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Founder
According to tradition,
Confucius was born in the state of Lu (present-day Shandong
[Shantung] Province) of the noble Kong clan. His original name was
Kong Qiu (K’ong Ch’iu). His father, commander of a district in Lu,
died three years after Confucius was born, leaving the family in
poverty; but Confucius nevertheless received a fine education. He
was married at the age of 19 and had one son and two daughters.
During the four years immediately after his marriage, poverty
compelled him to perform menial labors for the chief of the district
in which he lived. His mother died in 527 bc, and after a period of
mourning he began his career as a teacher, usually traveling about
and instructing the small body of disciples that had gathered around
him. His fame as a man of learning and character and his reverence
for Chinese ideals and customs soon spread through the principality
of Lu.

Living as he did in the
second half of the Zhou dynasty (Chou dynasty; 1045?-256 bc), when
feudalism degenerated in China and intrigue and vice were rampant,
Confucius deplored the contemporary disorder and lack of moral
standards. He came to believe that the only remedy was to convert
people once more to the principles and precepts of the sages of
antiquity. He therefore lectured to his pupils on the ancient
classics. He taught the great value of the power of example. Rulers,
he said, can be great only if they themselves lead exemplary lives,
and were they willing to be guided by moral principles, their states
would inevitably become prosperous and happy.
Confucius had, however,
no opportunity to put his theories to a public test until, at the
age of 50, he was appointed magistrate of Zhongdu (Chung-tu), and
the next year minister of crime of the state of Lu. His
administration was successful; reforms were introduced, justice was
fairly dispensed, and crime was almost eliminated. So powerful did
Lu become that the ruler of a neighboring state maneuvered to secure
the minister's dismissal. Confucius left his office in 496 bc,
traveling about and teaching, vainly hoping that some other prince
would allow him to undertake measures of reform. In 484 bc, after a
fruitless search for an ideal ruler, he returned for the last time
to Lu. He spent the remaining years of his life in retirement,
writing commentaries on the classics. He died in Lu and was buried
in a tomb at Qufu (Ch'ü-fu), Shandong.

Confucius did not put
into writing the principles of his philosophy; these were handed
down only through his disciples. The Lunyu (Analects), a work
compiled by some of his disciples, is considered the most reliable
source of information about his life and teachings. One of the
historical works that he is said to have compiled and edited, the
Chunqiu (Spring and Autumn Annals), is an account of Chinese history
in the state of Lu from 722 to 481 bc. In learning he wished to be
known as a transmitter rather than as a creator, and he therefore
revived the study of the ancient books. His own teachings, together
with those of his main disciples, are found in the SiShu (Ssu Shu;
Four Books) of Confucian literature, which became the textbooks of
later Chinese generations. Confucius was greatly venerated during
his lifetime and in succeeding ages. Although he himself had little
belief in the supernatural, he has been revered almost as a
spiritual being by millions.
The entire teaching of
Confucius was practical and ethical, rather than religious. He
claimed to be a restorer of ancient morality and held that proper
outward acts based on the five virtues of kindness, uprightness,
decorum, wisdom, and faithfulness constitute the whole of human
duty. Reverence for parents, living and dead, was one of his key
concepts. His view of government was paternalistic, and he enjoined
all individuals to observe carefully their duties toward the state.
In subsequent centuries his teachings exerted a powerful influence
on the Chinese nation.
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