Gan Ji

Yu Ji
于吉
A Qing dynasty illustration of Gan Ji
Born Unknown
Linyi, Shandong
Died 200
Occupation Taoist priest

Yu Ji (died 200) was a Taoist priest who lived during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China.

Life

Yu Ji was from Langya Commandery (琅琊郡), which is around present-day Linyi, Shandong.

According to the Book of Later Han, during the reign of Emperor Shun (r.  125–144), Gong Chong (宮崇), one of Yu Ji's disciples, submitted the Taiping Qingling Shu (太平清領書) to the emperor.

Some believe that the character Yu Ji (于吉) in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms is a misspelling of Yu Ji.[1] In the novel, he wandered around the Jiangdong region, chatting with soldiers and civilians, making everyone believe that he was a magician and healer. The warlord of Jiangdong, Sun Ce, heard of Yu Ji's magic and grew suspicious of him, thinking that he was casting spells on people. Sun Ce accused Yu Ji of heresy and had him executed. However, Yu Ji's spirit returned to haunt Sun Ce and eventually caused him to die from shock.

Many historians reject the account of Yu Ji and Sun Ce, suggesting that it is propaganda or merely fiction. Reasons for this include Yu Ji's previously recorded activities (which would have made Yu Ji quite old by the time he even met Sun Ce). Only a select few historical texts mention Yu Ji being killed by Sun Ce. Of those that do, Yu Ji is not necessarily portrayed as an innocent victim; rather, in the Jiangbiao Zhuan (江表傳), Sun Ce believes that Yu Ji is misleading the people (Sun Ce was a strict Confucianist).[2]

In the video games Dynasty Warriors 5 and Dynasty Warriors 7, there is a stage is based on Sun Ce's confrontation with Yu Ji, a fictional event. In the stage Sun Ce has to fight Yu Ji clones, as well as a Da Qiao and Sun Jian clone.

The 1983 Hong Kong film The Weird Man by the Shaw Brothers Studio is loosely based on the story of Yu Ji and Sun Ce. Yu Ji was put to death by Sun Ce and he later comes back as a ghost and wreaks havoc on Sun Ce for revenge by possessing his army and his wife. He also helped Sun Ce kill Xu Gong while killing Sun Ce in the process. In this film, he is seen as the hero while Sun Ce is portrayed as the anti-hero. The Weird Man was remade in 1993 as Ninja in Ancient China.

See also

References

  1. Bokenkamp, Stephen R. (1997). Early Daoist Scriptures (reprint, revised ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 052092312X.
  2. Seiwert, Hubert Michael (2003). Popular Religious Movements and Heterodox Sects in Chinese History. Brill. p. 69. ISBN 9004131469.
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