Lu Ban Explained

Lu Ban (–444BC)[1] was a Chinese architect or master carpenter, structural engineer, and inventor, during the Zhou Dynasty. He is revered as the Chinese Deity (Patron) of builders and contractors.

Life

Lu Ban was born in the state of Lu; a few sources claim he was born further to the west, in Dunhuang,[2] to a family of carpenters[1] or artisans during the Spring and Autumn period of the Zhou dynasty. His original name was He was also referred to as or Pan. He was supposed to have been an indifferent pupil until his love of learning was kindled by the scholar Zi Xia. He later learned woodworking from Bao Laodong. The great demand for his work supposedly compelled him to invent or improve several carpenter's tools—the saw, the square, the planer, the drill, the shovel, and an ink marking tool—to complete his many projects more quickly. His wife was also credited with inventing the umbrella in order to permit him to work in inclement weather.

Inventions

According to tradition, he was responsible for several inventions:[3]

Other inventions were also attributed to him, such as a lifting implement to assist with burial,[5] a wooden horse carriage and coachman,[6] a pedal-powered cycle,[7] and other woodworking mentioned in various texts, which thereafter led Lu Ban to be acknowledged as a master craftsman:

Legacy

Lu Ban is revered as the god of carpentry and masonry in Chinese folk religion. His personality is assumed by the master carpenter involved in the construction of houses among the Dong.[8] He is sometimes counted among the Five Kings of the Water Immortals, Taoist water gods invoked by sailors for protection while carrying out journeys.[9]

He is referenced in a number of Chinese idioms. The Chinese equivalent of "teaching one's grandmother to suck eggs" is to "brandish one's axe at Lu Ban's door" (班门弄斧[10]). His cultural companion is the stone worker Wang Er, who lived around the same time.

The Lu Ban Ruler (魯班尺) is used in feng shui practices.[11]

The modern artist Shi Lu has claimed that Lu Ban was an alias of his contemporary Confucius, but this seems dubious.[12]

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. Youyang Zazu, Vol. XXIV.
  3. Mozi, Ch. 49 & 50.
  4. Book: Guo, Li . Games & Play in Chinese & Sinophone Cultures . Eyman . Douglas . Sun . Hongmei . 2024 . . 9780295752402 . Guo . Li . Seattle, WA . 6 . Introduction . Eyman . Douglas . Sun . Hongmei.
  5. Liji, Ch. 4.
  6. Lunheng, Ch. 85, by Wang Chong (b. 27).
  7. Web site: Was this the world's first-ever cycle?. 24 March 2010. metro.co.uk.
  8. .
  9. . &
  10. Web site: Lu Ban, China's inventor of everything . Colville . Alex . 2020-10-19 . The China Culture Project . 2024-03-07 . Even today the phrase 班门弄斧 bān mén nòng fǔ — literally, “to brandish your axe at Lu Ban’s door” — is a common idiom, used to describe people who unwittingly boast their small achievements in front of those who’ve set the bar, like showing off one’s front-crawl to Michael Phelps.
  11. Web site: The Magic Ruler. The Redbrick Team . REDBRICK MORTGAGE ADVISORY . 2024-03-07 . The Lu Ban ruler is synonymous with Fengshui or geomancy, which is the Chinese art of living in harmony with nature by harnessing Qi (energy). It is practised by arranging buildings or other sites auspiciously..
  12. .