Online Encyclopedia

KIU CHANG CHUN (1148-1227)

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 840 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KIU CHANG CHUN (1148-1227)  ,

Chinese Taoist sage and traveller, was born in 1148 . In 1219 he was invited by Jenghiz Khan, founder of the Mongol
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empire and greatest of
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Asiatic conquerors, to visit him . Jenghi# letter of invitation, dated the 15th of May 1219 (by
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present reckoning), has been preserved, and is among the curiosities of
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history; here the terrible
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warrior appears as a meek
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disciple of wisdom, modest and
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simple, almost Socratic in his self-examination, alive to many of the deepest truths of
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life and government . Chang Chun obeyed this summons; and leaving his home in Shantung (
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February 1220) journeyed first to Peking . Learning that Jenghiz had gone far west upon fresh conquests, the sage stayed the winter in Peking . In February 1221 he started again and crossed eastern
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Mongolia to the camp of Jenghiz'
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brother Ujughen, near Lake Bor or Buyur in the upper basin of the Kerulun-Amur . Thence he travelled south-westward up the Kerulun, crossed the Karakorum region in north-central Mongolia, and so came to the Chinese Altai, probably passing near the present Uliassutai . After traversing the Altai he visited Bishbalig, answering to the
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modern Urumtsi, and moved along the north side of the Tian Shan range to lake Sairam, Almalig (or Ku1ja), and the rich valley of the
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Ili . We then trace him to the Chu, over this
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river to Talas and the Tashkent region, and over the Jaxartes (or Syr Daria) to
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Samarkand, where he halted for some months . Finally, through the " Iron Gates " of Termit, over the
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Oxus, and by way of
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Balkh and
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northern
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Afghanistan, Chang Chun reached Jenghiz' camp near the
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Hindu Kush . Returning home he followed much the same course as on his outward route: certain deviations, however, occur, such as a visit to Kuku-khoto . He was back in Peking by the end of
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January 1224 .

From the narrative of his expedition (the Si yu ki, written by his

pupil and companion Li Chi Chang) we derive some of the most faithful and vivid pictures ever
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drawn of nature and man between the
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Great Wall of
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China and
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Kabul, between the
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Aral and the Yellow Sea: we may particularly
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notice the sketches of the
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Mongols, and of the
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people of Samarkand and its neighbourhood; the account of the fertility and products of the latter region, as of the Ili valley, at or near Almalig-Kulja; and the description of various great mountain ranges, peaks and defiles, such as the Chinese Altai, the Tian Shan, Mt Bogdo-ola (?), and the Iron Gates of Termit . There is, moreover, a noteworthy reference to a
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land apparently identical with the uppermost valley of the
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Yenisei . After his return Chang Chun lived at Peking till his
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death on the 23rd of
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July 1227 . By order of Jenghiz some of the former imperial garden grounds were made over to him, for the foundation of a Taoist monastery . See E . Bretschneider, Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic
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Sources, vol. i. pp . 35-108, where a
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complete
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translation of the narrative is given, with a valuable commentary; C . R . Beazley Dawn of Modern Geography, iii . 539 . (C . R .

End of Article: KIU CHANG CHUN (1148-1227)
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