![](https://assets11.geni.com/images/external/twitter_bird_small.gif?1697640593)
![](https://assets11.geni.com/images/facebook_white_small_short.gif?1697640593)
public profile
Chen Tingjing 陳廷敬 【參考資料: MQWW PoetID #749, HuWenKai #603.】 《清代人物生卒年表》定其生卒年為崇禎12年~康熙51年。 【參考《清代人物生卒年表》#13231.】
When the governor of Hupeh, Chang Ch'ien 張汧 (T. 蕙嶫 H. 壺陽 a chin-shih of 1646) became involved in 1688 in a bribery case, Ch'ên T'ing-ching, being a relative of the accused, retired. Two years later he was recalled, but before long had to relinquish his post for a period of mourning. In 1703 he was made Grand Secretary of the Wên-yüan ko 文淵閣 and in 1705 accompanied Emperor Shêng-tsu on the latter's fifth tour of the South. Although granted leave to retire on grounds of ill-health in 1710, the death of one Grand Secretary, Chang Yü-shu, and the absence of another, Li Kuang-ti [qq.v.], on sick leave made it necessary to recall him immediately to look after governmental affairs. He died at his post in 1712 and was canonized as Wên-ch'ên 文貞. His literary collection, 午亭文編 Wu-t'ing wên-pien in 50 chüan, was first printed in 1708 in the facsimile calligraphy of Lin Chi [q.v.]. A supplement to it, entitled Wu-t'ing shan jên ti-êr-chih (山人第二集), 3 chüan, was printed later. Ch'ên T'ing-ching had three sons: Ch'ên Ch'ien-chi 陳謙吉, for a time sub-prefect of Huai-an-fu, Kiangsu; Ch'ên Yü-p'êng 陳豫朋 (T. 堯愷 H. 濂村, chin-shih of 1694) ; and Ch'ên Chuang-li 陳壯履 (T. 禮叔 H. 幼安, 潛安 chin-shih of 1697).
[ 1/273/5b; 3/7/8a; Ts'ê-chou-fu chih (1783) 36/ 33b; Shansi t'ung-chih (1734) 122/37b; Ssŭ-k'u (see under Chi Yün) 173/4b, 182/6a.]
TU LIEN-CHÊ
1639 |
1639
|
||
1677 |
1677
|
||
1712 |
1712
Age 73
|
||
???? | |||
???? |