Zhang, Juzheng, 1525-1582
Enlarge text Shrink text- His Chang Chiang-ling shu tu, 1924.
- Tzʻu hai, 1979:p. 2490 (张居正 = Chang Chü-cheng)
- Ssu shu chi chu ho tsʻan shuo yüeh chih chieh chʻan wei, 1677?:caption (太岳張居正 = Tʻai-yüeh Chang Chü-cheng)
- Zōtei Bukyō shichisho chokukai, 1643:v. 7, caption t.p. (張居正 = Chō Kyosei; [chi. rdg.: Zhang Juzheng])
- Yang gang lü xing wang WWW site, Sept. 10, 2010(張居正 = Zhang Juzheng; zi: 叔大 = Shuda; hao: 太岳 = Taiyue; canonized: 文忠 = Wenzhong; called 張江陵 = Zhang Jiangling)
Zhang Juzheng (26 May 1525 – 9 July 1582), courtesy name Shuda, art name Taiyue, also known as Zhang Jiangling, was a prominent Grand Secretary during the reigns of Ming emperors Longqing and Wanli. In 1547, he passed the highest level of official examinations and was granted the rank of jinshi. He then served at the Hanlin Academy. In 1567, he was appointed as the Grand Secretary to the Longqing Emperor, and upon the ascension of the Wanli Emperor in 1572, he became the head of the Grand Secretaries. During the early years of the Wanli Emperor's reign, Zhang Juzheng played a crucial role as the emperor's mentor and de facto ruler of China due to the emperor's immaturity. His decisive foreign and economic policies led to one of the most successful periods in the Ming history. Influenced by the Mongol raids of the 1550s, Zhang Juzheng aimed to "enrich the country and strengthen the army" through legalistic methods rather than Confucian principles. He played a key role in centralizing the administration, limiting various privileges, and revising land tax exemptions. However, after Zhang's death in 1582, many of his reforms and policies were reversed, and in 1584 his family was stripped of their accumulated property and wealth. It was not until more than half a century later, just before the fall of the Ming dynasty, that he was finally rehabilitated.
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