Who is Ji An 汲黯?

Who is Ji An 汲黯?

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Ji An (? ~ 112 BCE)
A Daoist scholar of the Western Han Dynasty. Courtesy name Changru, he was a native of Puyang (now southwest of Puyang, Henan Province). During the reign of Emperor Jing, he served as Crown Prince's Horse Washing Attendant. Under Emperor Wu, he held positions including Magistrate of Xingyang, Grand Master of the Central Court, Governor of Donghai Prefecture, and Commander of the Principal Marquis Office. He was ranked among the Nine Ministers and later appointed Governor of Huaiyang Prefecture.

Throughout his life, Ji An studied and advocated the ideas of Huang-Lao (the Yellow Emperor and Laozi), and implemented Huang-Lao philosophy in political practice. "In governing officials and managing the people, he preferred tranquility and simplicity, selecting capable assistants and delegates to entrust tasks to. In his governance, he focused on general principles rather than nitpicking minor details," and "his administrative approach emphasized non-action (wuwei), upholding broad principles without being constrained by rigid rules and regulations" (Records of the Grand Historian: Biographies of Ji and Zheng). As Governor of Donghai Prefecture, his adherence to the policy of tranquility and non-action achieved remarkable governance results.

On major issues, he dared to remonstrate frankly based on reason. For example, he opposed launching wars against the Xiongnu and criticized Zhang Tang, a favored minister of Emperor Wu, as a sycophant (ibid.). However, using "tranquility and non-action" and "not nitpicking minor details" as excuses, he adopted an attitude of avoiding and glossing over contradictions regarding issues of national livelihood, reflecting the passive implications of Huang-Lao thought at the time. For instance, when dispatched by Emperor Wu to resolve a violent conflict of inter-clan warfare in Dongyue (present-day Zhejiang), he turned back midway without reaching the scene, claiming, "Feuds among the Yue people are inherent in their customs and not worth troubling the Emperor's envoy over," dismissing the unrest as trivial and unworthy of intervention. Later, when sent to handle a major fire in Henei (now southwest of Wuzhi County, Henan) that destroyed over a thousand households, he deemed it a minor incident and reported, "A family's accidental fire spread to neighboring houses due to close proximity—no need for concern" (ibid.). In doing so, he transformed the Huang-Lao principle of tranquility and non-action into bureaucratic negligence that ignored the lives and sufferings of the people.

His biography can be found in Volume 120 of Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji) and Volume 50 of Book of Han (Hanshu).

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