Fan Ye (historian)
Fan Ye | |||
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Traditional Chinese | 范曄 | ||
Simplified Chinese | 范晔 | ||
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Fan Ye (398–445 or 446[note 1]), courtesy name Weizong (蔚宗), was a Chinese historian and politician of the Liu Song dynasty during the Southern and Northern dynasties period. He was the compiler of the historical text Book of the Later Han. The son of Fan Tai (范泰), Fan Ye was born in present-day Shaoxing, Zhejiang, but his ancestral home was in Nanyang, Henan.
He was a noted atheist who heavily criticised Buddhism, Yin and Yang, and the concept of the Mandate of Heaven. To this end he cited Zhang Heng's scientific studies as evidence.
Fan has a biography in the Book of Song.
Notes[]
References[]
Citations[]
- ^ Hill, John E. Through the Jade Gate, footnotes 28.1 and 29.1.
Sources[]
- Tan, Jiajian, "Hou Hanshu" ("Book of Later Han"). Encyclopedia of China (Chinese Literature Edition), 1st ed.
Further reading[]
- Yap, Joseph P. (2019). The Western Regions, Xiongnu and Han, from the Shiji, Hanshu and Hou Hanshu. ISBN 978-1792829154.
Categories:
- 398 births
- 445 deaths
- 5th-century executions
- 5th-century Chinese historians
- Executed Liu Song people
- Executed Northern and Southern dynasties people
- Historians from Zhejiang
- Jin dynasty (266–420) historians
- Liu Song historians
- Liu Song politicians
- People executed by a Northern and Southern dynasties state by decapitation
- People executed by Liu Song
- Writers from Shaoxing
- 5th-century Chinese philosophers
- Chinese academic biography stubs
- Asian historian stubs
- Chinese history stubs