7期
/
2005 / 12
/
pp. 33 - 70
再論晉獻公
A Second Thought on Duke Shien of Jin
作者
劉文強 Wen-Chiang Liu *
(國立中山大學中國文學系教授 Professor, Department of Chinese Literature, National Sun Yat-Sen University)
劉文強 Wen-Chiang Liu *
國立中山大學中國文學系教授 Professor, Department of Chinese Literature, National Sun Yat-Sen University
中文摘要

本篇再討論太子申生與晉獻公究竟是父子還是兄弟、晉武公死與獻公有無關聯、桓莊之族何以偪迫獻公、太子申生的立場與動向等問題進行討論。以為晉獻公實無殺太子之心,太子自縊,為以死報復其父欲廢其太子之位,適見其無共志。至於所謂「驪姬之亂」者,欲加之罪,其無辭乎。

英文摘要

This article means to solicit second thoughts on Duke Shien of Jin’s (晉獻公) merits and demerits in Jin’s hegemony. Such a symposium will definitelytrigger off heated debates hovering over the duke’s reputation as aninnovator. They run the gamut in the court politics from Duke Shien’s enigmatic relationship with Prince Shen-shen (太子申生), a war tugged betweena fraternal bond and a vertical pedigree as their titles suggest, to the conspiracy leading directly to Duke Wu’s (晉武公) premature death, and then to Duke Shien’s own subdued wrath under the clan pressure from Huan and Juang (桓莊). Court politics also help us profile and reconstruct a PrinceShen-sheng whose strategies to survive these struggles were found to noavail. Deprived of power and a prospect, he was driven to desperation by hanging himself as a protest against his duke-father’s decision to disinherit him. A princedom in name never grows into a scepter in hand. Shen-sheng’s heirship was a thorn in the duke’s side, a permanent tickle that sometimes threatened to gore deeper. Such a lurking menace allude to usurpation or a coup d’etat. Concubine Li-ji’s Revolt (驪姬之亂) was no better than a false accusation inflicted upon the underdog in the power struggle, even though the duke withdrew his offensive remarks and disclaimed an intention to execute his own heir.

中文關鍵字

晉獻公; 太子申生; 驪姬之亂; 晉武公; 桓莊之族

英文關鍵字

Duke shien of Jin; Prince Shen-shen; Li-ji's revolt; Duke wu of Jin; The clan of Huan and Juang