Hu Ango ( Chinese. 胡安国 ), nicknamed Kanhou ( Chinese. 康 候 ), people called him "Teacher from Wu," (1074, Fujian - 1138) - cannonologist of the Northern Song era.
| Hu ango | |
|---|---|
| Chinese 胡安国 | |
| Date of Birth | 1074 |
| Place of Birth | fujian province |
| Date of death | 1138 |
| Direction | chinese philosophy |
| Core interests | |
Hu Ango had the highest degree of Jinshi , was a professor at the Imperial Higher School, held positions in the Hanlin Academy and the imperial book depository, and served in the State Chancellery. In his studies, he maintained contacts with Xie Liangzo , Yang Shi, and Yu Zuo (followers of the Cheng brothers' teachings ) and believed that he owed everything to the books of Cheng Yi and Cheng Hao . To interpret current political events, the text “ Chun Qiu ” was used. Hu Ango's book on “Chun qiu” was approved as a textbook for those who pass state exams for a degree and had a decisive influence on the interpretation of “Chun qiu” by the Confucians of the Song and Yuan eras. In the compilation Song Yuan Xue An (Teachings of the Song and Yuan Era), created by Huang Zongxi and his students, Hu Ango plays a leading role in strengthening the position of the Cheng brothers' school in the Southern Song era.
The main works: “Chun qiu tsun chi” (“Ideas that penetrate the Chun qiu”), “Zizhi tongjian juyiao bu” (“Supplementary materials to the main provisions of“ Zizhi tongjian “”), subsequently compiled in the collection “Hushi zhuan jia lu ”(“ Catalog of the commented heritage of the Hu clan ”).
Sources
- “Chinese philosophy. Encyclopedic Dictionary ”- Moscow,“ Thought ”, 1994. ISBN 5-244-00757-2