A memorial temple is a place to offer
a sacrifice to dead ancestors or the late sage, including Wise Men's Ancestral
Hall, Ancestor's Hall (or Zong Ci) and Fane, of which the Ancestor's Hall
is the most popular. It is the place to worship clan ancestors, also called
ancestral halls. It is the combined core of clan power and religious
authority.
The Memorial to Prime Minister Wen Tianxiang
(Wen Tianxiang Ci) was built in 1376 during, the reign of the Ming
Emperor Hongwu, to commemorate the Southern Song (1127-1279) national hero Wen
Tianxiang. Today the memorial stands on the northern side of the entrance to
South Fuxue Alley near Beixinqiao, in Beijing.
The memorial once housed three ancient
scholar trees, as well as a "Prime Minister" elm and a date tree with their
branches and trunk leaning very noticeably southward. According to local legend,
these trees represent Wen Tianxiang's longing for his old home in the south. The
three scholar trees disappeared long ago, but the date tree is still thriving.
A eulogistic couplet reading "The
Song Dynasty's Top Ranking Scholar and Prime Minister, the West River's Filial Son and Loyal Subject," is
carved into the columns of the memorial's main hall. In the center of the hall
stands a sculpture Wen Tianxiang holding an official tablet before him. To the
left with Wen's likeness and below with the 32-character "Clothes and Belt
Inscription" which ends with the lines "¡ and today and ever after his
conscience is clear." Four large inscribed wooden plaques hang inside the hall.
They read, "Loyalty and devotion to old friends"; "Righteousness in heaven and
on earth"; "The utmost in benevolence and justice"; and "The Song Dynasty
survives here." A screen bears the complete text of Wen Tianxiang's Song of
Righteousness (Zheng Qi Ge).
Wen Tianxiang (1236-1282) was born in Luling
(present-day Ji'an), Jiangxi Province. In 1256 he was the top scholar in the
imperial examinations and successively held posts in the Ministry of Punishments
and in local government offices in Hunan and Jiangxi. When the Yuan armies began
moving southward and steadily closed in on Hangzhou, Wen Tianxiang received
orders to negotiate a truce, but was arrested by the Yuan force. He escaped and
returned to Wenzhou where he led the Song troops into battle. In 1278, Wen was
taken prisoner after suffering a defeat at Haifeng and made two unsuccessful
suicide attempts. Wen sternly refused to surrender and wrote a poem which ends
with two famous lines:
What man is ever immune from death?
Leave me with a loyal heart shining in the
pages of history.
In 1279, he was put to death. Wen
Tianxiang's execution site was traditionally thought to have been the firewood
market in the Teaching Loyalty District near the present-day entrance of Fuxue
Alley, and thus the memorial was established here. His famous patriotic poems
and essays Song of Righteousness was written while he was in the Yuan
Dynasty military prison.