- Kong Rong
Three Kingdoms infobox
Name=Kong Rong
imagesize=
Caption=
Title=Bureaucrat and minorwarlord
Kingdom=
Born=153
Died=208
Simp=孔融
Trad=孔融
Pinyin=Kǒng Róng
WG=K'ung Jung
Zi=Wenju (文舉)
Post=
Era=
Temple=
Other=Kong Beihai (孔北海)Kong Rong (153 – 208) was a bureaucrat, poet, and minor warlord during the late
Eastern Han Dynasty andThree Kingdoms era ofChina . He was also the 20th generation descendant ofConfucius . As he was once the governor ofBeihai Commandery (北海, present dayWeifang ,Shandong ), he was also known as Kong Beihai. He was defeated byYuan Tan in 196 and escaped to the capitalXuchang , where he served effectively underCao Cao , who held Emperor Xian under his control. For being a political opponent ofCao Cao and humiliating him on multiple occasions, Kong Rong was eventually executed.Famed for his quick wits and elaborate literary style, Kong Rong was ranked among the
Seven Scholars of Jian'an (建安七子), a group of representative literature of his time. However, most of his works had been lost. Those that survived can be found in compilations from theMing Dynasty andQing Dynasty .A well-known story commonly used to educate children even nowadays on the values of courtesy and fraternal love involves the four-year-old Kong Rong giving up the larger pears to his elder and younger brothers. This story is also mentioned in the "
Three Character Classic ", a text used for elementary education since theSong Dynasty .Life
Early life and career
Born in the former State of Lu (present day southern
Shandong and northern parts ofHenan ,Anhui andJiangsu ), Kong Rong showed his quick wits since a young age. According to the "Epilogue of Han " (續漢書) bySima Biao (司馬彪), when he was a teenager, Kong Rong paid a visit to a renowned official named Li Ying (李膺), who received no one but the very eminent and his own relatives. Claiming to be a relative, Kong Rong was brought toLi Ying , who asked how they were related. Kong Rong answered that his ancestorConfucius was a student and friend ofLao Tzu (whose family name is Li). Another guest present was not impressed, however, and commented that a person who showed great ability at a young age might not grow up to be especially capable. Kong Rong immediately retorted, saying, "I suppose you were really smart when you were young."Li Ying laughed at this and predicted the child would grow up to be a great man.When he grew older, Kong Rong entered the bureaucratic system of the Eastern Han Dynasty. He was successively promoted and in 190 was appointed as the governor of Beihai Commandery, which situated in Qingzhou, the region most heavily infested by the
Yellow Turban Rebellion of the 180s. Upon taking up office, Kong Rong concentrated on reconstruction of the city and establishment of schools. He promoted Confucian studies and provided proper burial for deceased refugees without family members to look after their funeral affairs. During this time, however, he was besieged by an army consisting of the remnant of Yellow Turban rebels led byGuan Hai (管亥). Kong Rong sentTaishi Ci to seek help fromLiu Bei , who was the governor of Pingyuan County (平原) at that time.Taishi Ci came back with 3,000 elite troops, whereupon the rebels dispersed. In 195, Kong Rong was further elevated to governor of the entireQingzhou under a recommendation byLiu Bei .tay in Xuchang
In the next year, however, the powerful warlord
Yuan Shao sent his eldest sonYuan Tan to take over Qingzhou. Kong Rong was defeated and his family was captured. He escaped to the capitalXuchang , where he was subsequently appointed as the Privy Treasurer (少府). During his stay inXuchang , Kong Rong often stood against policies of the chancellorCao Cao , the de facto ruler who held Emperor Xian under his control. When Cao Cao imposed a ban on alcohol due to crop shortage, Kong Rong wrote to him retorting, "Since the kings Jie and Zhou (last rulers of theXia Dynasty andShang Dynasty respectively) were overthrown due to their desire for women, why don't you ban marriage as well?" Kong Rong was then stripped of his official post but soon reinstated, albeit to a titular position. However, because of his hospitality, his house was always filled with guests.During this time Kong Rong befriended
Mi Heng , a talented man from Jingzhou (荆州, present dayHubei andHunan ). Despite being very learned,Mi Heng was unconventional and unconstrained. Upon reachingXuchang , he wrote a prose putting down every eminent person there. When asked whom he would then consider talented,Mi Heng replied, "First there is Kong Rong, second there is Yang Xiu." Kong Rong tried to recommend him toCao Cao , butMi Heng first played a drum naked at a feast hosted byCao Cao before many guests and then criticized Cao Cao loudly outside the latter's doors. Unwilling to killMi Heng himself,Cao Cao then sent the presumptuous man away toLiu Biao , governor ofJingzhou .In 198,
Cao Cao was gearing up for an encounter withYuan Shao along the shores of theYellow River . Kong Rong held a pessimistic stand, tellingCao Cao 's advisorXun Yu thatYuan Shao would be extremely difficult to defeat as he had ample food supplies, far superior troop strength and many capable and loyal subjects. However, Cao Cao took advantages ofYuan Shao 's weaknesses and eventually defeated the latter at the decisiveBattle of Guandu in 200.Yuan Shao died two years later, leaving his legacy to contest between his eldest and youngest sonsYuan Tan andYuan Shang .In 204, Cao Cao defeated the latter and conquered the city of Ye, whereupon he married
Lady Zhen to his own son,Cao Pi . When Kong Rong heard of this, he wroteCao Cao a letter, saying, "WhenKing Wu of Zhou defeated Zhou, he marriedDaji (a beautiful consort of Zhou blamed for the downfall of the Shang Dynasty) to (his brother) theDuke of Zhou ." Thinking that Kong Rong cited a classic text to praise him,Cao Cao asked about the source when he returned, but Kong Rong said, "Seeing what happened in our day, I thought it must be so then."Death
In 208, Kong Rong spoke ill of
Cao Cao before an emissary fromSun Quan , a powerful warlord occupying southeast China.Cao Cao then sentenced him to death. According to the "Spring and Autumn Annals of Wei " (魏氏春秋) bySun Sheng (孫盛), Kong Rong's two eight-year-old sons (a nine-year-old son and a seven-year-old daughter according to the "Book of Later Han ") were playing a game of Go when their father was arrested. When others urged them to escape, they answered:How could there be unbroken eggs under a toppled nest? (安有巢毀而卵不破者乎)
This later became a
Chinese idiom (覆巢之下,安有完卵), used to describe that when a group suffers, all individuals belonging to it will be affected. An alternate but similar story could also be found in "A New Account of the Tales of the World " byLiu Yiqing (劉義慶), which is written in a more elaborate style.After Kong Rong was executed along with his entire family, his body was left in the streets. Not a single court official who used to be close to him dared to collect the corpses for burial except
Zhi Xi (脂習), who fell over Kong Rong's body and wept, crying, "Now you have left me for death, who could I talk to that would understand me?"Literary achievement
Although he did not meet with much success in politics, Kong Rong was undeniably a leading literary figure of his time, famed for his proses as well as poems. Along with six other poets of his time, their poems formed the backbone of what was to be known as the
Jian'an style (建安风骨; "Jian'an" is theChinese era name for the period between 196 and 220). Collectively they were known as the Seven Scholars of Jian'an (建安七子). The civil strife towards the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty gave the "Jian'an" poems their characteristic solemn yet heart-stirring tone, while lament over the ephemerality of life was also a central theme of works from this period. In terms of the history of Chinese literature, the "Jian'an" poems were a transition from the early folksongs into scholarly poetry.Kong Rong's outstanding literary skills, however, were often thought to be an elaborate but empty façade not supported by sound reasons. Cao Pi commented in his "
A Discourse on Literature " (典論) that Kong Rong's words cannot hold discourses and surpassed their reasoning, so much so that they almost seem like mere sarcasm or mockery.After Kong Rong's death, Cao Pi collected twenty-five of his poems and included them in "A Discourse on Literature". However, most of these had been lost and only five survive till this day, out of which the authenticity of two has not been verified. Nine volumes containing Kong Rong's proses under the "
Book of Sui " (隋書) had also been lost. Those that survived could be found in compilations from the Ming and Qing Dynasty. These include several letters Kong Rong wrote toCao Cao in criticism of the latter's policies.References
*cite book|author=Chen Shou|title=San Guo Zhi|publisher=Yue Lu Shu She|year=2002|id=ISBN 7-80665-198-5
ee also
*
Three Kingdoms
*Personages of the Three Kingdoms
*"Records of Three Kingdoms"
*"Romance of the Three Kingdoms "External links
* [http://www.asianresearch.org/articles/1609.html The story of Kong Rong from the Association for Asian Research]
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