of mourning, ate and drank at will, permitted his officers to convey women in covered carriages, and joined them in revelry at their lodgings. On his arrival he was forthwith proclaimed Crown Prince, and still he privately purchased chickens and swine for his meals.

    “He received the Imperial Trust Seal[for military command] and the Personnel Seal before the pall of the late Emperor, yet left them unguarded. He caused more than two hundred attendants and slaves of Changyi to be escorted into the palace, where they engaged in frivolities within the forbidden precincts. He even wrote a letter, saying: The Emperor greets the court attendants. I have ordered Gao Chang, Supervisor of the Changyi Treasury, to grant you a thousand catties of gold and bestow upon you ten wives.

    “Even while the pall of the late Emperor stood in the front hall, he opened the Music Office, called in the performers of Changyi to strike drums, sing songs, blow flutes, and play lewd and vulgar farces. He summoned the ensemble of the Grand Ancestral Temple and the physicians’ musicians to perform. He drove carriages through the Northern Palace and Gui Palace, staging contests of pigs and battles of tigers. He commandeered the Empress Dowager’s miniature carriage, with slave attendants mounted beside him, and rollicked about the courtyard. He committed lewd acts with palace women, even Lady Mong of the late Emperor, and through the Superintendent of the Courtyard issued an edict, saying: Whoever dares to leak this will be cut in twain at the waist!

    The Empress Dowager said: “Wait a moment! As a subject, should one act with such wantonness?” The Prince of Changyi rose from his seat and prostrated himself.

    The Chief of the State Secretariat continued to read:

    “…He took the ribbons of princes, marquises, and officials of two-thousand-picul rank, together with the black and yellow insignia, and bestowed them upon his attendants and pardoned slaves of Changyi. He lavished gold coins, knives, swords, jade ornaments, and woven silks from the Imperial Treasury as rewards for revelry. He held night banquets with his officials and slaves, drowning himself in wine.

    “On a solitary night he feasted in the Wenshi Chamber, receiving his brother-in-law, the Marquis Within the Passes from Changyi, with the highest rites. Before the ancestral sacrifices had been offered, he sent forth a sealed command to dispatch an envoy to sacrifice to the late Prince of Changyi, his father Liu Bo, in the royal garden, and styled himself the ‘Successor Emperor.’

    “In the span of twenty-seven days after receiving the imperial seal, the Prince issued one thousand one hundred and twenty-seven orders to the various offices of government. He has abandoned himself to extravagance and debauchery, cast aside the rites and proprieties of an emperor, and thrown the governance of Han into disorder.

    “Chancellor Yang Chang and the ministers, again and again, offered admonition, yet he never amended his conduct, but daily grew worse. Fearing peril to the state and turmoil within the empire, the ministers consulted the learned, and all were of one accord: The sovereign who succeeded Emperor Zhao has engaged in licentious and lawless conduct, in defiance of filial piety.

    “The Classic of Filial Piety says: Among the five categories of crime, unfilial conduct is the gravest. In the Spring and Autumn Annals, it is recorded: King Xiang of Zhou mistreated his mother, and the heavenly king was driven from the capital to dwell in Zheng. His want of filial piety made him an outcast beneath Heaven.

    “The ancestral temple is greater than the throne. His Majesty has failed to receive Heaven’s mandate, to revere the ancestral temple, and to fulfill the duty of succession. Therefore it is meet and right that he be deposed. We request that a solemn offering of a great victim—ox, sheep, and swine—be made to the ancestral temple.”

    The Empress Dowager decreed: “It is permitted.”

    Huo Guang bade the Prince of Changyi rise and receive the decree. The Prince said: “I have heard it said: Though the Son of Heaven lost his way, if seven ministers remonstrate with him, the empire shall not be lost.

    Huo Guang replied: “The Empress Dowager has decreed your deposition. How can you still call yourself Son of Heaven?”

    He then took the Prince by the hand, untied the ribbon of the imperial seal, and presented the seal to the Empress Dowager. He led the Prince down from the hall, out through the Golden Horse Gate, the ministers following behind.

    Facing west, the Prince knelt and said: “I am foolish and ignorant, unfit to bear the enterprise of Han!” Then he rose, mounted his carriage, and the Grand General escorted him to the residence of Changyi princedom.

    Huo Guang said with gratitude: “Sire by his own conduct has severed the bond with Heaven. I would rather betray Sire than betray the state. May Sire preserve himself; I, a subject, shall no longer attend at your side.” He departed in tears.

    The ministers memorialized, saying: “In antiquity, those deposed and banished were sent afar, severed from affairs of state. We request that Prince Liu He be relocated to Fangling county of Hanzhong Commandery.”

    The Empress Dowager decreed that Prince Liu He be returned to Changyi, granted a fief of two thousand households, and the possessions of his house restored. To the four daughters of the late Prince of Changyi, each was granted a thousand households. The principality itself was abolished, and its lands annexed to Shanyang Commandery.

    In the time of Liu He’s reign in Changyi, the court officials, though seated in office, made no report of his misdeeds. They concealed his faults from the Han court and failed to guide him in the righteous path, whereby the Prince fell into grave transgressions. Thereupon all were implicated, arrested, and more than two hundred were executed. Only the Commandant of the Capital Guard, Wang Ji, and the Chamberlain, Gong Sui, who had steadfastly remonstrated with a loyal heart, were spared from death. Yet they were shaven of hair and sent to labor upon the city walls.

    When Wang Shi, tutor to the Prince of Changyi, was cast into prison and faced death, the interrogator asked him: “Why did you not submit a memorial of admonition to the Prince?”

    Wang Shi replied: “Day and night I recited the three hundred and five poems of the Book of Songs to the Prince. Those chapters that speak of loyal ministers and filial sons, I recited again and again. When the odes told of rulers in peril and princes astray, I never ceased to weep and admonish. With all three hundred and five poems I made my remonstrance. What need did I have for a separate memorial?”

    The interrogator, moved by these words, commuted his sentence and spared him from death.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 184): Athena Save The Day

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang  

    Annals of Han Book 16 Scroll 24 (continued)

    Mattei Athena at Louvre Abu Dhabi, the Goddess of Wisdom

    The 1st year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanping Era (74 B.C. continued)

    The Grand General Huo Guang was troubled in heart and distressed in mind. He sought counsel only from his trusted former colleague, the Minister of Agriculture, Tian Yannian. Tian Yannian said: “General, you are the pillar of the state. If this man proves unfit, why not present the matter to the Empress Dowager, and enthrone one worthy to inherit?”

    Huo Guang asked: “Is there any precedent for such a deed in antiquity?”

    Tian Yannian replied: “Yi Yin served as prime minister in the Yin, deposing Tai Jia for the security of the ancestral temple. Later ages have praised his loyalty. If the General acts thus, you will be the Yi Yin of the Han.”

    Huo Guang thereupon appointed Tian Yannian as Palace Liaison, and in secret conspired with the General of Chariots and Cavalry, Zhang Anshi, to lay their plan.

    While the Prince of Changyi went forth in an outing, the Grandee Chamberlain Xiahou Sheng of Lu stood before the imperial carriage and remonstrated, saying: “The heavens have long been overcast without rain; among the ministers there are conspiracies against the Son of Heaven. Whither does Your Majesty go?”

    The Prince was angered, and charged Xiahou Sheng with words of ill omen, commanding him to be bound and delivered to the authorities.

    The officials reported the matter to Huo Guang, yet Huo Guang did not take up the case. He laid blame upon Zhang Anshi, suspecting that their design had been disclosed.

    But Zhang Anshi had leaked nothing, and summoned Xiahou Sheng to question him. Xiahou Sheng said: “In the Classic of Documents, within the chapter Hongfan[Great Charter], it is written: ‘When the sovereign attains not the utmost virtue, calamities are constant and hidden. At such times there may be subjects who plot against their ruler.’ I dared not speak it outright, and so I said, ‘There are conspiracies among the ministers.’ This was what I meant.”

    Huo Guang and Zhang Anshi were greatly alarmed, and from this time depended more upon scholars versed in the Confucian classics.

    The Privy Counselor, Fu Jia, many times offered remonstrance, yet the Prince of Changyi had him seized and cast into prison.

    After Huo Guang and Zhang Anshi had resolved upon their course, they dispatched Tian Yannian to report to the Chancellor, Yang Chang. Yang Chang was stricken with fear, his countenance ashen, unable to utter a word. Sweat soaked his back, and he could only mumble incoherently. Tian Yannian withdrew to change his garments. The wife of Yang Chang hastened from the eastern chamber and said: “This concerns the fate of the state. Now that the Grand General has taken his stand, and the Nine Ministers have come to inform you, if you respond with hesitation, you shall be the first to suffer execution!”

    When Tian Yannian returned, Yang Chang and his wife spoke in unison, saying: “We await the command of the Grand General.”

    On June 28, Huo Guang assembled the Chancellor, the censors, the generals, the marquises, the officials of two-thousand-picul rank, the grandees, and the scholars in conference at Weiyang Palace. Huo Guang said: “The Prince of Changyi has thrown the realm into disorder and imperils the state. What course should be taken?”

    The assembled ministers were all astonished, their faces drained of color. None dared to speak; they mumbled only confused words. Then Tian Yannian rose, drew his sword, and said: “The late Emperor entrusted to the Grand General an orphaned child, laying upon him the charge of the whole realm, for he alone was deemed capable, by loyalty and wisdom, of preserving the House of Liu. Now this man has plunged the state into chaos, and the empire stands on the brink of ruin.

    “In the Han dynasty, those who upheld the line of sacrifice were often honored with the title ‘Filial,’ that their merits might endure with the ancestral temple. Should the imperial line be severed, even if the Grand General were to die, how could he face the late Emperor beneath the earth? Today’s decision must be swift and resolute. Any who waver or delay—I beg leave to strike them down with my sword!”

    Huo Guang bowed and apologized: “The fault is mine. The Nine Ministers speak rightly. The empire is in turmoil; I alone shall bear the blame.” The assembled officials all knocked their heads and said: “The lives of the people rest in the Grand General. We will follow your command.”

    Then Huo Guang, together with the ministers, entered to see the Empress Dowager and laid forth in detail the reasons why the Prince of Changyi could not be heir to the ancestral temple. The Empress Dowager took her carriage to Chengming Hall in Weiyang Palace, and issued an edict forbidding the ministers of Changyi to pass through any of the inner gates.

  • Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance(Part 180): Consequence for Harboring Fugitive

    Comprehensive Reflections to Aid in Governance

    By Sima Guang

    Translated By Yiming Yang

    Annals of Han Book 15 Scroll 23 (continued)

    Mount Wuhuan, Inner Mongolia

    The 1st year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanfeng Era (80 B.C. continued)

    On September 2, Wang Xin of Fufeng was appointed Grand Master of Censorate.

    In October of winter, Du Yannian was enfeoffed as Marquis of Jianping, and Yan Cang was made Marquis of Yicheng. Ren Gong, formerly a liaison in the Chancellery, who had seized Shangguan Jie, was ennobled as Marquis of Yiyang. Wang Shanshou, junior staff of the Chancellery, who enticed Shangguan An into the Chancellery and arrested him, was granted the title of Marquis of Shangli.

    Long after, Literati Wei Xiang of Jiyin, in reply to the Emperor’s inquiry, said: “Of late, when the Prince of Yan committed injustice, Han Yi, though bound by close ties, dared to remonstrate sternly, and was slain by the Prince. Han Yi, though not kin to the Prince as Bi Gan was to King Zhou of Shang, followed Bi Gan’s principles. It is fitting that his son be rewarded, to proclaim to the world the righteousness of a loyal minister.” Accordingly, Han Yi’s son, Han Yanshou, was promoted to Grand Master of Remonstration.

    The Grand General, Huo Guang, perceiving that the court lacked seasoned officials, appointed the Chamberlain Zhang Anshi—who had long been forthright and had served as Chief of the State Secretariat since the reign of the late Emperor—as General of the Right, concurrently holding his post as Chamberlain, to serve as his second in command. Zhang Anshi was the son of the former Minister of Justice, Zhang Tang. Huo Guang also esteemed the loyalty and integrity of Du Yannian, promoting him in succession to Grand Coachman, Right Office Administrator, and Palace Liaison.

    Huo Guang upheld strict enforcement of laws and punishments, while Du Yannian oft aided in tempering them. When officials or commoners submitted petitions for reform, the court charged Du Yannian to review them and present them again for the Emperor’s decision. Those who passed vetting and were recommended for office, were appointed as county magistrates, or employed in the Chancellery or the Censorate. Their conduct was examined yearly, and if found wanting and punishment-warranted, they were disposed accordingly.

    That same year, the Xiongnu dispatched twenty thousand cavalry in four columns from the Left and Right Divisions, breaking across the frontier to plunder. Han troops pursued them, beheading many, seizing nine thousand prisoners, and capturing their leader, the Outuo King. The Han suffered no loss. The Xiongnu, fearful that the Outuo King was now in the Han’s hands, and dreading confrontation, withdrew northwest, not daring to advance southward to seek water and pasture. The Han court then recruited settlers to cultivate and guard the land of Outuo.

    The 2nd year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanfeng Era (79 B.C.)

    In April of summer, the Emperor moved from Jianzhang Palace to Weiyang Palace.

    In June, a general amnesty was proclaimed throughout the realm.

    That year, the Xiongnu again sent nine thousand riders to garrison near the City of Defectors, preparing against the Han’s attack. They built a northern bridge over the Yuwu River, to secure their retreat. They desired marriage alliance and peace, yet feared the Han’s refusal, and so dared not first make the request. Instead, their chieftains often hinted of it to the Han envoys. Meanwhile, their raids and thefts diminished, and they received the Han emissaries with increasing courtesy, thereby seeking gradually to achieve reconciliation. The Han, in turn, strove to win their allegiance.

    The 3rd year of Emperor Zhao’s Yuanfeng Era (78 B.C.)

    In January of spring, on Mount Tai a great stone arose of itself and stood upright. In the Shanglin Park, a willow tree long dead and withered revived and came back to life. Insects fed on its leaves, forming characters that read: “Gongsun Bingyi shall be enthroned.”

    Sceptre Custodian Sui Hong of Lu memorialized, saying: “The stone that stands of itself, the withered willow revived—these portents signify that from among the common people one shall soon become Emperor. The tree that revives to life may be the restoration of the Gongsun clan, once cut off. The House of Han, inheriting the mandate from Emperor Yao, is destined now for transfer of reign. It should seek out the virtuous to receive the throne, abdicate willingly, and retain a fief of a hundred li, thus according with Heaven’s will.” For spreading blasphemy to mislead the people, Sui Hong was executed.

    At that time, the Xiongnu Chanyu dispatched the Liwu King to reconnoiter the frontier, reporting that the garrisons of Jiuquan and Zhangye were weakened. He urged an expedition to probe their defenses, hoping to recover those lands. The plan was revealed by surrendered Xiongnu, and the Emperor ordered the border commanderies to maintain strict vigilance. Soon after, the Right Tuqi King and the Liwu King led four thousand riders in three columns, raiding Ri’le, Wulan, and Panhe. The Prefect of Zhangye and the Commandant of the colony mustered their troops and engaged them, winning a great victory; only a few hundred escaped.

    The Yiqu chieftain, a vassal king, shot and killed the Liwu King with a bow. In reward, he received two hundred catties of gold, two hundred horses, and was ennobled with the title of Liwu King by the Han. From that time forth, the Xiongnu dared not again intrude into Zhangye.

    During the turmoil of the Prince of Yan and the Princess Royal Gai’s rebellions, Sang Qian, son of Sang Hongyang, fled into exile and sought refuge with Houshi Wu, once a subordinate of his father. Later, Sang Qian was seized and put to death. When a general amnesty was proclaimed, Houshi Wu came forth of his own accord and was cast into prison. The Minister of Justice, Wang Ping, and the Privy Treasurer, Xu Ren, were charged with handling the cases of those implicated in the rebellion. They submitted: “Sang Qian, though son of a traitor, fled in fear; Houshi Wu sheltered him, not as an accomplice in treason but as one guilty by association. Both should be pardoned.”

    Later, the Censorate re-examined the evidence, stating: “Sang Qian, though learned in the Confucian Classics, knew of his father’s conspiracy yet offered no opposition. His guilt is as that of the rebels themselves. Houshi Wu, a minor official of three hundred-picul rank, willingly harbored Sang Qian, unlike commoners who merely hid the implicated. Thus, he cannot be pardoned.” The case was reopened, and charges were pressed against Wang Ping and Xu Ren for showing leniency toward rebels.

    Xu Ren, being son-in-law to the Chancellor, Tian Qianqiu, feared that the Grand General Huo Guang would not hear his defense. Tian Qianqiu therefore summoned officials of 2000-picul rank together with scholars to assemble at the palace gate, and deliberate on the case of Houshi Wu. Those present, discerning the intent of Huo Guang, all deemed Houshi Wu guilty. On the morrow, Tian Qianqiu presented their judgment to the Emperor.

    The Grand General Huo Guang accused the Chancellor Tian Qianqiu of unilaterally summoning officials and scholars, thereby creating divisions within and without, stirring opposition and spreading rumor. He ordered that Wang Ping and Xu Ren be cast into prison, and the people feared the Chancellor himself might be implicated.

    The Grand Coachman, Du Yannian, memorialized the Grand General: “When officials shelter criminals, the statutes already provide for due punishment. Now, to add the charge of Houshi Wu’s impropriety may be overly severe. Moreover, the Chancellor, long known for holding nothing firmly, has been accustomed to speak fair words to his subordinates, in keeping with his nature. That he summoned the 2000-picul officials was improper, yet it accords with his old habit. The Chancellor has long served the late Emperor; there is no grave cause for dismissal, nor should he be cast aside save for open and manifested crimes.

    “Of late, the people speak much of harsh judgments and trumped-up charges. Now the Chancellor has spoken in matters of law. If in consequence he should be implicated, it will not accord with public sentiment. There may be unrest among the people, and rumors will spread. I, Du Yannian, humbly believe this will harm the Grand General’s good name.”

    The Grand General, deeming the Ministers of Justice and the Privy Treasurer guilty of trifling with the law, sent them to prison.

    In April of summer, Xu Ren took his own life. Wang Ping and Jia Shenghu, Prefect of East Pingyi, were executed by waist-chopping. The Chancellor, Tian Qianqiu, was not implicated, and continued thereafter to serve alongside Huo Guang. Du Yannian’s counsel, favoring moderation and concord in the court, helped bring resolution in similar cases.

    In winter, the Wuhuan of Liaodong rebelled. In former days, when Modu Chanyu destroyed the Donghu, their remnants scattered, settling about Mount Wuhuan and Mount Xianbei, and from these arose two eponym tribes, long subject to the Xiongnu. Later, Emperor Wu, in his eastern expedition against the Xiongnu, subdued them, and relocated the Wuhuan to Shanggu, Yuyang, Youbeiping, and the outer marches of Liaodong, to watch the Xiongnu on behalf of the Han. A Colonel of Protecting the Wuhuan was set over them, charged to guide and restrain them, and to forbid dealings with the Xiongnu. With the passing of years, the Wuhuan waxed strong and rose in rebellion.

    At that time, over three thousand Xiongnu cavalry entered Wuyuan, slaying and plundering thousands. Soon thereafter, tens of thousands of their riders ranged south along the frontier, hunting, assaulting the outer posts, and seizing officers and commoners. Yet the watchtowers of the Han stood alert, and the Xiongnu, gaining little by such raids, seldom forced the defenses. From surrendered Xiongnu it was learned that the Wuhuan had earlier despoiled the tomb of a former Chanyu, which roused the wrath of the Xiongnu, and now they were dispatching twenty thousand cavalry to smite the Wuhuan.

    The Grand General Huo Guang sought to dispatch troops to intercept and strike. He asked counsel of the Army Protector Commandant, Zhao Chongguo. Zhao Chongguo said: “The Wuhuan have oft violated the passes; now that the Xiongnu assail them, it is as though they act for the Han. Moreover, the Xiongnu seldom raid of late, and the northern frontier enjoys peace. If the barbarians fight among themselves and we send troops to intervene, stirring disorder and kindling strife, it is not a prudent course.”

    Huo Guang then consulted the General of Household, Fan Mingyou, who judged it feasible to advance. Fan Mingyou was accordingly appointed General of Crossing Liao and led twenty thousand cavalry to Liaodong. When the Xiongnu heard of the Han army’s arrival, they withdrew.

    At first, Huo Guang had warned Fan Mingyou not to let the mobilization be wasted, and if he could not overtake the Xiongnu, to strike the Wuhuan instead. The Wuhuan, having just been harried by the Xiongnu, were weakened. Fan Mingyou attacked them, slew over six thousand, and took the heads of three kings. Thereafter, the Xiongnu, in fear of the Han, dared not again make incursions.