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Famous Grand Courtyards of Shanxi Merchants(II)
The Wangs
Besides the unique constructions and the cultural bearings, what attract
tourists most are the legends and tales about the Grand Courtyard's owner, the
Wangs. The Wang clan originally lived in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi Province,
before their ancestor Wang Shi moved to Jingsheng during the reign of Emperor
Huangqing (1312-1313) of the Yuan
Dynasty (1271-1368).
After moving to Jingsheng, Wang Shi mainly engaged in agriculture, but also
made bean curd. The business gradually thrived as a result of the family's hard
work and business virtues. Some members began to attend school, making the Wangs
a distinguished family in the town.
The Wangs prospered during the reigns of Emperors Kangxi
(1662-1722), Qianlong
(1736-1795), and Jiaqing (1796-1820) in the Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911). The family conducted large-scale constructions at the
time, building many houses, ancestral temples,
graveyards, stores, and workshops. Besides, they also set up some free private
schools and barns, built roads and bridges, dug channels, offered relief to
those people struck by disasters, and did some other philanthropic works. In
this period alone, the family produced 12 top-ranking government officials.
The Wangs began to decline during Emperor
Daoguang's Reign (1820-1850). Besides the social and political reasons, another
important factor that led to their decline was the later generations'
abandonment of the family's traditional values like diligence and thriftiness.
They became increasingly luxurious; some gave up attending school, choosing
instead to bribe their way into government positions; while others indulged in
opium, leading to the erosion of the once-prosperous family.
The few members of the family who still had shops and stores within the
province or other big cities like Beijing
and Tianjin
before the outbreak of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
(1937-1945) lost what little they had after the outbreak. The whole family moved
southward after the Lugou
Bridge Incident (or Marco
Polo Bridge Incident, staged by Japanese imperialists in their attempt to
control the whole of China, which marked the beginning of China's war against
Japan).
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