QUOTE(asiaconqueror @ Aug 21 2004, 04:12 PM)
I heard that Yongle Emperor was a famous Ming emperor. Can someone tell me more history about him?
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Here are some brief notes about him.
The Yong Le emperor was a rebel. He was equally as ambitions as his father and equally pitiless in his elimination of those whom he disliked or feared. Like his father, he was quick to anger and often abused officials cruelly. On his accession he brought terrible retribution to those who had most closely advised the previous emperor. They and all their relatives were put to death, and before the purge ended, thousands had perished. He also revoked the institutional and policy changes of his nephew-predecessor and even ordered history rewritten so that the founding emperor’s era name was extended through 1402, as if Zhu Yunwen, the Jianwen emperor, had never reigned at all. The one reform policy that he retained was that princely powers must be curtailed. Hence, the surviving frontier princes were successively transferred from their strategically located fiefs into central and south China and were deprived of all governmental authority. From the Yong Le period on, imperial princes were no more than salaried idlers who socially and ceremonially adorned the cities to which they were assigned and in which they were effectively confined. At no time was he, or any subsequent Ming emperor, seriously threatened by a princely uprising. He was domineering, jealous of his authority, and inclined toward self-aggrandizement. He staffed the central government with young men dependent on himself and relied to an unprecedented extent on eunuchs for service outside their traditionally prescribed palace spheres — as foreign envoys, as supervisors of special projects such as the requisitioning of construction supplies, and as regional overseers of military garrisons. His insecurity caused him to establish in 1420 a special agency of his Imperial bodyguard called the Eastern Depot (Tong Chang) to ferret out possible treasonable activities. It quickly became notorious, and it was a hated and feared force of secret police during all later decades and centuries.
He relied heavily on a secretarial group of young scholar-officials assigned to palace duty from the traditional compiling and editing agency, the Hanlin Academy, and by the end of his reign they became a Grand Secretariat, a powerful buffer between the Emperor and the administrative agencies of government. He also sponsored the compilation and publication of Confucian and Neo-Confucian Classics, and it most notably ordered the preparation in manuscript form of a monumental compendium of literature called Yong Le Da Dian (“The Great Canon of the Yong Le Era”) in more than 11,000 volumes, which preserved many works that would otherwise have been lost. But he considered such work as an activity for literati who enjoyed public esteem but not his personal trust. It kept them busy, and therefore out of mischief. He was a military man of action, and had little enough patience with unavoidable administrative business, much less with intellectual exercises.
The Yong Le emperor had expansionist inclinations, and this led China into an ultimately disastrous military adventure against China’s southern neighbor, Annam. In 1400 the heir to the Annamite throne had been deposed and a new dynasty proclaimed. He was urged to intervene and restore legitimate rule, and, when his own envoys to Annam were murdered, in 1406, he authorized a punitive campaign. Chinese forces rapidly occupied and pacified Annam. Because no heir seemed available, in 1407 he transformed Annam from a tributary state into a new Chinese province. Local resistance broke out almost immediately and continued irrepressibly. Especially after 1418, guerrilla warfare against the Ming authorities made the Chinese position in Annam increasingly precarious. By that time the Yong Le emperor had lost most of his early interest in the southern regions, and the situation was allowed to deteriorate until his grandson, the Xuande emperor with some humiliation, realistically abandoned direct Ming rule of Annam in 1428.
The most notable domestic event of the Yong Le emperor’s reign was the transfer of the national capital and the central government from Nanking to Peking, though precisely why he did this has never been fully understood for Peking was not the ideal site for the national capital. It was far removed from China’s economic and cultural heartland, and it was dangerously close and exposed to the northern frontier. But it was the Yong Le emperor’s personal power base, and it was a site from which the northern defenses could be kept under effective surveillance. In 1407 the Emperor authorized transfer of the capital there, and from 1409 on he spent most of his time in the north. In 1417 large-scale work began on the reconstruction of Peking, and thereafter the Yong Le emperor never returned to Nanking. The new Peking palace was completed in 1420, and on New Year’s Day of 1421 Peking formally became the national capital.
Before this transfer of the capital could be accomplished and before the northern defenses could be made satisfactorily secure, the Yong Le emperor had to provide for the reliable transport of grain supplies from the affluent Yangtze Valley to the north. Since the old Grand Canal linking the Yangtze and Yellow River valleys had been neglected for centuries and was largely unusable, coastal transport service around the Shantung peninsula was reorganized, and it proved spectacularly successful in the early years of the Yong Le emperor’s reign under the naval commander Chen Xuan. Rehabilitation and extension of old waterways in the north proceeded simultaneously, so that in 1411 sea transport vessels could enter the Yellow River mouth south of Shantung and thus avoid the most perilous part of the coastal route. Then in 1415 Chen Xuan successfully rehabilitated the southern segments of the Grand Canal, and sea transport was abandoned. With Chen Xuan serving as supreme commander of the Grand Canal system until his death in 1433, the new army-operated waterway complex, extending from Hangzhou in the south to outside Peking, was able to deliver grain supplies in quantities adequate for the northern needs. In 1421, when Peking became the national capital, deliveries began to exceed 3,000,000 piculs (400 million pounds) annually.
The Yong Le emperor’s ill-fated occupation of Annam, the northern campaigns, the rebuilding of Peking, and the rehabilitation of the Grand Canal, and the spectacular but unproductive overseas expeditions, the all required enormous expenditures of supplies and human effort. That China was able to undertake such projects during his reign gives evidence of the Yong Le emperor’s strong leadership, but they left the country exhausted needing an era of recovery under his successors.
He was a memorable emperor. However, it is difficult to credit him with much more than the creation of the Forbidden City (although this wiped out the great forests) and the rehabilitation of the Grand Canal. The naval expeditions gained him personal recognition and enabled him to buy (expensively) tribute from neighboring minor countries, but provided no benefit to Chan as a whole. And the Great Canon was a mere by-product of his attempt to keep the scholar-officials occupied.