Ruan Dacheng Explained

Ruan Dacheng
Office:Grand Secretariat of the Eastern Hall
Term:1645
Office1:Minister of War
Term1:1645
Monarch1:Zhu Yousong
Predecessor1:Lian Guoshi
Successor1:Zhang Kentang
Office2:Minister of War in Southern Capital
Term2:1645
Monarch2:Zhu Yousong
Predecessor2:Lian Guoshi
Successor2:Shao Fuzhong
Birth Date:1587
Birth Place:Tongcheng, Ming China
Death Place:Jiangshan, Qing China
Occupation:mandarin, dramatists and playwrights

Ruan Dacheng (1587–1646) was a Chinese dramatist, poet and official of the Ming dynasty and the Southern Ming dynasty. His daughter, Ruan Lizhen, was also a dramatist.

Ruan grew up in Huaining County, Anqing. He became a jinshi in 1616 and began a career as an official. Ruan aligned himself with the faction of the eunuch Wei Zhongxian and, after Wei fell from favour and committed suicide, was removed from office. He then retired to live as a hermit and it is believed that most of his literary production was undertaken during this time.

In 1644, after the fall of Beijing to the Qing dynasty, he became an official of the Southern Ming through the influence of his close friend Ma Shiying. In 1645, he surrendered to the Qing dynasty.[1] [2]

After his death, he was reviled as a traitor and he is a villain in Kong Shangren's The Peach Blossom Fan.[3]

He was a patron of the garden designer Ji Cheng.

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Berg. Daria. Reading China [electronic resource]

    fiction, history and the dynamics of discourse : essays in honour of professor Glen Dudbridge]

    . 2007. BRILL. 978-9004154834. 111. en.
  2. Book: JR. FREDERIC WAKEMAN. The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. 1985. University of California Press. 9780520048041. 721. en.
  3. Book: Gernet. Jacques. A History of Chinese Civilization. 1996. Cambridge University Press. 9780521497817. 448. registration. en.