Jao Tsung-I
The Honourable Jao Tsung-I GBM, JP |
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Born | Chaozhou, Republic of China |
9 August 1917 ||||||||||||||||
Other names | Rao Gu'an 饒固庵 | ||||||||||||||||
Alma mater | Jinshan Middle School | ||||||||||||||||
Occupation | Professor of the University of Hong Kong, University of Singapore, Yale University, Academia Sinica, Chinese University of Hong Kong | ||||||||||||||||
Parent(s) | Rao E 饒鍔 | ||||||||||||||||
Awards | 1982: D.Litt (HKU) 1997: Life Achievement Award (HKADC) 2000: GBM |
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 饒宗頤 | ||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 饶宗颐 | ||||||||||||||||
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Jao Tsung-I (Chinese: 饒宗頤; pinyin: Ráo Zōngyí; born 9 August 1917) is a Chinese scholar, poet, calligrapher and painter. A versatile scholar, he contributes to every field of humanities, including archaeology, literature, philology, musicology and history. Currently he lives in Hong Kong. He has two daughters.
Biography
Born into a wealthy family in Chaozhou of Hakka Mei County, Guangdong ancestry,[1] Jao is largely an autodidact. He began to publish scholarly works at a young age. Later he was invited to work as lecturer and researcher at different colleges in the mainland. He moved to Hong Kong in 1949. During the following years, he taught in the University of Hong Kong, while learning Sanskrit from the Indian diplomat and China expert V. V. Paranjpe, who in turn learnt ancient Chinese from Jao. In 1959, he published Yindai zhenbu renwu tongkao (殷代貞卜人物通考 "Oracle Bone Diviners of the Yin Dynasty"), which later earned him the Prix Stanislas Julien from the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
From 1963 onwards, he travelled to different countries to research and teach, including India, France, Singapore, United States and Japan. Currently he is the Wei Lun Honorary Professor of Fine Arts and Emeritus Professor of Chinese Language and Literature at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Contributions
Many of his works are pioneering. For instance, he is the first scholar to render the Babylonian epic Enûma Elish into Chinese, after learning the Akkadian language from Jean Bottéro while he was a visiting scholar in Paris (see his work Jindong kaipi shishi 近東開闢史詩 "Creation Epic of the Near East"), and the first one to make a comparative study of the oracle bone script and the Indus script (see his essay Tan Yindu Hegu tuxing wenzi 談印度河谷圖形文字 "On the Indus Valley Pictorial Characters").
Yu Qiuyu (余秋雨), a popular writer in mainland, once said publicly that "with the presence of Jao Tsung-I, Hong Kong would not be a cultural desert", reacting to the common opinion that the region is a utilitarian cultural desert (文化沙漠). His remark has become a catchphrase in the Chinese intellectual circle (see, for example, this site).
References
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External links
- (Chinese) A site dedicated to him
- (Chinese) Chronology of his life and works
Order of precedence | ||
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Preceded by
Louis Cha
Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal |
Hong Kong order of precedence Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal |
Succeeded by Li Ka-shing Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal |
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- Articles containing traditional Chinese-language text
- Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text
- Articles with hCards
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- Articles with Chinese-language external links
- 1917 births
- Living people
- Hakka people
- Hong Kong people of Hakka descent
- Hong Kong people of Chaoshanese descent
- Republic of China calligraphers
- Hong Kong poets
- Hong Kong academics
- Hong Kong painters
- People from Chaozhou
- Recipients of the Grand Bauhinia Medal
- Republic of China painters
- Republic of China poets
- Poets from Guangdong
- Painters from Guangdong