i 53 Mao Kung (Kung-sun Lung
disciple)
i 54 Ch’imu Tzu (same)
i 55 Chan Tzu
56 Fan Sui (Wei diplomat,
debater, prime minister of
Ch’in)
57 Wu Hou (leader of Mohist
faction)
58 Hsiang-li Ch’in (leader of
Mohist faction)
59 T’eng-ling Tzu (Mohist
faction of the south)
60 Ku Huo (same)
61 Chi Ch’ih (same)
62 Tsou Shih (Chi-hsia Acad.)
63 Yü Ching (prime Minister of
Pingyuan court; patron of
Yü’s Spring and Autumn
Annals)
64 Lü Pu-wei (prime minister of
Ch’in; patron of Lü’s Spring
and Autumn Annals)
65 Fü-ch’iu Po
66 Mao Heng (textual scholar)
Figure 4.3. Han Dynasty Transition
and Forming of Official
Confucianism, 235 b.c.e.–100 c.e.
200 b.c.e.
67 Meng Ch’ing (Lanling school
of Hsun-tzu)
68 Shen Pei (teacher of numerous
Han officials and Erudites)
68a Kung-yang Chiu (transmitted
interpretation of Spring and
Autumn Annals from
Confucian family chain)
69 Liu Chiao
70 Mao Chang (textual scholar)
71 Chang Ts’ang (Yin-Yang,
calendar, Han court)
72 Fu Shang (textual scholar;
restored destroyed texts from
memory)
73 Chang Liang (“Taoist”
immortality magic, Han court)
74 Chia I (Yin-Yang; famous
poet)
75 Hsiahou Shih-Ch’ang
76 Hsiahou Sheng
77 Hsiahou Ch’ien
78 Ouyang Shêng (Five Agents;
occult portents; New Text
school)
79 Ouyang Kao (same)
80 Hu K’ang (textual scholar:
Annals, I Ching)
80a Hu-wu Cheng (Annals,
Erudite)
80b Kung-sun Hung (head of
Erudites, prime minister of
Emperor Wu)
i 80c Lu P’ou-chou (disciple of
Tung Chung-shu; prosecuted
Liu An)
81 Shu Kuang (same as 80)
82 Meng Hsi (same as 78 and
79, Lanling school)
83 K’ung An-kuo (descendant of
Confucius; began study of old
texts)
84 Ts’ou Pa (Book of History)
85 Shu-sun Tung (Confucian
court ritual)
86 Li Shao-chün (“Taoist”
magic, Han court)
87 Min Chi (same)
100 b.c.e.
88 Liu Pi-chiang
i 89 Liu Te
91 Ssu-ma Ch’ien (historian)
92 Chiao Kan (divination)
93 Ching Fang (same)
902 • (^) Appendix 3