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The
Yang Memorial Temple (Yang gongci), located behind the
offices of the Justice Bureau, was built in honor of Yang
Jisheng (with an assumed name of Yang Jiaoshan) of the
Ming Dynasty who risked his life to speak the truth. From
Rongcheng in Hebei Province, Yang Jisheng was clever and
quick-witted. His literary talent led him to become a
successful candidate in the imperial examinations during
the reign of the Ming Emperor Jiajing.
Yang
worked hard and was never intimidated by authority. After
rising to the position of councilor in the Ministry of
Personnel Affairs, he was demoted when he opposed the
plans of a man called Qiu Luan who wanted to open a horse
market. Qiu Luan was later found to be involved in corrupt
affairs, so the emperor gave Yang his job back. Yang Jisheng
again petitioned the emperor accusing Prime Minister Yan
Song of gross crimes and profound wickedness. The petition
is now embedded in the wall of Yang Jisheng’ s old
residence in Dazhiqiao Lane outside the Xuanwumen Gate.
Yan Song, furious at eh accusation, had Yang Jisheng unjustly
interrogated and imprisoned in 1552. In the Official History
of the Ming Dynasty it is written that Yang Jisheng, while
wasting away in prison, used the fragments of a broken
bowl to cut off the rotting flesh from the infected wounds
on his hand. He lived for three more years in prison before
the treacherous official Yan Song had him executed. He
wrote the following poem before his death:
The noble spirit returns to the great void,
The
loyal heart remains eternal.
All
my life my debt of gratitude unpaid,
In
heaven my devoted soul will continue to serve.
In 1784, during the Qing Dynasty, Yang’ s old home
was converted into a memorial temple. An inscription,“The
House of Mr. Yang Jiaoshan,”was carved on the main
gate and an image in his likeness erected. The Draft Petition
Pavilion was built to house a stone tablet with the inscriptions
of his draft petitions to the emperor. But the elm tree,
which he had planted while in prison, was knocked down
in a storm in 1953 and the pavilion too. In order to preserve
this historic site, the Justice Bureau rebuilt the temple,
preserving a piece of the elm tree on a stone tablet and
marking the spot with another small pavilion. |