Yu Xin

Ming dynasty person CBDB = 248705
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroMing dynasty person CBDB = 248705
PlacesChina
Gender
Male
The details

Biography

Cover of collected work by Yu Xin (here called by his courtesy name Yu Zishan) as appearing in Sibu Congkan

Yu Xin (Chinese: 庾信; pinyin: Yŭ Xìn; Wade–Giles: Yü Hsin) (513-581) was a Chinese poet, politician, and writer of the Liang and Northern Zhou dynasties of medieval China. Yu Xin was one of the founders of the Xu-Yu literary style, and the author of a famous fu. His courtesy name was Zǐshān (子山), and he was known as Yu Shin in Japan.

Life

Yu Xin was born and raised in Jiangling, which was once the capital of Chu. His family was wealthy and aristocratic, and Yu became an important official of the Liang dynasty. As such, he served as the lover and patron of aspiring statesman Wang Shao.

In 554, Yu Xin was sent as an ambassador to the Western Wei in Chang'an, a mission that did not meet with success. On the way to his mission, he visited Wang Shao, now an official censor, who rejected further advances. After the fall of the Liang dynasty in 557, Yu was held in Chang'an for the rest of his life, and three of his children were executed.

Works

Along with the poet and official Xu Ling and the fathers of both men, Yu is known for the Xu-Yu Style (徐庾体), which was known as "fancy and alluring". Perhaps his most famous poem is The Lament for the South (哀江南賦), which James Hightower has described as the highest development of the fu form of poetry.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 13 Oct 2019. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.