Page:Eminent Chinese Of The Ch’ing Period - Hummel - 1943 - Vol. 1.pdf/513

 LIANG Kuo-chih 梁國治, Nov. 18, 1723–1787, Jan. 31, official and calligrapher, was a native of K'uai-chi, Chekiang. After taking his chü-jên degree in 1741 he passed a special examination which gave him the post of secretary of the Grand Secretariat. In the metropolitan and Palace examinations of 1748 he attained the highest rank, or chuang-yüan 狀元. After serving as compiler of the first class in the Hanlin Academy, he was appointed (1754) tutor in the Imperial Academy. Two years later he officiated as chief-examiner of the Kwangtung provincial examination. In 1757 he became intendant of the Hui-chou Ch'ao-chou Chia-ying circuit, Kwangtung. While visiting the capital for the celebration of the Dowager Empress' seventieth birthday late in 1761 (see under ) he was, by special decree, made acting senior vice-president of the Censorate. He then held posts in Kiangsi, Anhwei, Shansi, Hunan and Kiangsu and in 1769 was made governor of Hupeh. At that time the campaign against Burma was in progress (see under ). Hence, in addition to the hardships of drought and flood of several years' standing, the province of Hupeh had also to meet the requirements of military movements. Liang Kuo-chih provided relief by temporarily drawing funds from the treasury. Two years later (1771) he was transferred to the governorship of the neighboring province of Hunan. Here he met the same problem of supplying the needs of westward marching troops, this time for the campaign against the Chin-ch'uan aborigines (see under ). Late in 1773 he was summoned to the capital to serve in the Council of State, and continued to serve in that office until he died fourteen years later. In the meantime he served concurrently as senior vice-president of the Board of Revenue (1774–77), as president of the same Board (1777–85), as an Associate Grand Secretary (1783–85), and as the Emperor's personal secretary in the Imperial Study (after 1774). Twice (in 1780 and 1784) he accompanied Emperor Kao-tsung on tours of South China. On February 14, 1785 he participated in the Banquet for Elderly Men (千叟宴) which was given that year to about one thousand men of distinction who had passed the age of sixty. In the summer of the same year he was promoted to be concurrently a Grand Secretary. He was cannonizedcanonized [sic] as Wên-ting 文定.

The collected literary works of Liang Kuo-chih, entitled 敬思堂集 Ching-ssŭ t'ang chi, in 12 chüan, were printed by his sons. Liang had a twin brother, Liang Kuo-t'ai 梁國泰, who died young. In deference to this loss he is reported never, after his brother's death, to have celebrated his own birthday. As a calligrapher he mastered the essentials of T'ang styles. A chronological biography, entitled 梁文定公年譜 Liang Wên-ting kung nien-p'u, was compiled by his sons, and was edited by, but it is not known to be extant.

[1/326/4b; 3/29/27a; 4/28/13a; 26/2/12a; 29/5/5a.]

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 LIANG Lun-shu 梁綸樞, 1790–1877, Aug. 4, a native of Canton, was engaged in foreign trade and was known to Westerners as Kingqua. His father, Liang Ching-kuo 梁經國, for years a clerk in a Chinese firm trading with Westerners at Canton, established in 1808 a similar business of his own which he styled T'ien-pao 天寶. He thus became a Hong merchant or member of the Co-hong (see under ). Western merchants called him Leang Kingkuan (Liang Ching-kuan 梁經官), or simply, Kingqua, corrupted from Kingkuan, and this name they also applied to his son. Liang Lun-shu was the third son of Liang Ching-kuo. In 1809, at the age of twenty (sui), he graduated as hsiu-ts'ai, and during the years 1810–37 competed fourteen times in the provincial examination, but was not able to obtain a higher degree. After assisting his father in business for several years, he inherited (1827) the firm, T'ien-pao, but as a Hong merchant adopted the name Liang Ch'êng-hsi 梁丞禧. His Hong was on the Pearl River, the third east of the British East India Company. In 1830, owing to his inability to pay a heavy tax levied upon him by the Hoppo or Superintendent of the Canton Maritime Customs, he was disqualified as a Hong merchant, but in the following year by bribing the Hoppo and by obtaining the support of his fellow Hong merchants who paid the delinquent taxes he was allowed to resume his business. Thereafter his firm prospered for a time but when the privilege of Hong merchants to monopolize foreign trade was abolished in accordance with the Treaty of Nanking of 1842, Liang Lun-shu's Hong gradually declined.

Owing to his wealth, Liang Lun-shu won considerable social and political influence. In 1828 he contributed 95,000 taels to a fund for works in Honan and was rewarded with the rank of taotai; 501