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| fullname = | other_names = | birth_date = 〔 | birth_place = | death_date = 〔 | death_place = | era = Qing Dynasty | region = | school_tradition = | main_interests = Philology, textual studies | notable_ideas = | major_works = List of Yu's works | influences= | influenced=Zhang Taiyan }} Yu Yue (1821-1907), courtesy name Yinfu, ''hao'' Quyuan,〔 was a prominent scholar and official of Qing Dynasty China. An expert in philology and textual studies, he taught and wrote prolifically on the classics and histories.〔 Yu Pingbo was his great-grandson;〔Bartke 1997.〕 one of his most important disciples was Zhang Taiyan.〔 == Scholarly career == Yu Yue hailed from Deqing, Zhejiang, and later moved to Renhe, now a subdistrict of Hangzhou.〔 In 1850, Yu passed the imperial examination as metropolitan graduate, and was appointed junior compiler〔Junior compiler, 〕 in the Hanlin Academy. He then served successively in a variety of academic posts in the imperial bureaucracy, and was later promoted to educational instructor〔Educational instructor, 〕 of Henan, not long before his resigning from this position and withdrawing to Suzhou, where he became a private teacher and devoted himself full-time to classical studies.〔 From 1868 on, he was director of the Gujing Academy (詁經精舍), which he headed for more than 30 years. Yu's analyses of the classics are widely admired for their philological acumen, and he has had a large influence on both Chinese and foreign students of the Chinese classics, particularly in Japan.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Yu Yue」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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