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杨炎[查看正文] [修改] [查看历史]ctext:845982
生平
杨炎风骨峻峙,文藻雄丽,早年即有盛名。通过科举释褐试后,河西节度使吕崇贲聘为书记官,官至中书舍人,后因与宰相元载同乡,受重用为吏部侍郎,大历十二年(777年)元载失势被杀,朝廷派刘晏处理此案,杨炎坐贬道州司马,因此对刘晏有怨恨。唐德宗即位(779年),被宰相崔佑甫推荐,任命为门下侍郎,同中书门下平章事(即宰相),次年建议推行两税法,每年分夏、秋两季徵收(称夏输、秋输),全部以金钱徵输,废止徭役。两税法使当时受藩镇割据而财用不足的唐朝政府有所助益。
后崔佑甫因病淡出政坛,杨炎开始独权,陷害有过节的财政专家刘晏,朝廷罢免了刘晏所兼的转运、租庸、盐铁、常平等诸使。建中元年(780年)初,杨炎以刘晏奏事不实为由,贬其为忠州(今四川忠县)刺史。杨炎的亲信荆南节度使庾准更上奏德宗,称刘晏诽谤朝廷,并称刘晏曾致书朱泚,语言怨望,并召集士卒,打算造反。杨炎为此亲自作了伪证,最终刘晏被诛杀,抄家时却仅发现「杂书两乘,米麦数斛」,天下冤之。此事使德宗起了杀死杨炎之心,于是起用卢杞为相以分权。杨炎鄙视卢杞,耻与为伍,往往托病不和对方一起进餐(每托疾息于他阁,多不会食),使卢杞怀恨在心;加上杨炎意图集权中央的政策为各藩镇所不满,造成河北、河南藩镇联合叛乱,卢杞以李希烈迟不出兵讨伐梁崇义一事,归咎杨炎。德宗听信卢杞之言,于建中二年十月将之贬为崖州(海南岛)司马,途中有诗云:「一去一万里,千知千不还。崖州何处是,生度鬼门关。」杨炎并在途中被赐死,年五十五岁。
杨炎有才干,但心胸狭隘,无法接受他人意见。德宗对杨炎的条陈提出不同意见时,杨炎动辄忿然作色,不肯继续讨论,「无复君臣之礼」。李泌与德宗讨论卢杞之恶,曾说杨炎罪不致死,实乃卢杞构陷,德宗表示:「卿所言确有其事。但杨炎把朕当作小孩般对待,每次有事上奏商讨,朕批准他的要求便告退,若朕不准奏,杨炎便以辞官作要挟,朕并非只因卢杞陷害才厌恶他的。」宋孙甫《唐史论断》称:「炎颇有才而心不公,故不能成就功业,卒至祸败。」
工于绘画,张彦远评其山水画「余观杨公山水图,想见其为人,魁岸洒落也。」《全唐诗》收录杨炎诗二首。
子杨朗,殿中侍御史。
注释
影视作品
• 1994年电视剧《人面桃花》 庞祥麟 饰 杨炎
• 2012年电视剧《紫钗奇缘》 李耀敬 饰 杨炎
显示更多...: Background Early career During Emperor Dezongs reign Notes and references
Background
Yang Yan was born in 727, during the reign of Emperor Xuanzong. His family was from Fengxiang (凤翔, in modern Baoji, Shaanxi) and claimed ancestry through officials of the Warring States period state Han), Qin Dynasty, Han Dynasty, and Sui Dynasty, although the lineage was not completely traceable. His great-grandfather Yang Dabao served as a county magistrate during the reign of Tang Dynasty's founder Emperor Gaozu and was killed when resisting a rival contender for the throne, Liu Wuzhou the Dingyang Khan, and therefore was posthumously honored. His grandfather Yang Zhe was known for his filial piety. His father Yang Bo was known for having passed the imperial examinations but then declined official offices to support his parents, an act for which he was honored by both Emperor Xuanzong and Emperor Xuanzong's son Emperor Suzong.
Early career
Yang Yan was known in his youth for his handsome eyebrows and beard, his ability to stand up against monetary enticements, and his beautiful writing. In his home region, he became known as the younger Yang Shanren (山人), implying that he was a Taoist hermit. Later, he took off his hermit robes and served as a secretary under Lü Chongbi the military governor (Jiedushi) of Hexi Circuit (河西, headquartered in modern Wuwei, Gansu). He had previously been humiliated by Li Dajian (李大简), and he became a colleague of Li's after he came to serve under Lü, and he took the opportunity, on one occasion, to batter Li severely along with his guards, almost causing Li's death. Lü, however, favored his talent and did not punish him. Later, when the major general Li Guangbi invited him to serve as an assistant, he declined, and he also declined a promotion to serve as an imperial chronicler at the capital Chang'an. Instead, he returned home to support his mother. After his mother died, he was honored for his filial piety to her—and it was said that it was unprecedented, at that point, that a household would be decorated for three straight generations for their filial piety.
After Yang completed his period of mourning, he became Sixun Yuanwailang (司勋员外郎), a low-level official at the ministry of civil service affairs (吏部, Libu), and later served at the ministries of defense (兵部, Bingbu) and the ministry of rites (礼部, Libu). While serving at the ministry of rites, he became one of the main drafters of edicts for Emperor Suzong's son Emperor Daizong. Both he and his colleague Chang Gun were known for the beautiful language they used in writing edicts—with Chang being known for his ability to cite ancient precedents, and Yang known for the ability to use appropriate praises. When he wrote the text of a monument dedicated to the general Li Kailuo (李楷洛), the writing was so beautiful that the scholars at the time all took pains to memorize it. He later became the deputy minister of civil service affairs (吏部侍郎, Libu Shilang) and was put in charge of editing the imperial history. He also became well regarded by the powerful chancellor Yuan Zai and was fostered by Yuan to be his successor. After Yuan was executed for corruption in 777, Emperor Daizong initially wanted to execute Yang and some other close associates of Yuan's as well, but Emperor Daizong's uncle Wu Cou persuaded him not to do so. Instead, Yang was demoted to be the military advisor to the prefect of Dao Prefecture (道州, in modern Yongzhou, Hunan).
During Emperor Dezongs reign
In 779, Emperor Daizong died and was succeeded by his son Emperor Dezong. Emperor Dezong, wanting to reform government, was willing to promote people in exceptional manners, and in fall 779, based on the recommendation of the chancellor Cui Youfu, Emperor Dezong promoted Yang from exile to be the Menxia Shilang, the deputy head of the examination bureau of government (门下省, Menxia Sheng) and gave him the designation Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi, making him a chancellor de facto, serving alongside Cui and Qiao Lin.
As chancellor, Yang quickly carried out a number of actions that were praised by contemporaries and/or later historians:
• Promoting Li Gao (李皋) the Prince of Cao, a capable official of imperial descent who had been demoted due to false accusations by Xin Jinggao (辛京杲).
• Keeping the general Cui Ning, the military governor of Sichuan Circuit (西川, headquartered in modern Chengdu, Sichuan), who had controlled the circuit semi-independently from the imperial government, at Chang'an when Cui arrive at Chang'an to pay homage to Emperor Dezong, thus allowing the imperial government to take back control of Sichuan.
• Convincing Emperor Dezong to return the responsibility of collecting and storing money and silk revenues from Daying Storage (大盈库), inside the palace and managed by eunuchs, to the ministry of storage (太府寺, Taifu Si), thus restoring accountability.
What Yang became most known for, however, was his reform of the taxation system, introduced in an edict by Emperor Dezong in 780. As described by the Song Dynasty historian Sima Guang in his Zizhi Tongjian, of the problems of the taxation system at the time and what Yang's reforms were intended to address:
Meanwhile, though, Yang was also said to be vindictive. Blaming the senior official Liu Yan, one of the judges that adjudicated Yuan Zai's guilt, for Yuan's death and for his own demotion, he accused Liu of having encouraged Emperor Daizong to make his favorite concubine Consort Dugu empress—which would have endangered Emperor Dezong's position as crown prince since he was not Consort Dugu's son, and Consort Dugu had her own son, Li Jiong (李迥) the Prince of Han. At Cui Youfu's urging, who argued that such matters should no longer be considered since Emperor Dezong had issued a general pardon when he declared the Liangshuifa, Emperor Dezong did not, for the time being, investigate Liu. Still, at Yang's urging, he removed Liu from his various posts as directors of specialized financial agencies and returned the responsibilities to the executive bureau (尚书省, Shangshu Sheng). (Subsequently, however, with the executive bureau agencies unable to handle these financial matters, the specialized agencies were restored, although the responsibilities were given to Han Hui and Du You, not back to Liu.) Liu was also soon demoted and exiled to be the prefect of Zhong Prefecture (忠州, in modern Chongqing).
By spring 780, With Cui Youfu seriously ill at that point and Qiao having been removed by Emperor Dezong due to incompetence, Yang was solely in charge of the government, and he revived major military projects that Yuan had advocated until his downfall—to rebuild Yuan Prefecture (原州, in modern Guyuan, Ningxia), formerly Tang territory but which had become part of the no man's land between territories held by Tang and Tufan, as a forward advance base for a campaign to recapture lands lost to Tufan; and to conscript labor from the regions of the two capitals (Chang'an and Luoyang) and Guanzhong to reopen Lingyang Aqueduct (陵阳渠, flowing through Bayan Nur, Inner Mongolia) in order to promote agriculture in the region by soldiers. When Duan Xiushi, the military governor of Jingyuan Circuit (泾原, headquartered in modern Pingliang, Gansu) opposed the projects on account that it would provoke a Tufan attack, Yang, angered by Duan's opposition, had Duan recalled to the capital to serve in the relatively powerless post as minister of agriculture. When the disciplinarian general Li Huaiguang was subsequently named to succeed Duan, Duan's soldiers, fearing Li Huaiguang's harshness, rebelled under the leadership of the officer Liu Wenxi. While Liu was quickly killed by his own subordinates, and the rebellion dissipated, neither Yuan Prefecture nor Lingyang Aquedate was actually ever rebuilt.
Notwithstanding these projects, one of the agendas that Emperor Dezong had early in his reign was peace with Tufan, and he ordered a general release of Tufan captives. He also sent the official Wei Lun (韦伦) as an emissary to Tufan. When Wei requested that Emperor Dezong personally sign a letter offering peace addressed to the king of Tufan, Yang believed that this would overly dignify the Tufan king, and therefore requested that the senior general Guo Ziyi sign the letter, with Emperor Dezong writing, "approved," on the letter. Emperor Dezong agreed.
In fall 780, at Yang's direction, Liu Yan's superior Yu Zhun (庾准) the military governor of Jingnan Circuit (荆南, headquartered in modern Jingzhou, Hubei), accused Liu of complaining about Emperor Dezong in a letter to the general Zhu Ci, and of preparing to commit treason. Yang "confirmed" Yu's accusations, and Emperor Dezong had Liu put to death—drawing mourning from throughout the realm over the unfair treatment of the well-respected Liu. The warlord Li Zhengji, the military governor of Pinglu Circuit (平卢, headquartered in modern Tai'an, Shandong), in particular, was submitting repeated petitions criticizing the imperial government for executing Liu. Yang, in fear, sent his associates to the circuits to blame Liu's death on Emperor Dezong personally, over Emperor Dezong's resentment for Liu's support of Consort Dugu, and disavowing personal responsibility in Liu's death. When Emperor Dezong became aware that Yang was blaming him, he began to be resentful of Yang and considered killing him, but did not do so immediately. Rather, he promoted Lu Qi to also be a chancellor to divide Yang's power. Yang, looking down on Lu, as Lu was known to be ugly in appearance and untalented, would often refuse to have lunch with Lu even though chancellors were, by custom, to have lunches with each other on a regular basis. This thus drew resentment from Lu as well.
In 781, after Li Zhengji and fellow warlord Li Baochen, the military governor of Chengde Circuit (成德, headquartered in modern Shijiazhuang, Hebei), died, Emperor Dezong refused to let their sons (Li Na and Li Weiyue, respectively) to inherit their posts. Li Na and Li Weiyue, along with their allies Tian Yue the military governor of Weibo Circuit (魏博, headquartered in modern Handan, Hebei) and Liang Chongyi the military governor of Shannan East Circuit (山南东道, headquartered in modern Xiangfan, Hubei), thereafter prepared for war against the imperial government. One of the main advocates for an immediate attack against Liang was Li Xilie, the military governor of Huaixi Circuit (淮西, headquartered in modern Zhumadian, Henan), and Emperor Dezong put Li Xilie in charge of the campaign against Liang. Yang objected—pointing out that Li Xilie was himself disobedient of imperial edicts and had expelled his predecessor Li Zhongchen despite Li Zhongchen's kind treatment of him, and argued that if Li Xilie were successful, he would be so overconfident that the imperial government would no longer be able to control him. Emperor Dezong did not listen to Yang and became increasingly repulsed by Yang due to his opposition. When Li Xilie's army was not launched for sometime due to rain, Lu secretly suggested to Emperor Dezong that it was actually because Li Xilie was resentful of Yang and that Emperor Dezong should remove Yang to placate Li Xilie. Emperor Dezong agreed, and in fall 781, he made Yang Zuo Pushe (左仆射), one of the heads of the executive bureau, but no longer chancellor.
While Yang Yan was chancellor, he had demoted Yan Ying (严郢) the mayor of Jingzhao Municipality (京兆, i.e., the Chang'an region) because he disliked Yan Ying. Lu, knowing this, had Yan Ying made the chief imperial censor (御史大夫, Yushi Daifu). At Lu's direction, Yan Ying soon exposed an incident in which Yang had asked Zhao Huibo the mayor of Henan Municipality (河南, i.e., the Luoyang region) to sell Yang's mansion for him—and, at Yan's manipulation, this incident was increased in severity from the lesser charge of conflict of interest to embezzlement. Meanwhile, Lu also secretly told Emperor Dezong that Yang had built his family shrine on land that was said to be greatly blessed, and accused Yang of intending to try to become emperor himself. In winter 781, Emperor Dezong demoted and exiled Yang to the post of military advisor to the prefect of the extremely remove Yai Prefecture (崖州, in modern Sanya, Hainan). However, even before Yang reached Yai Prefecture, Emperor Dezong sent executioners to intercept him and execute him.
Notes and references
• Old Book of Tang, vol. 118.
• New Book of Tang, vol. 145.
• Zizhi Tongjian, vols. 225, 226, 227.
• A history of China from 7 BC to 1279
• Chinaknowledge.de article
• Article on foreign relations during the Tang dynasty
文献资料 | 引用次数 |
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新唐书 | 8 |
御定佩文斋书画谱 | 2 |
唐会要 | 2 |
大清一统志 | 2 |
陕西通志 | 2 |
御定全唐诗 | 2 |
全唐文 | 5 |
旧唐书 | 19 |
画史会要 | 2 |
职官分纪 | 2 |
资治通鉴 | 21 |
白孔六帖 | 6 |
天中记 | 2 |
名贤氏族言行类稿 | 2 |
氏族大全 | 2 |
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