Tu Ji
Tu Ji (1856-1921) was a historian, educator and sociologist in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China. The original name is Yu, the word Jingshan, the word Jingshan, the name jieyiluo, the master of Wujin, Jiangsu Province. In the 18th year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu, he was a Jinshi. He once worked as Zhang Zhidong, governor of Guangdong and Guangdong. He was the chief editor of Guangdong map Bureau, majoring in Guangdong map. He also edited the manuscript of song Huiyao with Miao Quansun and other scholars in Guangya book company, and wrote mengwuer historical records,
Profile
Tu Ji, the word Jingshan, Jingsheng, No. knot a host. He was born in Wujin, Jiangsu Province. Qing Dynasty historian. In 1888, he joined Zhang Zhidong's shogunate, the "master of contemporary literature", and became a "disciple of baobingtang". He was deeply influenced by Zhang Zhidong's idea that "the period of study is based on reason, and reason belongs to practical use". He was the chief editor of Guangdong map Bureau, majoring in Guangdong map; he was also the editor of Guangya book company, and worked with Miao Quansun to revise the manuscript of song Huiyao. In 1892, Jinshi (with Cai Yuanpei on the same list) was awarded the title of Imperial Academy scholar. Later, he served as the magistrate of Chun'an County in Zhejiang Province and the alternate principal of the Ministry of industry. In 1895, he went to Heilongjiang at the invitation of Yan Mao, the imperial minister, and arrived in Qiqihar in October of the same year. In the 22nd year of Guangxu (1896), yanmao wanted to return to Beijing, but in the message of the Qing government's conference hall, he asked for the mapping of Heilongjiang, and Heilongjiang lacked talents in this field. At that time, general Enze of Heilongjiang Province granted permission by the imperial court, leaving Tu Ji as the general editor of Heilongjiang map, and taking charge of Surveying and mapping and compilation. Soon after, the General Bureau of maps was changed to the Bureau of general records, and Tu Ji was appointed as the chief editor of the Bureau. In October of the same year, Heilongjiang map Bureau and Tongzhi Bureau were established. In 1898, all the sketches of six cities in Heilongjiang Province were completed. In the second year, we completed the revision of Heilongjiang map and the writing of "Heilongjiang map theory". However, the compilation of Heilongjiang general annals has not been completed for various reasons. Tu Ji left Heilongjiang in 1900. In 1902, he was the first principal of Dong Xuetang (now Yangzhou middle school). During the 1911 Revolution, he and his eldest son Xiaokuan (member of the alliance) organized local forces and middle school students to participate in the restoration activities in Changzhou, Jiangsu Province. After the restoration of Changzhou, he was elected the civil affairs chief of Wujin County. After the revolution of 1911, he served as the chief editor of the National History Museum of Peking University. In 1913, he refused Yuan Shikai's appointment as the governor of Wujin County by the Northern Warlord government. He resigned and went home to write.
He is rich in collecting old books. He has a family of "jieyihuan". He collects historical and geographical materials, maps, inscriptions, foreign books and so on. The collected books were lost in the Republic of China. His former residence and library are still in use today. Except for the backyard garden which has been destroyed, the rest are basically in good condition. It has preserved the architectural style of the Qing Dynasty mansion and is now a cultural relic protection unit in Changzhou City.
Academic achievements
Tu Jigong was good at history and geography, especially in Mongolian history. After ten years of collecting old collections and historical materials in foreign languages, the great work of Mongolian history, mengwuer Shiji, has been completed in 160 volumes (14 of which are blank), which has corrected the mistakes in Yuanshi. The book was created under the instruction of the Qing Dynasty, distorting the history of the Yuan Dynasty and believing that there were many errors in the history of the Yuan Dynasty, It also collects scattered materials to supplement the biographies of hundreds of figures missing in the history of the Yuan Dynasty, which makes up for the omission of the records of the early Mongolian history, the history of the four great khanates and the deeds of many important figures in Mongolia and Semu before the establishment of the Yuan Dynasty in the history of the Yuan Dynasty . His works include: map of Heilongjiang, map of Heilongjiang, lecture notes on Chinese history of Beijing University, discussion on Genghis Khan's mausoleum, answer to Zhang Weixi's differentiation of Genghis Khan's mausoleum, Jieyi Jue parallel prose, etc. There are three manuscripts: the history of archaeology, the history of Liubian, etc.
Selected works
Poetry
Send Li Hubu CI ming to Tianjin
Resign to the sea, farewell to Chang'an.
Old to worry about elegant, deep talk about the lung and liver.
The spring of the imperial city is near, and the day and night of the island are cold.
Don't lean on the coral tree. Look straight north from the floating clouds.
Return to dream
The cold dew in my hometown makes the guests feel frightened. At night, there are wild geese in the yellow building.
In the slanting moon, the west wind blows across Jiangcheng.
But memory
The willows of the Yuhe River meet the Jintai, and the fragrant chariots turn to the riverside.
But I remember the peach trees in the south of the Yangtze River, for whom the east wind worries.
Yangchun Pavilion is the eye
Around the guocang mountain, the evening clouds rise, and the withering grass in front of the pavilion is late.
Returning to the pond, the wind settles the autumn, and the Ping gathers together.
Calligraphy
member of family
The eldest son Tu Kuan (1879-1918), with the character of Yuanbo, was a famous intellectual with democratic revolutionary thought in Changzhou, a member of the league, and an important figure in the "restoration of Changzhou" in 1911.
Chinese PinYin : Tu Ji
Tu Ji