Zhuangyuan

Zhuangyuan, or trạng nguyên in Vietnamese, variously translated into English as principal graduate, primus, or optimus,[1] was the title given to the scholar who achieved the highest score on highest level of the Imperial examination, 省試 (in the Tang dynasty) and 殿試 (in the Song dynasty)[2] in ancient China and Vietnam.

Zhuangyuan
Imperial exam paper of Ming dynasty Zhuangyuan Zhao Bing-zhong in 1598 AD
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese狀元
Simplified Chinese状元
Hanyu Pinyinzhuàngyuán
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabettrạng nguyên
Chữ Hán狀元

In China, Fu Shanxiang is known as the first (and last) female zhuangyuan (nü zhuangyuan) in Chinese history, but under the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, not the regular imperial exams. After the Taipings captured the city of Nanjing, they offered an exam for women in January 1853 in which Fu attained the highest score. [3]

In Vietnam, the first trạng nguyên was Lê Văn Thịnh, a Lý dynasty scholar. He was the chief negotiator who persuaded the Song to return the 6 districts of Quảng Nguyên (today Hà Giang province) to Vietnam. The first female trạng nguyên (nữ trạng nguyên) was Nguyễn Thị Duệ, who later become a consort of the Mạc Emperor Mạc Kính Cung. She had previously been a consort of the Emperor Lê Thần Tông, and would serve as an official in the Revival Lê dynasty after the fall of the Mạc dynasty.

In China

In total, there were 596 zhuangyuan in ancient China.[4]

Noteworthy zhuangyuan

In Vietnam

In total, there were 56 trạng nguyên in ancient Vietnam.

Noteworthy Trạng nguyên

In modern culture

In modern Chinese, zhuangyuan is used to refer to anyone who achieves the highest mark on a test, or, more generally, to anyone who is at the forefront of his or her field.[5] In mainland China, the term is most often used to refer to the highest score at the provincial level for either the social sciences (文科) or physical sciences (理科) track of the annual gaokao college entrance exam.

See also

References

    • Hucker, Charles O. (1985). Dictionary of Official Titles of Imperial China. Stanford: Stanford University Press. p. 187.
  1. 萧源锦,《狀元史話》,重庆出版社,1992,ISBN 7-5366-1648-1
  2. Mao (1998), p. 43.
  3. 萧源锦,《狀元史話》,重庆出版社,1992,ISBN 7-5366-1648-1
  4. 《现代汉语词典》,商务印书馆,第五版,ISBN 7-100-04385-9

Further reading

  • Mao, Jiaqi (Grace Chor Yi Wong tr.) (1998), "Fu Shanxiang", in Ho, Clara Wing-chug (ed.), Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, Armonk, NY: Sharpe, pp. 43–45, ISBN 0765600439
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