352 A Chinese Biographical Dictionaryto his master. His palate was so delicate that he could distingoish
between the waters of the )l^ TzH and the ;^|| Shftng riyers.
913 I Yin 18th cent. B.C. Minister under Gh'ftng T'ang, first Emperor of the Shang dynasty. The enyoy seot to sommon him to Court returned five times before he could persuade I Tin to accompany him. He was at once placed at the head of the administration, and took part in the campaign against the in&mous tyrant Chieh Euei which put an end to the Hsia dynasty and placed his master upon the throne. He banished Ch^6ng T*ang*s grandson, who ultimately succeeded, for misconduct, and kept him in exile until he promised to reform. He conferred many benefits upon the State by the wisdom of his counsels, and when be died there is said to haye been a dense fog for three days. Some say that his personal name was ^ ^ A-h6ng; others that it was ^ Chih. Tradition has it that he was born in a hollow mulberry- tree, and that he ingratiated himself with Ch^^ng T^ang by means of his skill in cookery.
914 I Yüan 13th cent. A.D. A famous maker of day and metal images for Buddhistic worship. EUs images were said to be quite lifelike in appearance.
915 Ile Chepe 懿璘質班 A.D. 1326-1332. Second son of Hosila. At the death of Tup Timur, he was placed upon the throne by the latter's widow as ninth Emperor of the Yüan dynasty, but died within the year. Canonised as 寧宗.
J.
916
Jan Ch'iu (T. ). born B.C. 520. One of the
disciples of Confucius, who accompanied his master when the
latter quitted his native State of Lu. Subsequently he took office,
and incurred the censure of Confucius by doubling the tax on
grain in order to increase the revenues of his sovereign.