Lu Xixiong 陸錫熊

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【(江蘇上海)】 陸錫熊 (健男 耳山)

Also Known As: "陸錫榮", " 篁村", " 耳仙", " 傳經書屋", " 寶奎堂", " 浴鳧池館", " 淞南老人"
Birthdate:
Death: 1792 (57-58)
Immediate Family:

Son of Lu Binghu 陸秉笏 and Cao Xishu 曹錫淑
Husband of 朱氏
Father of 陸慶循; 陸慶堯; 陸慶庚; 陸慶勳 and 陸慶均

Managed by: CBDB (China Biographical Database)
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Immediate Family

About Lu Xixiong 陸錫熊

LU Hsi-hsiung 陸錫熊 (T. 健男, H. 耳山), Dec. 26, 1734–1792, Mar. 17, scholar and official, was a native of Shanghai. His grandfather, Lu Ying-ling 陸瀛齡 (T. 景房, H. 仰山, 柳村) was for a time district director of schools of Shih-tai, Anhwei; and his father, Lu Ping-hu 陸秉笏 (T. 長卿, 葵霑, H. 淞南老人, 1706–1783), was a chü-jên of 1741. His mother, Ts'ao Hsi-shu 曹錫淑 (T. 采荇, 1709–1743), was a poetess whose collection of verse, entitled 晚香樓詩稿 Wan-hsiang lou shih kao, was given notice in the Ssŭ-k'u Catalogue (see under Chi Yün). After the death of his mother Lu Hsi-hsiung accompanied his grandfather several times to Shih-tai. In 1761 he became a chin-shih and in the following year passed a special examination granted by Emperor Kao-tsung on his third tour of South China. Lu was appointed a secretary of the Grand Secretariat and so became acquainted with many scholars in Peking. Three times he was sent to the provinces to take charge of examinations (Shansi in 1765, Chekiang in 1768, and Kwangtung in 1770), and twice he was assistant examiner in the metropolitan examinations (1771, 1772). He also served as a compiler of the general history of China, 歷代通鑑輯覽 Li-ta t'ung-chien chi-lan, 120 chüan, which was completed in 1768 and printed about 1771. Meanwhile he was promoted to an assistant department directorship in the Board of Punishments (1771) and later was made full director (1772).

In 1773 Lu Hsi-hsiung and Chi Yün [q.v.] were appointed chief-editors of the Imperial Manuscript Library, known as the Ssŭ-k'u ch'üan-shu (see under Chu Yün and Chi Yün) and both served in that capacity until the work was completed, more than ten years later. They also compiled, by imperial order (1780), several important works, among them the 歷代職官表 Li-tai chih-kuan piao, 72 chüan, completed in 1784, and printed by the Wu-ying tien press. Together they were made sub-readers of the Hanlin Academy (1773) and thereafter received many honors, especially at the completion, in 1781, of the great Imperial Catalogue, Ssŭ-k'u ch'üan-shu tsung-mu t'i-yao, and at the presentation of the memorial announcing the completion of the first of the four main sets of the Ssŭ-k'u library (see under Chi Yün). In 1780 Lu was appointed director of the Banqueting Court, and two years later, director of the Court of Judicature and Revision. In 1782 he and the other editors of the Ssŭ-k'u library were reprimanded for having copied into the library a work by Mao Ch'i-ling [q.v.] which seemed not to give due recognition to the Manchu dynasty. Early in 1784 Lu was informed of his father's death and returned to Shanghai to observe the period of mourning, but after the funeral he was so pressed financially that he made a journey to Hupeh (1785) to solicit help from his friends. Returning to Peking in 1786 he was reappointed director of the Banqueting Court and later in the same year was made provincial director of education in Fukien. Although promoted to the rank of a vice-president of the Censorate he was ordered to continue his duties in Fukien.

Meanwhile (1787) it was discovered that several works, regarded as prejudicial to the reigning dynasty, had been copied into the Imperial Manuscript Library (see under Chou Liang-kung, Li Ch'ing, and Chi Yün). For this Lu was not only severely reprimanded but was ordered to share with Chi Yün the expense of making the necessary alterations. When in 1790 he finished his term of office in Fukien he volunteered to effect the required changes in that set of the Ssŭ-k'u ch'üan-shu which was deposited in the Wên Su Ko library at Mukden, the other three sets in or near Peking having by this time been collated by Chi Yün. Accompanying Lu to Mukden were several other former editors of the Ssŭ-k'u, among them Wêng Fang-kang [q.v.]. In 1791 more mistakes in the Ssŭ-k'u were disclosed, and all the former editors from Lu and Chi down were again ordered to re-collate the different sets of the Library in and near Peking. Late in 1791, after helping Chi several months in Peking, Lu went to Mukden for the second time to collate the Wên Su Ko set, but he found the northern winter so inclement that he died soon after his arrival. According to the Shanghai gazetteer of 1871, his tomb in Shanghai was located in the neighborhood of the present racecourse.

Lu Hsi-hsiung, like Chi Yün, was a good writer in the court style of ceremonial literature. He drafted many public documents and composed several articles published in the name of Yü Min-chung [q.v.]. His collected works in prose, entitled 寶奎堂文集 Pao-k'uei tang wên-chi, and those in verse, entitled 篁邨詩集 Huang-ts'un shih-chi, each in 12 chüan, were printed by one of his sons in 1810. The printing blocks for these works were burned in 1842 when the British troops entered Shanghai, but were recarved in 1849 by one of his grandsons.

Lu Hsi-hsiung's maternal grandfather, Ts'ao I-shih 曹一士 (T. 諤廷, H. 濟寰, 1678–1736), member of a celebrated family in Shanghai, was an uncle of Ts'ao Hsi-pao (see under Ch'ien Fêng). A chin-shih of 1730, Ts'ao I-shih rose to be a supervising censor. His collected poems, entitled 四焉齋詩集 Ssŭ-yen-chai shih-chi, 6 chüan, and his works in prose, Ssŭ-yen-chai wên-chi (文集), 8 chüan, were printed in 1750 in the collectanea, 石倉世纂 Shih-ts'ang shih-tsuan. There appeared in the same work a collection of poems by his eldest daughter, Ts'ao Hsi-kuei 曹錫珪 (T. 采蘩), entitled 拂珠樓偶鈔 Fu-chu-lou ou-ch'ao, 2 chüan. Two younger daughters of Ts'ao I-shih were also poets, the second being the above-mentioned Ts'ao Hsi-shu, the mother of Lu Hsi-hsiung. After her death, a younger sister, Ts'ao Hsi-k'un 曹錫堃 (T. 采藻), became Lu's stepmother. Ts'ao Hsi-k'un, too, left a collection of poems, entitled 五老堂詩稿 Wu-lao-tang shih-kao.

[1/326/7a; 3/96/7a; Shanghai hsien-chih (1871) 21/5a, 201, 26/109a, 27/7a, 24a, 29/15b; Ch'ien Ta-hsin [q.v.], Ch'ien-yen tang wên-chi, 45/1a; Pan-li Ssŭ-k'u chüan-shu tang-an (see bibl. under Chi Yün).]

Fang Chao-ying


Lu Xixiong 陸錫熊 【參考資料: MQWW PoetID #858, HuWenKai #539.】 《清代人物生卒年表》定其生卒年為雍正12年~乾隆57年。 【參考《清代人物生卒年表》#12712.】