READING HALL . THE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
  
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 A HISTORY OF CHINACHAPTER III.THE CHOU DYNASTY(1028-257 BC)1
           Cultural origin of the Chou
          
          and end of the Shang dynasty
           
           The Shang culture still lacked certain things that were to become
          
          typical of "Chinese" civilization. The family system was not yet the
          
          strong patriarchal system of the later Chinese. The religion, too, in spite of
          
          certain other influences, was still a religion of agrarian fertility. And
          
          although Shang society was strongly stratified and showed some tendencies to
          
          develop a feudal system, feudalism was still very primitive. Although the Shang
          
          script was the precursor of later Chinese script, it seemed to have contained
          
          many words which later disappeared, and we are not sure whether Shang language
          
          was the same as the language of Chou time. With the Chou period, however, we
          
          enter a period in which everything which was later regarded as typically
          
          "Chinese" began to emerge.
            During the time of the Shang dynasty the Chou formed a small realm in
          
          the west, at first in central Shensi, an area which even in much later times
          
          was the home of many "non-Chinese" tribes. Before the beginning of
          
          the eleventh century BC they must have pushed into eastern Shensi, due to
          
          pressures of other tribes which may have belonged to the Turkish ethnic group.
          
          However, it is also possible that their movement was connected with pressures
          
          from Indo-European groups. An analysis of their tribal composition at the time
          
          of the conquest seems to indicate that the ruling house of the Chou was related
          
          to the Turkish group, and that the population consisted mainly of Turks and
          
          Tibetans. Their culture was closely related to that of Yang-shao, the
          
          previously described painted-pottery culture, with, of course, the progress
          
          brought by time. They had bronze weapons and, especially, the war-chariot.
          
          Their eastward migration, however, brought them within the zone of the Shang
          
          culture, by which they were strongly influenced, so that the Chou culture lost
          
          more and more of its original character and increasingly resembled the Shang
          
          culture. The Chou were also brought into the political sphere of the Shang, as
          
          shown by the fact that marriages took place between the ruling houses of Shang
          
          and Chou, until the Chou state became nominally dependent on the Shang state in
          
          the form of a dependency with special prerogatives. Meanwhile the power of the
          
          Chou state steadily grew, while that of the Shang state diminished more and
          
          more through the disloyalty of its feudatories and through wars in the East.
          
          Finally, about 1028 B.C., the Chou ruler, named Wu Wang ("the martial
          
          king"), crossed his eastern frontier and pushed into central Honan. His
          
          army was formed by an alliance between various tribes, in the same way as
          
          happened again and again in the building up of the armies of the rulers of the
          
          steppes.
            Wu Wang forced a passage across the Yellow River and annihilated the
          
          Shang army. He pursued its vestiges as far as the capital, captured the last
          
          emperor of the Shang, and killed him. Thus was the Chou dynasty founded, and
          
          with it we begin the actual history of China. The Chou brought to the Shang
          
          culture strong elements of Turkish and also Tibetan culture, which were needed
          
          for the release of such forces as could create a new empire and maintain it
          
          through thousands of years as a cultural and, generally, also a political unit.
           
           2
           Feudalism in the new empire
           
           A natural result of the situation thus produced was the turning of the
          
          country into a feudal state. The conquerors were an alien minority, so that
          
          they had to march out and spread over the whole country. Moreover, the allied
          
          tribal chieftains expected to be rewarded. The territory to be governed was
          
          enormous, but the communications in northern China at that time were similar to
          
          those still existing not long ago in southern China--narrow footpaths from one
          
          settlement to another. It is very difficult to build roads in the loess of
          
          northern China; and the war-chariots that required roads had only just been
          
          introduced. Under such conditions, the simplest way of administering the empire
          
          was to establish garrisons of the invading tribes in the various parts of the
          
          country under the command of their chieftains. Thus separate regions of the
          
          country were distributed as fiefs. If a former subject of the Shang surrendered
          
          betimes with the territory under his rule, or if there was one who could not be
          
          overcome by force, the Chou recognized him as a feudal lord.
            We find in the early Chou time the typical signs of true feudalism:
          
          fiefs were given in a ceremony in which symbolically a piece of earth was handed
          
          over to the new fief-holder, and his installment, his rights and obligations
          
          were inscribed in a "charter". Most of the fief-holders were members
          
          of the Chou ruling family or members of the clan to which this family belonged;
          
          other fiefs were given to heads of the allied tribes. The fief-holder (feudal
          
          lord) regarded the land of his fief, as far as he and his clan actually used
          
          it, as "clan" land; parts of this land he gave to members of his own
          
          branch-clan for their use without transferring rights of property, thus
          
          creating new sub-fiefs and sub-lords. In much later times the concept of landed
          
          property of a family developed, and the whole concept of "clan"
          
          disappeared. By 500 BC, most feudal lords had retained only a dim memory that
          
          they originally belonged to the Chi clan of the Chou or to one of the few other
          
          original clans, and their so-called sub-lords felt themselves as members of
          
          independent noble families. Slowly, then, the family names of later China began
          
          to develop, but it took many centuries until, at the time of the Han Dynasty,
          
          all citizens (slaves excluded) had accepted family names. Then, reversely,
          
          families grew again into new clans.
            Thus we have this picture of the early Chou state: the imperial central
          
          power established in Shensi, near the present Sian; over a thousand feudal
          
          states, great and small, often consisting only of a small garrison, or
          
          sometimes a more considerable one, with the former chieftain as feudal lord
          
          over it. Around these garrisons the old population lived on, in the north the
          
          Shang population, farther east and south various other peoples and cultures.
          
          The conquerors' garrisons were like islands in a sea. Most of them formed new
          
          towns, walled, with a rectangular plan and central crossroads, similar to the
          
          European towns subsequently formed out of Roman encampments. This town plan has
          
          been preserved to the present day.
            This upper class in the garrisons formed the nobility; it was sharply
          
          divided from the indigenous population around the towns The conquerors called
          
          the population "the black-haired people", and themselves "the
          
          hundred families". The rest of the town populations consisted often of
          
          urban Shang people: Shang noble families together with their bondsmen and serfs
          
          had been given to Chou fief-holders. Such forced resettlements of whole
          
          populations have remained typical even for much later periods. By this method
          
          new cities were provided with urban, refined people and, most important, with
          
          skilled craftsmen and businessmen who assisted in building the cities and in keeping
          
          them alive. Some scholars believe that many resettled Shang urbanites either
          
          were or became businessmen; incidentally, the same word "Shang" means
          
          "merchant", up to the present time. The people of the Shang capital
          
          lived on and even attempted a revolt in collaboration with some Chou people.
          
          The Chou rulers suppressed this revolt, and then transferred a large part of
          
          this population to Loyang. They were settled there in a separate community, and
          
          vestiges of the Shang population were still to be found there in the fifth
          
          century AD: they were entirely impoverished potters, still making vessels in
          
          the old style.
           
           3
           Fusion of Chou and Shang
           
           The conquerors brought with them, for their own purposes to begin with,
          
          their rigid patriarchate in the family system and their cult of Heaven (t'ien),
          
          in which the worship of sun and stars took the principal place; a religion most
          
          closely related to that of the Turkish peoples and derived from them. Some of
          
          the Shang popular deities, however, were admitted into the official
          
          Heaven-worship. Popular deities became "feudal lords" under the
          
          Heaven-god. The Shang conceptions of the soul were also admitted into the Chou
          
          religion: the human body housed two souls, the personality-soul and the
          
          life-soul. Death meant the separation of the souls from the body, the life-soul
          
          also slowly dying. The personality-soul, however, could move about freely and
          
          lived as long as there were people who remembered it and kept it from hunger by
          
          means of sacrifices. The Chou systematized this idea and made it into the
          
          ancestor-worship that has endured down to the present time.
            The Chou officially abolished human sacrifices, especially since, as
          
          former pastoralists, they knew of better means of employing prisoners of war
          
          than did the more agrarian Shang. The Chou used Shang and other slaves as
          
          domestic servants for their numerous nobility, and Shang serfs as farm laborers
          
          on their estates. They seem to have regarded the land under their control as
          
          "state land" and all farmers as "serfs". A slave, here,
          
          must be defined as an individual, a piece of property, who was excluded from
          
          membership in human society but, in later legal texts, was included under
          
          domestic animals and immobile property, while serfs as a class depended upon
          
          another class and had certain rights, at least the right to work on the land.
          
          They could change their masters if the land changed its master, but they could
          
          not legally be sold individually.
            Thus, the following, still rather hypothetical, picture of the land
          
          system of the early Chou time emerges: around the walled towns of the feudal
          
          lords and sub-lords, always in the plains, was "state land" which
          
          produced millet and more and more wheat. Cultivation was still largely
          
          "shifting", so that the serfs in groups cultivated more or less
          
          standardized plots for a year or more and then shifted to other plots.
            During the growing season they lived in huts on the fields; during the
          
          winter in the towns in adobe houses. In this manner the yearly life cycle was
          
          divided into two different periods. The produce of the serfs supplied the
          
          lords, their dependants and the farmers themselves.
            Whenever the lord found it necessary, the serfs had to perform also
          
          other services for the lord. Farther away from the towns were the villages of
          
          the "natives", nominally also subjects of the lord. In most parts of
          
          eastern China, these, too, were agriculturists. They acknowledged their
          
          dependence by sending "gifts" to the lord in the town. Later these
          
          gifts became institutionalized and turned into a form of tax. The lord’s serfs,
          
          on the other hand, tended to settle near the fields in villages of their own
          
          because, with growing urban population, the distances from the town to many of
          
          the fields became too great. It was also at this time of new settlements that a
          
          more intensive cultivation with a fallow system began. At latest from the sixth
          
          century B.C. on, the distinctions between both land systems became unclear; and
          
          the pure serf-cultivation, called by the old texts the "well-field
          
          system" because eight cultivating families used one common well,
          
          disappeared in practice.
            The actual structure of early Chou administration is difficult to
          
          ascertain. The "Duke of Chou", brother of the first ruler, Wu Wang,
          
          later regent during the minority of Wu Wang's son, and certainly one of the
          
          most influential persons of this time, was the alleged creator of the book
          
          Chou-li which contains a detailed table of the bureaucracy of the country.
          
          However, we know now from inscriptions that the bureaucracy at the beginning of
          
          the Chou period was not much more developed than in late Shang time. The
          
          Chou-li gave an ideal picture of a bureaucratic state, probably abstracted from
          
          actual conditions in feudal states several centuries later.
            The Chou capital, at Sian, was a twin city. In one part lived the
          
          master-race of the Chou with the imperial court, in the other the subjugated
          
          population. At the same time, as previously mentioned, the Chou built a second
          
          capital, Loyang, in the present province of Honan.
            Loyang was just in the middle of the new state, and for the purposes of
          
          Heaven-worship it was regarded as the centre of the universe, where it was
          
          essential that the emperor should reside. Loyang was another twin city: in one
          
          part were the rulers' administrative buildings, in the other the transferred
          
          population of the Shang capital, probably artisans for the most part. The
          
          valuable artisans seem all to have been taken over from the Shang, for the
          
          bronze vessels of the early Chou age are virtually identical with those of the
          
          Shang age. The shapes of the houses also remained unaltered, and probably also
          
          the clothing, though the Chou brought with them the novelties of felt and woolen
          
          fabrics, old possessions of their earlier period. The only fundamental material
          
          change was in the form of the graves: in the Shang age house-like tombs were
          
          built underground; now great tumuli were constructed in the fashion preferred
          
          by all steppe peoples.
            One professional class was severely hit by the changed circumstances: the
          
          Shang priesthood. The Chou had no priests. As with all the races of the
          
          steppes, the head of the family himself performed the religious rites. Beyond
          
          this there were only shamans for certain purposes of magic. And very soon
          
          Heaven-worship was combined with the family system, the ruler being declared to
          
          be the Son of Heaven; the mutual relations within the family were thus extended
          
          to the religious relations with the deity. If, however, the god of Heaven is
          
          the father of the ruler, the ruler as his son himself offers sacrifice, and so the
          
          priest becomes superfluous. Thus the priests became "unemployed".
          
          Some of them changed their profession. They were the only people who could read
          
          and write, and as an administrative system was necessary they obtained
          
          employment as scribes. Others withdrew to their villages and became village
          
          priests. They organized the religious festivals in the village, carried out the
          
          ceremonies connected with family events, and even conducted the exorcism of
          
          evil spirits with shamanistic dances; they took charge, in short, of everything
          
          connected with customary observances and morality. The Chou lords were great
          
          respecters of propriety. The Shang culture had, indeed, been a high one with an
          
          ancient and highly developed moral system, and the Chou as rough conquerors must
          
          have been impressed by the ancient forms and tried to imitate them. In
          
          addition, they had in their religion of Heaven a conception of the existence of
          
          mutual relations between Heaven and Earth: all that went on in the skies had an
          
          influence on earth, and vice versa. Thus, if any ceremony was
          
          "wrongly" performed, it had an evil effect on Heaven: there would be
          
          no rain, or the cold weather would arrive too soon, or some such misfortune
          
          would come. It was therefore of great importance that everything should be done
          
          "correctly". Hence the Chou rulers were glad to call in the old
          
          priests as performers of ceremonies and teachers of morality similar to the
          
          ancient Indian rulers who needed the Brahmans for the correct performance of
          
          all rites. There thus came into existence in the early Chou empire a new social
          
          group, later called "scholars", men who were not regarded as
          
          belonging to the lower class represented by the subjugated population but were
          
          not included in the nobility; men who were not productively employed but
          
          belonged to a sort of independent profession. They became of very great
          
          importance in later centuries.
            In the first centuries of the Chou dynasty the ruling house steadily
          
          lost power. Some of the emperors proved weak, or were killed at war; above all,
          
          the empire was too big and its administration too slow-moving. The feudal lords
          
          and nobles were occupied with their own problems in securing the submission of
          
          the surrounding villages to their garrisons and in governing them; they soon
          
          paid little attention to the distant central authority. In addition to this,
          
          the situation at the centre of the empire was more difficult than that of its
          
          feudal states farther east. The settlements around the garrisons in the east
          
          were inhabited by agrarian tribes, but the subjugated population around the
          
          centre at Sian was made up of nomadic tribes of Turks and Mongols together with
          
          semi-nomadic Tibetans. Sian lies in the valley of the river Wei; the riverside
          
          country certainly belonged, though perhaps only insecurely, to the Shang empire
          
          and was specially well adapted to agriculture; but its periphery (mountains in
          
          the south, steppes in the north) was inhabited (until a late period, to some
          
          extent to the present day) by nomads, who had also been subjugated by the Chou.
          
          The Chou themselves were by no means strong, as they had been only a small
          
          tribe and their strength had depended on auxiliary tribes, which had now spread
          
          over the country as the new nobility and lived far from the Chou.
            The Chou emperors had thus to hold in check the subjugated but warlike
          
          tribes of Turks and Mongols who lived quite close to their capital. In the
          
          first centuries of the dynasty they were more or less successful, for the
          
          feudal lords still sent auxiliary forces. In time, however, these became fewer
          
          and fewer, because the feudal lords pursued their own policy; and the Chou were
          
          compelled to fight their own battles against tribes that continually rose
          
          against them, raiding and pillaging their towns. Campaigns abroad also fell
          
          mainly on the shoulders of the Chou, as their capital lay near the frontier.
            It must not be simply assumed, as is often done by the Chinese and some
          
          of the European historians, that the Turkish and Mongolian tribes were so
          
          savage or so pugnacious that they continually waged war just for the love of
          
          it. The problem is much deeper, and to fail to recognize this is to fail to
          
          understand Chinese history down to the Middle Ages. The conquering Chou
          
          established their garrisons everywhere, and these garrisons were surrounded by the
          
          quarters of artisans and by the villages of peasants, a process that ate into
          
          the pasturage of the Turkish and Mongolian nomads. These nomads, as already
          
          mentioned, pursued agriculture themselves on a small scale, but it occurred to
          
          them that they could get farm produce much more easily by barter or by raiding.
          
          Accordingly they gradually gave up cultivation and became pure nomads,
          
          procuring the needed farm produce from their neighbors. This abandonment of
          
          agriculture brought them into a precarious situation: if for any reason the
          
          Chinese stopped supplying or demanded excessive barter payment, the nomads had
          
          to go hungry. They were then virtually driven to get what they needed by
          
          raiding. Thus there developed a mutual reaction that lasted for centuries. Some
          
          of the nomadic tribes living between garrisons withdrew, to escape from the
          
          growing pressure, mainly into the province of Shansi, where the influence of
          
          the Chou was weak and they were not numerous; some of the nomad chiefs lost
          
          their lives in battle, and some learned from the Chou lords and turned
          
          themselves into petty rulers. A number of "marginal" states began to
          
          develop; some of them even built their own cities. This process of
          
          transformation of agro-nomadic tribes into "warrior-nomadic" tribes
          
          continued over many centuries and came to an end in the third or second century
          
          BC.
            The result of the three centuries that had passed was a symbiosis
          
          between the urban aristocrats and the country-people. The rulers of the towns
          
          took over from the general population almost the whole vocabulary of the
          
          language which from now on we may call "Chinese". They naturally took
          
          over elements of the material civilization. The subjugated population had,
          
          meanwhile, to adjust itself to its lords. In the organism that thus developed,
          
          with its unified economic system, the conquerors became an aristocratic ruling
          
          class, and the subjugated population became a lower class, with varied elements
          
          but mainly a peasantry. From now on we may call this society
          
          "Chinese"; it has endured to the middle of the twentieth century.
          
          Most later essential societal changes are the result of internal development
          
          and not of aggression from without.
           
           4
           Limitation of the imperial
          
          power
           
           In 771 BC an alliance of northern feudal states had attacked the ruler
          
          in his western capital; in a battle close to the city they had overcome and
          
          killed him. This campaign appears to have set in motion considerable groups
          
          from various tribes, so that almost the whole province of Shensi was lost. With
          
          the aid of some feudal lords who had remained loyal, a Chou prince was rescued
          
          and conducted eastward to the second capital, Loyang, which until then had
          
          never been the ruler's actual place of residence. In this rescue a lesser
          
          feudal prince, ruler of the feudal state of Ch'in, specially distinguished
          
          himself. Soon afterwards this prince, whose domain had lain close to that of
          
          the ruler, reconquered a great part of the lost territory, and thereafter
          
          regarded it as his own fief. The Ch'in family resided in the same capital in
          
          which the Chou had lived in the past, and five hundred years later we shall
          
          meet with them again as the dynasty that succeeded the Chou.
            The new ruler, resident now in Loyang, was foredoomed to impotence. He
          
          was now in the centre of the country, and less exposed to large-scale enemy
          
          attacks; but his actual rule extended little beyond the town itself and its
          
          immediate environment. Moreover, attacks did not entirely cease; several times
          
          parts of the indigenous population living between the Chou towns rose against
          
          the towns, even in the centre of the country.
            Now that the emperor had no territory that could be the basis of a
          
          strong rule and, moreover, because he owed his position to the feudal lords and
          
          was thus under an obligation to them, he ruled no longer as the chief of the
          
          feudal lords but as a sort of sanctified overlord; and this was the position of
          
          all his successors. A situation was formed at first that may be compared with
          
          that of Japan down to the middle of the nineteenth century. The ruler was a
          
          symbol rather than an exerciser of power. There had to be a supreme ruler
          
          because, in the worship of Heaven which was recognized by all the feudal lords,
          
          the supreme sacrifices could only be offered by the Son of Heaven in person.
          
          There could not be a number of sons of heaven because there were not a number
          
          of heavens. The imperial sacrifices secured that all should be in order in the
          
          country, and that the necessary equilibrium between Heaven and Earth should be
          
          maintained. For in the religion of Heaven there was a close parallelism between
          
          Heaven and Earth, and every omission of a sacrifice, or failure to offer it in
          
          due form, brought down a reaction from Heaven.
            For these religious reasons a central ruler was a necessity for the
          
          feudal lords. They needed him also for practical reasons. In the course of
          
          centuries the personal relationship between the various feudal lords had
          
          ceased. Their original kinship and united struggles had long been forgotten.
          
          When the various feudal lords proceeded to subjugate the territories at a
          
          distance from their towns, in order to turn their city states into genuine
          
          territorial states, they came into conflict with each other. In the course of
          
          these struggles for power many of the small fiefs were simply destroyed. It may
          
          fairly be said that not until the eighth and seventh centuries B.C. did the old
          
          garrison towns became real states. In these circumstances the struggles between
          
          the feudal states called urgently for an arbiter, to settle simple cases, and
          
          in more difficult cases either to try to induce other feudal lords to intervene
          
          or to give sanction to the new situation. These were the only governing
          
          functions of the ruler from the time of the transfer to the second capital.
           
           5
           Changes in the relative
          
          strength of the feudal states
           
           In these disturbed times China also made changes in her outer frontiers.
          
          When we speak of frontiers in this connection, we must take little account of
          
          the European conception of a frontier. No frontier in that sense existed in
          
          China until her conflict with the European powers. In the dogma of the Chinese
          
          religion of Heaven, all the countries of the world were subject to the Chinese
          
          emperor, the Son of Heaven. Thus there could be no such thing as other
          
          independent states. In practice the dependence of various regions on the ruler
          
          naturally varied: near the centre, that is to say near the ruler's place of
          
          residence, it was most pronounced; then it gradually diminished in the
          
          direction of the periphery. The feudal lords of the inner territories were already
          
          rather less subordinated than at the centre, and those at a greater distance
          
          scarcely at all; at a still greater distance were territories whose chieftains
          
          regarded themselves as independent, subject only in certain respects to Chinese
          
          overlordship. In such a system it is difficult to speak of frontiers. In
          
          practice there was, of course, a sort of frontier, where the influence of the
          
          outer feudal lords ceased to exist.
            The development of the original feudal towns into feudal states with
          
          actual dominion over their territories proceeded, of course, not only in the
          
          interior of China but also on its borders, where the feudal territories had the
          
          advantage of more unrestricted opportunities of expansion; thus they became
          
          more and more powerful. In the south (that is to say, in the south of the Chou
          
          empire, in the present central China) the garrisons that founded feudal states
          
          were relatively small and widely separated; consequently their cultural system
          
          was largely absorbed into that of the aboriginal population, so that they
          
          developed into feudal states with a character of their own. Three of these
          
          attained special importance: (1) Ch'u, in the neighborhood of the present
          
          Chungking and Hankow; (2) Wu, near the present Nanking; and (3) Yeh, near the
          
          present Hangchow. In 704 BC the feudal prince of Wu proclaimed himself
          
          "Wang". "Wang", however was the title of the ruler of the
          
          Chou dynasty. This meant that Wu broke away from the old Chou religion of
          
          Heaven, according to which there could be only one ruler (wang) in the world.
            At the beginning of the seventh century it became customary for the
          
          ruler to unite with the feudal lord who was most powerful at the time. This
          
          feudal lord became a dictator, and had the military power in his hands, like
          
          the shoguns in nineteenth-century Japan. If there was a disturbance of the
          
          peace, he settled the matter by military means. The first of these dictators
          
          was the feudal lord of the state of Ch'i, in the present province of Shantung.
          
          This feudal state had grown considerably through the conquest of the outer end
          
          of the peninsula of Shantung, which until then had been independent. Moreover,
          
          and this was of the utmost importance, the state of Ch'i was a trade centre.
          
          Much of the bronze, and later all the iron, for use in northern China came from
          
          the south by road and in ships that went up the rivers to Ch'i, where it was
          
          distributed among the various regions of the north, north-east, and north-west.
          
          In addition to this, through its command of portions of the coast, Ch'i had the
          
          means of producing salt, with which it met the needs of great areas of eastern
          
          China. It was also in Ch'i that money was first used. Thus Ch'i soon became a
          
          place of great luxury, far surpassing the court of the Chou, and Ch'i also
          
          became the centre of the most developed civilization.
            After the feudal lord of Ch'i, supported by the wealth and power of his
          
          feudal state, became dictator, he had to struggle not only against other feudal
          
          lords, but also many times against risings among the most various parts of the
          
          population, and especially against the nomad tribes in the southern part of the
          
          present province of Shansi. In the seventh century not only Ch'i but the other
          
          feudal states had expanded. The regions in which the nomad tribes were able to
          
          move had grown steadily smaller, and the feudal lords now set to work to bring
          
          the nomads of their country under their direct rule. The greatest conflict of
          
          this period was the attack in 660 BC against the feudal state of Wei, in
          
          northern Honan.
            The nomad tribes seem this time to have been proto-Mongols; they made a
          
          direct attack on the garrison town and actually conquered it. The remnant of
          
          the urban population, no more than 730 in number, had to flee southward. It is
          
          clear from this incident that nomads were still living in the middle of China,
          
          within the territory of the feudal states, and that they were still decidedly
          
          strong, though no longer in a position to get rid entirely of the feudal lords
          
          of the Chou.
            The period of the dictators came to an end after about a century,
          
          because it was found that none of the feudal states was any longer strong
          
          enough to exercise control over all the others. These others formed alliances
          
          against which the dictator was powerless. Thus this period passed into the
          
          next, which the Chinese call the period of the Contending States.
           
           6
           Confucius
           
           After this survey of the political history we must consider the
          
          intellectual history of this period, for between 550 and 280 B.C. the enduring
          
          fundamental influences in the Chinese social order and in the whole
          
          intellectual life of China had their original. We saw how the priests of the
          
          earlier dynasty of the Shang developed into the group of so-called
          
          "scholars". When the Chou ruler, after the move to the second
          
          capital, had lost virtually all but his religious authority, these
          
          "scholars" gained increased influence. They were the specialists in
          
          traditional morals, in sacrifices, and in the organization of festivals.
            The continually increasing ritualism at the court of the Chou called for
          
          more and more of these men. The various feudal lords also attracted these
          
          scholars to their side, employed them as tutors for their children, and
          
          entrusted them with the conduct of sacrifices and festivals.
            China's best-known philosopher, Confucius (Chinese: K'ung Tz[u], was one
          
          of these scholars. He was born in 551 BC in the feudal state Lu in the present
          
          province of Shantung. In Lu and its neighboring state Sung, institutions of the
          
          Shang had remained strong; both states regarded themselves as legitimate heirs
          
          of Shang culture, and many traces of Shang culture can be seen in Confucius's
          
          political and ethical ideas. He acquired the knowledge which a scholar had to
          
          possess, and then taught in the families of nobles, also helping in the
          
          administration of their properties. He made several attempts to obtain
          
          advancement, either in vain or with only a short term of employment ending in
          
          dismissal. Thus his career was a continuing pilgrimage from one noble to
          
          another, from one feudal lord to another, accompanied by a few young men, sons
          
          of scholars, who were partly his pupils and partly his servants. Many of these
          
          disciples seem to have been "illegitimate" sons of noblemen, i.e. sons of concubines, and Confucius's
          
          own family seems to have been of the same origin. In the strongly patriarchal
          
          and patrilinear system of the Chou and the developing primogeniture, children
          
          of secondary wives had a lower social status. Ultimately Confucius gave up his
          
          wanderings, settled in his home town of Lu, and there taught his disciples
          
          until his death in 479 B.C.
            Such was briefly the life of Confucius. His enemies claim that he was a
          
          political intriguer, inciting the feudal lords against each other in the course
          
          of his wanderings from one state to another, with the intention of somewhere
          
          coming into power himself. There may, indeed, be some truth in that.
            Confucius's importance lies in the fact that he systematized a body of
          
          ideas, not of his own creation, and communicated it to a circle of disciples.
          
          His teachings were later set down in writing and formed, right down to the
          
          twentieth century, the moral code of the upper classes of China. Confucius was
          
          fully conscious of his membership of a social class whose existence was tied to
          
          that of the feudal lords. With their disappearance, his type of scholar would
          
          become superfluous. The common people, the lower class, was in his view in an
          
          entirely subordinate position. Thus his moral teaching is a code for the ruling
          
          class.
            Accordingly it retains almost unaltered the elements of the old cult of
          
          Heaven, following the old tradition inherited from the northern peoples. For
          
          him Heaven is not an arbitrarily governing divine tyrant, but the embodiment of
          
          a system of legality. Heaven does not act independently, but follows a
          
          universal law, the so-called "Tao". Just as sun, moon, and stars move
          
          in the heavens in accordance with law, so man should conduct himself on earth
          
          in accord with the universal law, not against it. The ruler should not actively
          
          intervene in day-to-day policy, but should only act by setting an example, like
          
          Heaven; he should observe the established ceremonies, and offer all sacrifices
          
          in accordance with the rites, and then all else will go well in the world. The
          
          individual, too, should be guided exactly in his life by the prescriptions of
          
          the rites, so that harmony with the law of the universe may be established.
            A second idea of the Confucian system came also from the old conceptions
          
          of the Chou conquerors, and thus originally from the northern peoples. This is
          
          the patriarchal idea, according to which the family is the cell of society, and
          
          at the head of the family stands the eldest male adult as a sort of patriarch.
          
          The state is simply an extension of the family, "state", of course,
          
          meaning simply the class of the feudal lords. And the organization of the
          
          family is also that of the world of the gods. Within the family there are a
          
          number of ties, all of them, however, one-sided: that of father to son (the son
          
          having to obey the father unconditionally and having no rights of his own;)
          
          that of husband to wife (the wife had no rights); that of elder to younger
          
          brother. An extension of these is the association of friend with friend, which
          
          is conceived as an association between an elder and a younger brother. The
          
          final link, and the only one extending beyond the family and uniting it with
          
          the state, is the association of the ruler with the subject, a replica of that
          
          between father and son. The ruler in turn is in the position of son to Heaven.
          
          Thus in Confucianism the cult of Heaven, the family system, and the state are
          
          welded into unity. The frictionless functioning of this whole system is
          
          effected by everyone adhering to the rites, which prescribe every important
          
          action. It is necessary, of course, that in a large family, in which there may
          
          be up to a hundred persons living together, there shall be a precisely
          
          established ordering of relationships between individuals if there is not to be
          
          continual friction. Since the scholars of Confucius's type specialized in the
          
          knowledge and conduct of ceremonies, Confucius gave ritualism a correspondingly
          
          important place both in spiritual and in practical life.
            So far as we have described it above, the teaching of Confucius was a
          
          further development of the old cult of Heaven. Through bitter experience,
          
          however, Confucius had come to realize that nothing could be done with the
          
          ruling house as it existed in his day. So shadowy a figure as the Chou ruler of
          
          that time could not fulfill what Confucius required of the "Son of
          
          Heaven". But the opinions of students of Confucius's actual ideas differ.
          
          Some say that in the only book in which he personally had a hand, the so-called
          
          Annals of Spring and Autumn, he intended to set out his conception of the character
          
          of a true emperor; others say that in that book he showed how he would himself
          
          have acted as emperor, and that he was only awaiting an opportunity to make
          
          himself emperor. He was called indeed, at a later time, the "uncrowned
          
          ruler".
            In any case, the Annals of Spring and Autumn seem to be simply a dry
          
          work of annals, giving the history of his native state of Lu on the basis of
          
          the older documents available to him. In his text, however, Confucius made
          
          small changes by means of which he expressed criticism or recognition; in this
          
          way he indirectly made known how in his view a ruler should act or should not
          
          act. He did not shrink from falsifying history, as can today be demonstrated.
          
          Thus on one occasion a ruler had to flee from a feudal prince, which in Confucius's
          
          view was impossible behavior for the ruler; accordingly he wrote instead that
          
          the ruler went on a hunting expedition. Elsewhere he tells of an eclipse of the
          
          sun on a certain day, on which in fact there was no eclipse. By writing of an
          
          eclipse he meant to criticize the way a ruler had acted, for the sun symbolized
          
          the ruler, and the eclipse meant that the ruler had not been guided by divine
          
          illumination. The demonstration that the Annals
            
            of Spring and Autumn can only be explained in this way was the achievement
          
          some thirty-five years ago of Otto Franke, and through this discovery
          
          Confucius's work, which the old sinologists used to describe as a dry and
          
          inadequate book, has become of special value to us. The book ends with the year
          
          481 BC, and in spite of its distortions it is the principal source for the
          
          two-and-a-half centuries with which it deals.
            Rendered alert by this experience, we are able to see and to show that
          
          most of the other later official works of history follow the example of the Annals of Spring and Autumn in containing things that have been deliberately
          
          falsified. This is especially so in the work called T'ung-chien kang-mu, which
          
          was the source of the history of the Chinese empire translated into French by
          
          de Mailla.
            Apart from Confucius's criticism of the inadequate capacity of the
          
          emperor of his day, there is discernible, though only in the form of cryptic
          
          hints, a fundamentally important progressive idea. It is that a nobleman should
          
          not be a member of the ruling elite by right of birth alone, but should be a
          
          man of superior moral qualities.
            From Confucius on, "chen-tz[u]" became to mean "a
          
          gentleman". Consequently, a country should not be ruled by a dynasty based
          
          on inheritance through birth, but by members of the nobility who show
          
          outstanding moral qualification for rulership. That is to say, the rule should
          
          pass from the worthiest to the worthiest, the successor first passing through a
          
          period of probation as a minister of state. In an unscrupulous falsification of
          
          the tradition, Confucius declared that this principle was followed in early
          
          times. It is probably safe to assume that Confucius had in view here an
          
          eventual justification of claims to rulership of his own.
            Thus Confucius undoubtedly had ideas of reform, but he did not interfere
          
          with the foundations of feudalism. For the rest, his system consists only of a
          
          social order and a moral teaching. Metaphysics, logic, epistemology, i.e. branches of philosophy which played
          
          so great a part in the West, are of no interest to him. Nor can he be described
          
          as the founder of a religion; for the cult of Heaven of which he speaks and
          
          which he takes over existed in exactly the same form before his day. He is
          
          merely the man who first systematized those notions. He had no successes in his
          
          lifetime and gained no recognition; nor did his disciples or their disciples
          
          gain any general recognition; his work did not become of importance until some
          
          three hundred years after his death, when in the second century BC his teaching
          
          was adjusted to the new social conditions: out of a moral system for the
          
          decaying feudal society of the past centuries developed the ethic of the rising
          
          social order of the gentry. The gentry (in much the same way as the European
          
          bourgeoisie) continually claimed that there should be access for every
          
          civilized citizen to the highest places in the social pyramid, and the rules of
          
          Confucianism became binding on every member of society if he was to be
          
          considered a gentleman. Only then did Confucianism begin to develop into the
          
          imposing system that dominated China almost down to the present day.
          
          Confucianism did not become a religion. It was comparable to the later Japanese
          
          Shintoism, or to a group of customs among us which we all observe, if we do not
          
          want to find ourselves excluded from our community, but which we should never
          
          describe as religion. We stand up when the national anthem is played, we give
          
          precedency to older people, we erect war memorials and decorate them with
          
          flowers, and by these and many other things show our sense of belonging. A
          
          similar but much more conscious and much more powerful part was played by
          
          Confucianism in the life of the average Chinese, though he was not necessarily
          
          interested in philosophical ideas.
            While the West has set up the ideal of individualism and is suffering
          
          now because it no longer has any ethical system to which individuals
          
          voluntarily submit; while for the Indians the social problem consisted in the
          
          solving of the question how every man could be enabled to live his life with as
          
          little disturbance as possible from his fellow-men, Confucianism solved the
          
          problem of how families with groups of hundreds of members could live together
          
          in peace and cooperation in a densely populated country. Everyone knew his
          
          position in the family and so, in a broader sense, in the state; and this
          
          prescribed his rights and duties. We may feel that the rules to which he was
          
          subjected were pedantic; but there was no limit to their effectiveness: they
          
          reduced to a minimum the friction that always occurs when great masses of
          
          people live close together; they gave Chinese society the strength through
          
          which it has endured; they gave security to its individuals. China's first real
          
          social crisis after the collapse of feudalism, that is to say, after the fourth
          
          or third century BC, began only in the present century with the collapse of the
          
          social order of the gentry and the breakdown of the family system.
           
           7
           Lao Tzu
           
           In eighteenth-century Europe Confucius was the only Chinese philosopher
          
          held in regard; in the last hundred years, the years of Europe's internal
          
          crisis, the philosopher Lao Tzu steadily advanced in repute, so that his book
          
          was translated almost a hundred times into various European languages.
          
          According to the general view among the Chinese, Lao Tzu was an older
          
          contemporary of Confucius; recent Chinese and Western research (A. Waley; H.H.
          
          Dubs) has contested this view and places Lao Tzu in the latter part of the
          
          fourth century B.C., or even later. Virtually nothing at all is known about his
          
          life; the oldest biography of Lao Tzu, written about 100 BC, says that he lived
          
          as an official at the ruler's court and, one day, became tired of the life of
          
          an official and withdrew from the capital to his estate, where he died in old
          
          age. This, too, may be legendary, but it fits well into the picture given to us
          
          by Lao Tzu's teaching and by the life of his later followers. From the second
          
          century AD, that is to say at least four hundred years after his death, there
          
          are legends of his migrating to the far west. Still later narratives tell of
          
          his going to Turkestan (where a temple was actually built in his honor in the
          
          Medieval period); according to other sources he travelled as far as India or
          
          Sogdiana (Samarkand and Bokhara), where according to some accounts he was the
          
          teacher or forerunner of Buddha, and according to others of Mani, the founder
          
          of Manichaeism. For all this there is not a vestige of documentary evidence.
            Lao Tzu's teaching is contained in a small book, the Tao Te Ching, the
          
          "Book of the World Law and its Power". The book is written in quite
          
          simple language, at times in rhyme, but the sense is so vague that countless
          
          versions, differing radically from each other, can be based on it, and just as
          
          many translations are possible, all philologically defensible. This vagueness
          
          is deliberate.
            Lao Tzu's teaching is essentially an effort to bring man's life on earth
          
          into harmony with the life and law of the universe (Tao). This was also
          
          Confucius's purpose. But while Confucius set out to attain that purpose in a
          
          sort of primitive scientific way, by laying down a number of rules of human
          
          conduct, Lao Tzu tries to attain his ideal by an intuitive, emotional method.
          
          Lao Tzu is always described as a mystic, but perhaps this is not entirely
          
          appropriate; it must be borne in mind that in his time the Chinese language,
          
          spoken and written, still had great difficulties in the expression of ideas. In
          
          reading Lao Tzu's book we feel that he is trying to express something for which
          
          the language of his day was inadequate; and what he wanted to express belonged
          
          to the emotional, not the intellectual, side of the human character, so that
          
          any perfectly clear expression of it in words was entirely impossible. It must
          
          be borne in mind that the Chinese language lacks definite word categories like
          
          substantive, adjective, adverb, or verb; any word can be used now in one
          
          category and now in another, with a few exceptions; thus the understanding of a
          
          combination like "white horse" formed a difficult logical problem for
          
          the thinker of the fourth century BC: did it mean "white" plus
          
          "horse"? Or was "white horse" no longer a horse at all but
          
          something quite different?
            Confucius's way of bringing human life into harmony with the life of the
          
          universe was to be a process of assimilating Man as a social being, Man in his
          
          social environment, to Nature, and of so maintaining his activity within the
          
          bounds of the community. Lao Tzu pursues another path, the path for those who
          
          feel disappointed with life in the community. A Taoist, as a follower of Lao
          
          Tzu is called, withdraws from all social life, and carries out none of the
          
          rites and ceremonies which a man of the upper class should observe throughout
          
          the day. He lives in self-imposed seclusion, in an elaborate primitivity which
          
          is often described in moving terms that are almost convincing of actual
          
          "primitivity". Far from the city, surrounded by Nature, the Taoist
          
          lives 0his own life, together with a few friends and his servants, entirely
          
          according to his nature. His own nature, like everything else, represents for
          
          him a part of the Tao, and the task of the individual consists in the most
          
          complete adherence to the Tao that is conceivable, as far as possible
          
          performing no act that runs counter to the Tao. This is the main element of Lao
          
          Tzu's doctrine, the doctrine of wu-wei, "passive achievement".
            Lao Tzu seems to have thought that this doctrine could be applied to the
          
          life of the state. He assumed that an ideal life in society was possible if
          
          everyone followed his own nature entirely and no artificial restrictions were
          
          imposed. Thus he writes: "The more the people are forbidden to do this and
          
          that, the poorer will they be. The more sharp weapons the people possess, the
          
          more will darkness and bewilderment spread through the land. The more craft and
          
          cunning men have, the more useless and pernicious contraptions will they
          
          invent. The more laws and edicts are imposed, the more thieves and bandits
          
          there will be. 'If I work through Non-action,' says the Sage, 'the people will
          
          transform themselves’." Thus according to Lao Tzu, who takes the existence
          
          of a monarchy for granted, the ruler must treat his subjects as follows:
          
          "By emptying their hearts of desire and their minds of envy, and by
          
          filling their stomachs with what they need; by reducing their ambitions and by
          
          strengthening their bones and sinews; by striving to keep them without the
          
          knowledge of what is evil and without cravings. Thus are the crafty ones given
          
          no scope for tempting interference. For it is by Non-action that the Sage
          
          governs, and nothing is really left uncontrolled."
              Lao Tzu did not live to learn that such rule of good government would be
          
          followed by only one sort of rulers--dictators; and as a matter of fact the
          
          "Legalist theory" which provided the philosophic basis for dictatorship
          
          in the third century BC was attributable to Lao Tzu.
            He was not thinking, however, of dictatorship; he was an individualistic
          
          anarchist, believing that if there were no active government all men would be
          
          happy. Then everyone could attain unity with Nature for himself. Thus we find
          
          in Lao Tzu, and later in all other Taoists, a scornful repudiation of all
          
          social and official obligations. An answer that became famous was given by the
          
          Taoist Chuang Tzu when it was proposed to confer high office in the state on
          
          him (the story may or may not be true, but it is typical of Taoist thought):
          
          "I have heard," he replied, "that in Ch'u there is a tortoise
          
          sacred to the gods. It has now been dead for 3,000 years, and the king keeps it
          
          in a shrine with silken cloths, and gives it shelter in the halls of a temple.
          
          Which do you think that tortoise would prefer: to be dead and have its
          
          vestigial bones so honored, or to be still alive and dragging its tail after it
          
          in the mud?" the officials replied: "No doubt it would prefer to be
          
          alive and dragging its tail after it in the mud." Then spoke Chuang Tzu:
          
          "Begone! I, too, would rather drag my tail after me in the mud!"
            The true Taoist withdraws also from his family. Typical of this is
          
          another story, surely apocryphal, from Chuang Tzu. At the death of Lao Tzu a
          
          disciple went to the family and expressed his sympathy quite briefly and
          
          formally. The other disciples were astonished, and asked his reason. He said:
          
          "Yes, at first I thought that he was our man, but he is not. When I went
          
          to grieve, the old men were bewailing him as though they were bewailing a son,
          
          and the young wept as though they were mourning a mother. To bind them so
          
          closely to himself, he must have spoken words which he should not have spoken,
          
          and wept tears which he should not have wept. That, however, is a falling away
          
          from the heavenly nature."
              Lao Tzu's teaching, like that of Confucius, cannot be described as
          
          religion; like Confucius's, it is a sort of social philosophy, but of
          
          irrationalistic character. Thus it was quite possible, and later it became the
          
          rule, for one and the same person to be both Confucian and Taoist. As an
          
          official and as the head of his family, a man would think and act as a
          
          Confucian; as a private individual, when he had retired far from the city to
          
          live in his country mansion (often modestly described as a cave or a thatched
          
          hut), or when he had been dismissed from his post or suffered some other
          
          trouble, he would feel and think as a Taoist. In order to live as a Taoist it
          
          was necessary, of course, to possess such an estate, to which a man could
          
          retire with his servants, and where he could live without himself doing manual
          
          work. This difference between the Confucian and the Taoist found a place in the
          
          works of many Chinese poets. I take the following quotation from an essay by
          
          the statesman and poet Ts'ao Chih, of the end of the second century AD:
            "Master Mysticus lived in deep seclusion on a mountain in the
          
          wilderness; he had withdrawn as in flight from the world, desiring to purify
          
          his spirit and give rest to his heart. He despised official activity, and no
          
          longer maintained any relations with the world; he sought quiet and freedom
          
          from care, in order in this way to attain everlasting life. He did nothing but
          
          send his thoughts wandering between sky and clouds, and consequently there was
          
          nothing worldly that could attract and tempt him.
            When Mr. Rationalist heard of this man, he desired to visit him, in
          
          order to persuade him to alter his views. He harnessed four horses, who could
          
          quickly traverse the plain, and entered his light fast carriage.
            He drove through the plain, leaving behind him the ruins of abandoned
          
          settlements; he entered the boundless wilderness, and finally reached the
          
          dwelling of Master Mysticus. Here there was a waterfall on one side, and on the
          
          other were high crags; at the back a stream flowed deep down in its bed, and in
          
          front was an odorous wood. The master wore a white doeskin cap and a striped
          
          fox-pelt. He came forward from a cave buried in the mountain, leaned against
          
          the tall crag, and enjoyed the prospect of wild nature. His ideas floated on
          
          the breezes, and he looked as if the wide spaces of the heavens and the
          
          countries of the earth were too narrow for him; as if he was going to fly but
          
          had not yet left the ground; as if he had already spread his wings but wanted
          
          to wait a moment. Mr. Rationalist climbed up with the aid of vine shoots,
          
          reached the top of the crag, and stepped up to him, saying very respectfully:
            I have heard that a man of nobility does not flee from society, but
          
          seeks to gain fame; a man of wisdom does not swim against the current, but
          
          seeks to earn repute. You, however, despise the achievements of civilization
          
          and culture; you have no regard for the splendor of philanthropy and justice;
          
          you squander your powers here in the wilderness and neglect ordered relations
          
          between man...."
              Frequently Master Mysticus and Mr. Rationalist were united in a single
          
          person. Thus, Shih Ch'ung wrote in an essay on himself:
            "In my youth I had great ambition and wanted to stand out above the
          
          multitude. Thus it happened that at a little over twenty years of age I was
          
          already a court official; I remained in the service for twenty-five years. When
          
          I was fifty I had to give up my post because of an unfortunate occurrence....
          
          The older I became, the more I appreciated the freedom I had acquired; and as I
          
          loved forest and plain, I retired to my villa. When I built this villa, a long
          
          embankment formed the boundary behind it; in front the prospect extended over a
          
          clear canal; all around grew countless cypresses, and flowing water meandered
          
          round the house. There were pools there, and outlook towers; I bred birds and
          
          fishes. In my harem there were always good musicians who played dance tunes.
          
          When I went out I enjoyed nature or hunted birds and fished. When I came home,
          
          I enjoyed playing the lute or reading; I also liked to concoct an elixir of
          
          life and to take breathing exercises, because I did not want to die, but wanted
          
          one day to lift myself to the skies, like an immortal genius. Suddenly I was
          
          drawn back into the official career, and became once more one of the
          
          dignitaries of the Emperor."
                Thus Lao Tz[u]'s individualist and anarchist doctrine was not suited to
          
          form the basis of a general Chinese social order, and its employment in support
          
          of dictatorship was certainly not in the spirit of Lao Tzu. Throughout history,
          
          however, Taoism remained the philosophic attitude of individuals of the highest
          
          circle of society; its real doctrine never became popularly accepted; for the
          
          strong feeling for nature that distinguishes the Chinese, and their reluctance
          
          to interfere in the sanctified order of nature by technical and other
          
          deliberate acts, was not actually a result of Lao Tzu's teaching, but one of
          
          the fundamentals from which his ideas started.
            If the date assigned to Lao Tzu by present-day research (the fourth
          
          instead of the sixth century BC is correct, he was more or less contemporary
          
          with Chuang Tzu, who was probably the most gifted poet among the Chinese
          
          philosophers and Taoists. A thin thread extends from them as far as the fourth
          
          century AD: Huai-nan Tz[u], Chung-ch'ang T'ung, Yan Chi (210-263), Liu Ling
          
          (221-300), and T'ao Ch'ien (365-427), are some of the most eminent names of
          
          Taoist philosophers.
            After that the stream of original thought dried up, and we rarely find a
          
          new idea among the late Taoists. These gentlemen living on their estates had
          
          acquired a new means of expressing their inmost feelings: they wrote poetry
          
          and, above all, painted. Their poems and paintings contain in a different
          
          outward form what Lao Tzu had tried to express with the inadequate means of the
          
          language of his day. Thus Lao Tzu's teaching has had the strongest influence to
          
          this day in this field, and has inspired creative work which is among the
          
          finest achievements of mankind.
           
 
 
 CHAPTER IV.THE CONTENDING STATES(481-256 BC)DISSOLUTION OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM
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