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A Chinese Biographical Dictionary


to be President of the Board of Bites. As an official, he urged the iuconyenieDce of frequent changes in the high prorincial posts, the need for giving adequate salaries to m^istrates, and the hardships of criminal procedure. As an author, he produced the ^ ^, a work on the Canon of Changes , the ^ ^ ^ Q ^, a chronologj of the Spring and Autumn^ the ^ ^ ^ ^ and the ^ ^ ^ ^ , two works on the Shuo Win , and a collection of essajs entitled ^ fi^ ^ ^ ^ • As an astrologer, he foretold the j^ ^ Lin-ch4ng rebellion and the war of 1842. Canonised as ^ ^.

2442 Yeh Fa-hsi ^ j^ # • 8th cent. A.D. A natire of ^ Ch'o- chou in Ohehkiang, who acquired great reptitation as a magidao under the Emperor Ming Huang, and is said to hare personally conducted his Majesty to the moon. Not to be confounded with Yeh Fa- ^ shan , another magician who was patronised by iiie Emperor Eao Tsung some fifty years previously.

2443 Teh Pang-ai ^ j^ IE (T. ^ ^. H. ^ ^). Died A.D.

1682. Graduated as third chin shih in 1659, and attracted the

Emperor*s notice by his honest representations on public afiairs.

He rose to be Vice President of the Board of Rites in 1680. Canonised as ^ ^ .

2444 Teh Hsiang-kao ^ fS) ]^ (T. %^). A.D. 1558-1627. Graduating as chin shih in 1583, he rose by 1607 to be Minister of State. He failed to rouse the Emperor ShSn Tsung to a proper sense of his duties, but succeeded in driving to bis fief the Prince of |[|§ Fu, son of the favourite concubine ^ ChSng, and so preventing auy risk of a disputed succession. Retiring in 1614, he was forced to resume the post in 1621; and though he was able for a time to save many good men from the vengeance of Wei Chung-hsien, he was finally driven from office by the eunuchs in 1624. Canonised as ;^ ^ .

2446 Teh-m Cho-li-chih ]^ # 1^ M R • Died A.D. 926. A chieftain