Duke Ai of Lu
魯哀公
Ruler of Lu
Reign494 BC-468 BC
PredecessorDuke Ding of Lu
SuccessorDuke Dao of Lu
Died468 BC
IssueDuke Dao of Lu
Prince Jing (荆)
Prince Tun (𪏆)
Names
Ancestral name: Ji (姬)
Given name: Jiang (將)
Posthumous name
Ai (哀)
HouseHouse of Ji
FatherDuke Ding of Lu

Duke Ai of Lu (Chinese: 魯哀公; pinyin: Lǔ Āi Gōng, died 468 BC) was a ruler of the State of Lu during the Spring and Autumn period of ancient China. His ancestral name was Ji (姬), given name Jiang (將), and Duke Ai was his posthumous title.

The reign of Duke Ai was the last to be recorded in the Spring and Autumn Annals, a historical record of Lu commonly attributed to Confucius as well as one of the Five Classics. Specifically, the final entry of the Spring and Autumn Annals as well as its commentaries such as the Gongyang Zhuan and the Guliang Zhuan is about the 14th year of Duke Ai's reign. The Zuo Zhuan, however, recorded the entirety of Duke Ai's reign.

Accession and Early Reign

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Prince Jiang (將), a son of Duke Ding of Lu, succeeded him upon his death in 495 BC. Political power of Lu had long being in the hands of three cadet houses of the ducal family collectively named the Three Huan, despite multiple dukes' attempts to retake power. Out of the Three Huan, the Jisun (季孫) clan was the most powerful.

Warfare Against Zhu

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Zhu was a minor state next to Lu, which had fought it for many generations. A Lu expedition against it in 494 BC ended with Zhu ceding the lands between Guo (漷) and Yi (沂) Rivers in the following year. This did not stop Lu from attacking Zhu again in 492 BC and 488 BC. In the latter attack, lead by Duke Ai himself, the Lu army sacked the capital of Zhu and captured its ruler Duke Yin of Zhu [zh]. Diplomatic pressure from Wu caused Lu to release the Zhu ruler in 487 BC, but he was deposed in the same year by Wu, which installed his son Duke Huan of Zhu [zh] and forced him into exile in Qi.

Diplomacy with Wu

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Centered in what is now southern Jiangsu, Wu was a rapidly-expanding state that had sacked Chu capital Ying in 506 BC and had recently subjugated its southern neighbor Yue in 494 BC. It was under this context that Duke Ai met with a Wu envoy at Zeng (鄫) in 488 BC. The Wu envoy demanded 100 sets of sacrificial animals (one of ox, sheep, and pig). When met with refusal of Lu minister Zifu He, Count Jing of Zifu [zh], he claimed that Song had already done the same and that Lu itself offered Jin ministers more than ten sets. Though Zifu He warned that such a demand would be a breach of ritual propriety (after noting that the gift to the Jin minister was a result of intimidation and that even the Son of Heaven could only use at most twelve) and would not win the allegiance of the states, the Wu envoy insisted on the demand. Lu complied to the demand, and Zifu He commented: "Wu is going to fall. They dismiss Heaven and neglect their roots." The King of Wu being a descendent of the Zhou royal house just like the Son of Heaven.

Bo Pi, Grand Steward of Wu, summoned Jisun Fei [zh], the head of the Jisun clan, for an explanation and an apology, but he sent his Zigong, his retainer and one of Confucius's disciples, to Bo Pi. When Bo Pi questioned Zigong of Jisun Fei's choice, he replied:

We act out of fear for your great domain. Your great domain is not commanding the princes according to ritual propriety, and if you fail to act according to ritual propriety, then how is it possible for us to take your proper measure? When our unworthy ruler is already following your commands, how can his senior officials presume to relinquish their domain? Taibo implemented the Zhou rituals in robes and cap, but when Zhongyong succeeded him, he cut his hair and tattooed his body, adorning himself in his nakedness: was that ritual propriety?

Later, Jisun Fei concluded that Wu would achieve nothing.

Warfare Against Wu

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In spring 487 BC, Wu attacked Lu in response to Lu's attack on Zhu in the previous year. Such an invasion was opposed by Shusun Zhe [zh] and Gongshan Buniu [zh], two Lu officials affiliated with the Three Huan who had fled to Wu after failing to resist Confucius's attempts to curb the Three Huan's power. Regardless, King Fuchai of Wu went ahead with the invasion. A lack of swift military victories eventually caused the Wu army to turn back after swearing a covenant with Lu at the gates of Qufu, the Lu capital.

Warfare Against Qi

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Qi attacked Lu in summer 487 BC. Prior to acceding to the throne, Duke Dao of Qi had sought refuge in Lu due to a succession dispute in Qi. During this time, Jisun Fei had betrothed his younger sister to Duke Dao. After Duke Dao returned to Qi to ascend to the Qi throne, he sent for his wife in Lu. However, she had an adulterous affair with her uncle Ji Fanghou (季魴侯). The woman told the truth to her brother Jisun Fei, who dared not send her to Qi, fearing Duke Dao's discovery of the affair. Duke Dao, furious, sent an army led by Qi minister Bao Mu [zh] to attack Lu, taking the Lu lands of Huan (讙) and Chan (闡). In autumn of the same year, Lu and Qi made peace, and Duke Dao's wife was sent to him. Huan and Chan were returned to Lu later in the same year.

In spring 485 BC, Lu joined an alliance lead by Wu to attack the southern borders of Qi. During this time, Duke Dao of Qi was murdered. King Fuchai of Wu, the commander of the allied forces, cried for three days outside of the army camp and turned his armies back, following a ritual stipulating that no expedition against a country could be done when it is in mourning of its ruler.

In spring 484 BC, a Qi force led by Qi minister Guo Shu [zh] invaded Lu and was approaching Qufu. Ran Qiu, a Jisun retainer and a disciple of Confucius, managed to convince Jisun Fei to resist despite the disunity of the Three Huan. The Qi and Lu forces clashed at Jiqu (稷曲), in the outskirts of Qufu. In this battle, Lu repelled the Qi forces. Ran Qiu requested Jisun Fei to pursue the retreating Qi army three times and was denied such request three times.

Soon after, in summer 484 BC, King Fuchai attacked Qi once again with Lu support. On 19 May, the allied forces defeated Qi at Ailing [zh], capturing Guo Shu and many other Qi commanders. Duke Ai sent Guo Shu's head back to Qi in a new and well-decorated box with a note saying:

If Heaven did not recognize the unjust, then for what purpose did it employ the domain below?

Such a note put Qi in the position of injustice and justified the attack of it by Wu and Lu.

The Return of Confucius to Lu

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Jisun Fei, seeing Ran You's performance, inquired him about where he learned about military matters. When Ran Qiu mentioned Confucius's name, Jisun Fei considered inviting Confucius back to Lu. In 484 BC, Confucius returned to Lu under Jisun Fei's invitation, ending his fourteen-year long exile.

Middle Reign

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In spring 483 BC, Jisun Fei implemented a new military requisition policy, which mandated taxation by land holding instead of by district. Confucius opposed such policy, citing that it was incongruent with the convention and norms set by the Duke of Zhou. When Ran You asked for Confucius's comment on Jisun Fei's behalf, Confucius said in private:

The conduct of the noble man takes its measure from ritual propriety. In giving he tends to liberality, in undertaking affairs he upholds moderation, and in collecting taxes he pursues thriftiness. In this way, to requisition by districts is surely satisfactory. If he does not take his measure from ritual propriety but covets without satiety, then even if he taxes according to landholdings, it will still not be satisfactory. What is more, if the nobleman Jisun wishes to act in accordance with standards, then the statutes of the Zhou Duke are at hand. If he prefers to be careless in his actions, then why consult with me?

In spring 482 BC, Duke Ai went to Huangchi (modern-day Fengqiu County, Henan) to participate in a covenant [zh] between King Fuchai of Wu and Duke Ding of Jin, the rulers of two of the greatest powers of the time. On 5 June, the covenant was formally made. According to the Guoyu and the Records of the Grand Historian, Wu had the precedence in the ceremonies. According to the Zuo Zhuan, however, Wu yielded precedence to Jin upon hearing the news that its rival state Yue had captured the Wu capital of Gusu.

Further Conflict with Qi

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On 23 May, 481 BC, Duke Jian of Qi was murdered by Tian Heng [zh], the head of the Tian clan, which controlled Qi politics. After fasting for three days, Confucius requested Duke Ai to launch a punitive expedition against Qi three times, but Duke Ai refused.

This did not prevent conflict, however. In spring 480 BC, Cheng (郕), the seat of power of the Shusun clan (one of the Three Huan), revolted and defected to Qi. This caused a brief conflict between Lu and Qi that ended in winter of the same year. As a part of the Lu delegation to Qi, Zigong managed to convince Tian Heng to return Cheng to Lu by implying that Lu would turn to Wu for aid should conflict continue.

The Death of Confucius

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On 9 March, 479 BC, Confucius died, and Duke Ai delivered an eulogy in his honor. Zigong commented that Duke Ai's non-employment of Confucius while he was alive while eulogizing him after his death was not ritually proper. Furthermore, he noted that Duke Ai used the wording "one man" (一人) while referring to himself, which, too, was not ritually proper, as only the Son of Heaven may do so. Zigong further predicted that Duke Ai would not die in Lu.

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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  • Zuo Zhuan, Duke Ding
  • Gongyang Zhuan, Duke Ding
  • Shiji, vol. 33, 47
  • Book of Rites, vol. 4
  • Guoyu, vol. 5
  • Durrant, Stephen; Li, Wai-yee; Schaberg, David (2016). Zuo Tradition/Zuozhuan: Commentary on the "Spring and Autumn Annals" (1st ed.). Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295999159.
  • Miller, Harry (2015). The Gongyang Commentary on The Spring and Autumn Annals. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US. doi:10.1057/9781137493002. ISBN 978-1-349-50514-2.
Duke Ai of Lu
Cadet branch of the House of Ji
 Died: 468 BC
Regnal titles
Preceded by Duke of Lu
494-468 BC
Succeeded by