Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conventions
- List of abbreviations
- Part I The bureaucratic apparatus
- Part II The compilation of the historical record
- 3 Introduction
- 4 The Court Diaries (Ch'i-chü chu)
- 5 The Inner Palace Diary (Nei Ch'i-chü chu)
- 6 The Record of Administrative Affairs (Shih-cheng chi)
- 7 The Daily Calendar (Jih-li)
- 8 Biographies
- 9 Histories of institutions, historical encyclopedias, and collections of documents
- 10 The Veritable Records (Shih-lu)
- 11 The National History (Kuo shih)
- Part III The Chiu T'ang shu
- Appendix: Derivation of the Basic Annals chapters of Chiu T'ang shu
- Bibliography
- Index
4 - The Court Diaries (Ch'i-chü chu)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conventions
- List of abbreviations
- Part I The bureaucratic apparatus
- Part II The compilation of the historical record
- 3 Introduction
- 4 The Court Diaries (Ch'i-chü chu)
- 5 The Inner Palace Diary (Nei Ch'i-chü chu)
- 6 The Record of Administrative Affairs (Shih-cheng chi)
- 7 The Daily Calendar (Jih-li)
- 8 Biographies
- 9 Histories of institutions, historical encyclopedias, and collections of documents
- 10 The Veritable Records (Shih-lu)
- 11 The National History (Kuo shih)
- Part III The Chiu T'ang shu
- Appendix: Derivation of the Basic Annals chapters of Chiu T'ang shu
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Court Diaries were the only official record that was compiled continually throughout the dynasty. We have already seen that they were written by the court diarists, the Ch'i-chü lang and Ch'i-chü she-jen who were part of the emperor's regular retinue. They kept a full record of what went on at the formal court assemblies.
The Ch'i-chü lang are responsible for recording the models provided by the emperor's acts, to fulfill the functions of the Recorder in charge of noting events. The system for recording events is that events shall be arranged by the day, the days organized into months, the months by the seasons, the seasons by the year. They must record the cyclical day for the first days of the month, so as to place in correct order the calendrical succession. They must record the canons and rituals, the words and objects employed, so as to scrutinize institutions, to record promotions, marks of distinction and rewards to encourage the good, and punishments and degradations to give warning to the evil. At the end of each quarter, their record is to be sent for use in the National History Each quarter [their record] is to be made into a scroll and sent to the Historiographical Office.
The Ch'i-chü she-jen is responsible for compiling and recording a historical account of the Emperor's utterances.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Writing of Official History under the T'ang , pp. 35 - 42Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992