Sima Biao

Sima Biao
Traditional Chinese 司馬彪
Simplified Chinese 司马彪
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Sima.

Sima Biao (Chinese: 司馬彪; between 238 and 246 306[1]), style name Shaotong (紹統), was an historian and nobleman during the Jin dynasty of China.

Biography

Sima Biao was the eldest son of Sima Mu (司馬睦), Prince of Gaoyang. His grandfather was Sima Jin (司馬進), younger brother of Sima Yi. This made Sima Biao one of many second-cousins to the emperors who reigned during his lifetime. Although the eldest son, Sima Biao was disinherited by his father due to his dissipate nature and love of sex, pushing him onto a scholarly career path.[2]

Appointed to minor sinecures, he began to work on literature and history, annotating the Zhuangzi and the Huainanzi, and writing the Chronicles of the Nine States (九州春秋). Lamenting the absence of a coherent history of the Eastern Han, Sima Biao began collating various sources into what would become his greatest work, the Continuation of the Book of Han (續漢書), covering the two hundred years from Emperor Guangwu of Han to Emperor Xian of Han. He also edited Qiao Zhou's Examination of Ancient History (古史考), altering over two hundred events so they would comply with the Bamboo Annals.[3]

Works

Sima Biao's Continuation of the Book of Han was one of many attempts during the Jin dynasty to create a history of the Eastern Han. Like most traditional Chinese histories,[4] his book was arranged into annals and biographies, along with eight treatises, and ran to a total length of 80 fascicles. Of these, all have been lost but the five volumes of treatises, on the topics of the calendar, ceremony, rituals, astronomy, the five phases, geography, bureaucracy, vehicles, and clothing. These have been incorporated into Fan Ye's Book of the Later Han, and Sima Biao is sometimes credited as a coauthor on that work.

Titles and appointments held

Family

  • Grandfather: Sima Jin (司馬進)

Notes

  1. His biography states that at the time of his death, he was "sixty-something". Fang Xuanling, et al., ed. Book of Jin, chapter 82, p 2143.
  2. Book of Jin, p 2142
  3. Book of Jin, p 2143
  4. Stephen Durrant, in Victor H. Mair, ed., The Columbia History of Chinese Literature, pp 503, 507, 509
  5. This was an honorific title signifying the official as a favoured companion or adviser to the emperor. Charles O. Hucker, Dictionary of Official Titles of Imperial China, pp 39596. It was Emperor Hui of Jin who conferred this title.

References

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