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eminent Chinese official of the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) who is reported to have begun the famous Han shu (“Book of Han”), considered the Confucian historiographic model on which all later dynastic histories were patterned.
With all obstacles now removed, he spent the next 16 years compiling and editing the vast Han shu, which became the prototype for the official histories of successive ruling houses in China, recording the administrations of their predecessors. Although modeled on the Shiji, the Han shu was not merely a supplement to that...
...and ordered him to complete his father’s work. Ban Zhao, who assisted her brother with the work, was commissioned by the emperor to complete it after Ban Gu’s death. The resulting Han shu (“Book of Han”) is one of the best-known histories ever written and the model for all future dynastic histories in China.
...by character-occupation types such as “maligned statesmen,” “rash generals,” “assassins,” a method that became established tradition with the Hanshu (History of the Former Han Dynasty), by Sima Qian’s successor and imitator, Pan Gu (ad 32–92). Toward the end of the first century ad, in the Mediterranean world, Plutarch’s Lives of...
...living realities for his readers; his biographies subsequently became models for authors of both fiction and history. Ssu-ma’s great successor, the poet-historian-soldier Pan Ku, author of the Han shu (“Han Documents”), a history of the Former Han dynasty containing more than 800,000 words, performed a similar tour de force but did not equal Ssu-ma Ch’ien in either scope or...
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