The ''Zizhi Tongjian'' (1084) is a chronicle published during the
Northern Song dynasty (960–1127) that provides a record of Chinese history from 403 BC to 959 AD, covering 16 dynasties and spanning almost 1400 years. The main text is arranged into 294 scrolls (), each equivalent to a chapter—totaling around 3 million
Chinese characters
Chinese characters are logographs used Written Chinese, to write the Chinese languages and others from regions historically influenced by Chinese culture. Of the four independently invented writing systems accepted by scholars, they represe ...
.
In 1065,
Emperor Yingzong of Song commissioned his official,
Sima Guang (1019–1086), to lead a project to compile a
universal history of China, and granted him funding and the authority to appoint his own staff. His team took 19 years to complete the work and in 1084 it was presented to Emperor Yingzong's successor
Emperor Shenzong of Song. It was well-received and has proved to be immensely influential among both scholars and the general public.
Endymion Wilkinson regards it as reference quality: "It had an enormous influence on later Chinese historical writing, either directly or through its many abbreviations, continuations, and adaptations. It remains an extraordinarily useful first reference for a quick and reliable coverage of events at a particular time", while
Achilles Fang wrote "
'Zizhi Tongjian'' and its numerous re-arrangements, abridgments, and continuations, were practically the only general histories with which most of the reading public of pre-Republican China were familiar."
The text

The principal text of the ''Zizhi Tongjian'' comprises a year-by-year narrative of the
history of China
The history of China spans several millennia across a wide geographical area. Each region now considered part of the Chinese world has experienced periods of unity, fracture, prosperity, and strife. Chinese civilization first emerged in the ...
over 294 scrolls, sweeping through many Chinese historical periods (
Warring States, Qin, Han, Three Kingdoms, Jin and the Sixteen Kingdoms, Southern and Northern dynasties, Sui, Tang, and
Five Dynasties), supplemented with two sections of 30 scrolls each—'tables' () and 'critical analysis' ().
Sima Guang departed from the format used in traditional Chinese dynastic histories, consisting primarily of 'annals' () of rulers and 'biographies' () of officials. Instead, Sima shifted from a 'biographical style' () to a 'chronological style' (). Guang wrote in a memorandum to the Emperor:
Since I was a child I have ranged through histories. It has appeared to me that in the annal-biography form the words are so diffuse and numerous that even an erudite scholar who reads them, again and again, cannot comprehend and sort them out. ... I have constantly wished to write a chronological history roughly in accordance with the form of the Tso-chuan (), starting with the Warring States and going down to the Five Dynasties, drawing on other books besides the Official Histories and taking in all that a ruler ought to know—matters which are related to the rise and fall of dynasties and connected with the joys and sorrows of the people, and of which the good can become a model and the evil a warning.
Initially, Sima Guang hired Liu Shu () and Zhao Junxi as his main assistants, but Zhao was soon replaced by Liu Ban (), a Han history expert. In 1070 Emperor Shenzong approved Guang's request to add Fan Zuyu (), a Tang history expert. Because the ''Zizhi Tongjian'' is a distillation from 322 disparate sources, the selection, drafting, and editing processes used in creating the work as well as potential political biases of Sima Guang, in particular, have been the subject of academic debate.
Derivative and commented works
In the 12th century,
Zhu Xi produced a reworked, condensed version of the ''Zizhi Tongjian'', known as the ''
Zizhi Tongjian Gangmu''. This version was itself later translated into
Manchu
The Manchus (; ) are a Tungusic peoples, Tungusic East Asian people, East Asian ethnic group native to Manchuria in Northeast Asia. They are an officially recognized Ethnic minorities in China, ethnic minority in China and the people from wh ...
as , upon the request of the Qing
Kangxi Emperor. This Manchu version was itself translated into French by
Jesuit
The Society of Jesus (; abbreviation: S.J. or SJ), also known as the Jesuit Order or the Jesuits ( ; ), is a religious order (Catholic), religious order of clerics regular of pontifical right for men in the Catholic Church headquartered in Rom ...
missionary
Joseph-Anne-Marie de Moyriac de Mailla. His 12-volume translation ' (1777–1783) was published posthumously in Paris. The condensed Zizhi Tongjian Gangmu was also the main source for ', a political history of China from antiquity to 906, published in 1929 by the French Jesuit missionary
Léon Wieger.
The
Zhonghua Book Company
Zhonghua Book Company (), formerly spelled Chunghwa or Chung-hua Shu-chü, and sometimes translated as Zhonghua Publishing House, are Chinese publishing houses that focuses on the humanities, especially classical Chinese works. Currently it ha ...
edition contains textual criticism made by
Yuan dynasty
The Yuan dynasty ( ; zh, c=元朝, p=Yuáncháo), officially the Great Yuan (; Mongolian language, Mongolian: , , literally 'Great Yuan State'), was a Mongol-led imperial dynasty of China and a successor state to the Mongol Empire after Div ...
historian
Hu Sanxing. The philosopher
Wang Fuzhi also wrote a commentary on ''Tongjian'', titled ''Comments After Reading the Tongjian'' ().
Historian
Rafe de Crespigny has published annotated translations of chapters 44 to 69 in three successive works under the titles ''A Hundred Years of Han'' (2025), ''Emperor Huan and Emperor Ling'' (1989), and ''To Establish Peace'' (1996),
altogether covering 57–220 AD, building upon the publication of
Achilles Fang's 1952 annotated translation of the next ten chapters (70–79) covering up to 265 AD. There are also self-published translations into English of chapters 1–8, covering the years 403–207 BC and some additional sections pertaining to the
Xiongnu
The Xiongnu (, ) were a tribal confederation of Nomad, nomadic peoples who, according to ancient Chinese historiography, Chinese sources, inhabited the eastern Eurasian Steppe from the 3rd century BC to the late 1st century AD. Modu Chanyu, t ...
people.
Contents

The book consisted of 294 chapters, of which the following number describe each respective dynastic era:
# 5 chapters –
Zhou (1046–256 BC)
# 3 chapters –
Qin (221–207 BC)
# 60 chapters –
Han (206 BC – 220 AD)
# 10 chapters –
Wei (220–265)
# 40 chapters –
Jin (266–420)
# 16 chapters –
Liu Song
Song, known as Liu Song (), Former Song (前宋) or Song of (the) Southern dynasties (南朝宋) in historiography, was an Dynasties of China, imperial dynasty of China and the first of the four Northern and Southern dynasties#Southern dynasti ...
(420–479)
# 10 chapters –
Qi (479–502)
# 22 chapters –
Liang (502–557)
# 10 chapters –
Chen (557–589)
# 8 chapters –
Sui (589–618)
# 81 chapters –
Tang (618–907)
# 6 chapters –
Later Liang (907–923)
# 8 chapters –
Later Tang (923–936)
# 6 chapters –
Later Jin (936–947)
# 4 chapters –
Later Han (947–951)
# 5 chapters –
Later Zhou (951–960)
See also
*
Culture of the Song dynasty
*
History of the Song dynasty
* ''
Records of the Grand Historian''
Notes
Citations
Sources
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* The first of a set of 72 volumes.
*.
* With annotations and translation of
Yang Kuan's textual research on the Warring States.
External links
''Zizhi Tongjian'' "Comprehensive Mirror to Aid in Government"—
Chinaknowledge
* {{Xu Elina-Qian, 2.1 Introduction to the Sources on the Pre-dynastic Khitan (pp. 19–23) > The ''Zizhi Tongjian'', p.20
''Zizhi Tongjian''(original text in Guoxue)
1080s books
11th-century Chinese books
11th-century history books
Chinese history texts
History books about the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
History books about the Han dynasty
History books about the Jin dynasty (266–420)
History books about the Northern and Southern dynasties
History books about the Qin dynasty
History books about the Sui dynasty
History books about the Tang dynasty
History books about the Three Kingdoms
Song dynasty literature