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Ancient China Simplified

Chapter 9 POSITION OF ENVOYS

Word Count: 1957    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

nd that their persons should be held sacred, whether at residential courts, in durb

irely cut off" together with the loss of imperial sway. In the year 595 B.C. Sung went so far as to put a Ts'u envoy to death, naturally much to the wrath of the rising southern power. Ts'u in turn arrested the Tsin envoy on his way to Sung, and tried in vain to force him to betray his trust. In 582 Tsin, in a fit of anger, detained the CHêNG envoy, and finally put him to death for his impudence in coming officially to visit Tsin after coquetting with Tsin's rival Ts'u. All these irregular cases are severely blamed by the historians. In 562 Ts'u turned the tables upon Tsin by putting the CHêNG envoy to death after the latter had concluded a treaty with Tsin. Confucius joins, retrospectively of course, in the chorus of universal reprobation. In 560 Ts'u tried to play upon the Ts'i envoy a trick which in its futility reminds us strongly of the analogous petty humiliations until recently imposed by China, whenever convenient occasion offered, upon foreign officials accredited to her. The Ts'i envoy, who was somewhat deformed in person, was no less an individual than the celebrated philosopher Yen-tsz, a respected acquaintance of Confucius (though, of course, much his senior), and second only to Kwan-tsz amongst the great administrative statesmen of Ts'i. The half-barbarous King of Ts'u concocted with his obsequious courtiers a nice little scheme for humiliating the northern envo

and philosopher, deeply lamented on his death alike by the people of CHêNG, and by his friend or correspondent Confucius of Lu state. The Chinese diplomats then, as now, had the most roundabout ways of pointing a moral or delicately insinuating an innuendo. On arrival at the outskirts of the capital, instead of building the usual da?s for formalities and sacrifices, Tsz-ch'an threw up a mean hut for the accommodation of his mission, saying: "Altars are built by great states when they visit small ones as a symbol of benefits accorded, and

eing himself of eastern barbarian descent) a princess of Wu. The following year, when two very distinguished statesmen from the territory of his secular enemy Tsin came on a political mission, the King of Ts'u consulted his premier about the advisability of castrating the one for a harem eunuch, and cutting of

, had very great pressure put upon him by a covetous Tsin minister who wanted the girdle. The envoy offered to give some silk instead, but he said that not even to save his life would he give up the girdle. The Tsin mag

e rising indignation of the other powers and representatives present by pooh-poohing the clumsy artifice on the ground that by such treachery Ts'u simply injured her own reputation in the federation to the manifest advantage of Tsin: it did not suit Tsin to continue the struggle with Ts'u just then. Then there was a squabble as to precedence at the same Peace Conference; that

nce saw through the menacing appearance of the barbarian "dances" (introduced here, again, as a "variety entertainment"), and by his firm behaviour not only saved the person of his prince, but shamed the ruler of Ts'i into disclaiming and disavowing his obsequious fellow- practical jokers. Yen-tsz was

tratio

River Sz, down to its junction with the Hwai. The River I starts still from I-shui (also a cross in circle; means "River I"), passes I-thou, and used to join the Sz (now the Canal) at the lower cross in a circle. Th

part of the River Wei bed, left it and took possession of the River Chang bed. Up to 602 B.C. the secondary branch took the more easterly dotted line (the present Yellow River, once the Riv

the capital of Lu, is marked with a small circle. In 278 B.C. the Ts'u capital was moved east to Ch'en. In 241 B.C.,

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Ancient China Simplified
Ancient China Simplified
“This is an easy to read yet highly informative history of ancient China. It is a classic in the field and covers all aspects of ancient Chinese life and culture. From the dynasties of the kings to the occupations and entertainments of the people, including ancient Chinese religions, sports, literature and customs. As well as the politics, geography and wars of this great civilization. It also includes chapters on ancient japan, human sacrifice, ancestor worship, and many interesting but generally unknown facts.”
1 Chapter 1 OPENING SCENES2 Chapter 2 SHIFTING SCENES3 Chapter 3 THE NORTHERN POWERS4 Chapter 4 THE SOUTHERN POWER5 Chapter 5 EVIDENCE OF ECLIPSES6 Chapter 6 THE ARMY7 Chapter 7 THE COAST STATES8 Chapter 8 FIRST PROTECTOR OF CHINA9 Chapter 9 POSITION OF ENVOYS10 Chapter 10 THE SECOND PROTECTOR11 Chapter 11 RELIGION12 Chapter 12 ANCESTRAL WORSHIP13 Chapter 13 ANCIENT DOCUMENTS FOUND14 Chapter 14 MORE ON PROTECTORS15 Chapter 15 STATE INTERCOURSE16 Chapter 16 LAND AND PEOPLE17 Chapter 17 EDUCATION AND LITERARY18 Chapter 18 TREATIES AND VOWS19 Chapter 19 CONFUCIUS AND LITERATURE20 Chapter 20 LAW21 Chapter 21 PUBLIC WORKS22 Chapter 22 CITIES AND TOWNS23 Chapter 23 BREAK-UP OF CHINA24 Chapter 24 KINGS AND NOBLES25 Chapter 25 VASSALS AND EMPEROR26 Chapter 26 FIGHTING STATE PERIOD27 Chapter 27 FOREIGN BLOOD28 Chapter 28 BARBARIANS29 Chapter 29 CURIOUS CUSTOMS30 Chapter 30 LITERARY RELATIONS31 Chapter 31 ORIGIN OF THE CHINESE32 Chapter 32 THE CALENDAR33 Chapter 33 NAMES34 Chapter 34 EUNUCHS, HUMAN SACRIFICES, FOOD35 Chapter 35 KNOWLEDGE OF THE WEST36 Chapter 36 ANCIENT JAPAN37 Chapter 37 ETHICS38 Chapter 38 WOMEN AND MORALS39 Chapter 39 GEOGRAPHICAL KNOWLEDGE40 Chapter 40 TOMBS AND REMAINS41 Chapter 41 THE TARTARS42 Chapter 42 MUSIC43 Chapter 43 WEALTH, SPORTS, ETC.44 Chapter 44 CONFUCIUS45 Chapter 45 CONFUCIUS AND LAO-TSZ46 Chapter 46 ORACLES AND OMENS47 Chapter 47 RULERS AND PEOPLE