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Three Impeachments: Guo Xiu and the Kangxi Court

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R. Kent Guy
2025
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A probe into corruption in late Imperial China

At the beginning of China's long eighteenth century or "High Qing" era, a time of peace and prosperity when the foundations of Manchu rule under the Qing dynasty were established, a courageous official named Guo Xiu reported on corruption at court. Guo Xiu's findings resulted in the impeachment of five of the most powerful figures of his day: the director of river conservancy, the chief grand secretary, and three scholars who advised the Manchu emperor on matters of Chinese culture. Weighing the officials' accomplishments against their corruption and violations of Confucian norms, the emperor dismissed all five from office—only to reappoint all five within ten years.

Bringing together a rich trove of sources, including writings by the accused officials, Guo Xiu's impeachment comments, and court diaries, historian R. Kent Guy's Three Impeachments traces the process of impeachment, condemnation, and restoration to provide unique insights into the Kangxi golden age. Part 1 reveals that the highly lauded accomplishments of the Kangxi emperor were not his alone but the result of collaboration between Manchu elite, the newly formed Chinese Martial Banner Army, and Chinese scholars. Part 2, which focuses on Guo Xi's impeachments, sheds new light on dynastic history and political agency.

Three Impeachments is a rich and enticing portal into a key moment in late imperial Chinese history.



The open access publication of this book was made possible by a grant from the James P. Geiss and Margaret Y. Hsu Foundation.

DOI: 10.6069/9780295752945

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Preface

pp. vii-x

Introduction

pp. 1-16

Part I / Kangxi Politics

One. Jin Fu and the River

pp. 17-39

Two. Imperial Intervention

pp. 40-59

Three. Mingju

pp. 60-76

Part II / Guo Xiu's Intervention

Four. Guo Xiu and the Qing Censorate

pp. 77-97

Five. Impeachments

pp. 98-118

Six. Decisions

pp. 119-137

Seven. Corrupt Scholars

pp. 138-157

Eight. Second Acts

pp. 158-178

Conclusion

pp. 179-186

Glossary of Chinese Characters

pp. 187-192

Notes

pp. 193-214

Bibliography

pp. 215-222

Index

pp. 223-234

Back Cover

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