Ban Zhao was a Chinese historian, poet, and teacher of the Eastern Han dynasty. She is the first known woman historian of China. She was born around 45 CE in Anling, near modern Xianyang in Shaanxi province. Her family was a famous scholarly household. Her father Ban Biao was a respected scholar and historian. Her two older twin brothers, Ban Gu and Ban Chao, would also become important figures. She was educated at home by both her parents. This was unusual for a girl, even in a scholarly family. By her teens she was widely read in Chinese classics. At fourteen she married Cao Shishu, a local man. They had several children. Her husband died young. She did not remarry, which was already considered virtuous in her culture. Her father had been writing a major history of the Western Han dynasty (206 BCE to 23 CE). After his death, her brother Ban Gu took over the project. In 92 CE, Ban Gu was imprisoned because of court politics and died in prison. Around 97 CE, the emperor summoned Ban Zhao to the capital to finish her brother's work. She was given access to the Imperial Library, an extraordinary privilege for any scholar of her time. She completed the Book of Han (Han shu), one of the most important histories ever written in China. She also wrote Lessons for Women (Nüjie) and many other works. She tutored the empress and other women of the court. She died around 117 CE, aged about 70.
Ban Zhao matters for three reasons. First, she completed the Book of Han, one of the foundational works of Chinese historical writing. The book covers about 230 years of the Western Han dynasty in 100 volumes. It set the form for all later Chinese dynastic histories. Ban Zhao did not start it; her father and brother did the early work. But she finished it after her brother's death in prison. Without her, it might never have been completed.
Second, she was the first known woman historian in China and one of the first known anywhere in the world. She did serious archival work in the Imperial Library. She wrote on tables and dynastic chronology. She handled material previously considered the work of male court officials. Her example shaped how educated Chinese women thought about themselves for nearly two thousand years.
Third, she is the most studied and most contested writer on women's conduct in Chinese history. Her short book Lessons for Women (Nüjie), written around 106 CE for her own daughters, became a foundational text on how Confucian women should behave. It taught humility, devotion to husband, and obedience. It also argued for women's education. The text shaped Chinese gender norms for two millennia. It is read today both as a defence of women's learning and as a justification for women's subordination. Both readings have evidence behind them.
For a first introduction, the chapter on Ban Zhao in Patricia Buckley Ebrey's The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (1996) gives a clear overview. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Chinese philosophy includes useful material on Ban Zhao's place in Confucian thought. For students who want to read her own writing, Nancy Lee Swann's Pan Chao: Foremost Woman Scholar of China (1932, reprinted 1968) includes English translations of Lessons for Women and other Ban Zhao works.
For deeper reading, Lily Xiao Hong Lee's The Virtue of Yin: Studies on Chinese Women (1994) examines Ban Zhao alongside other important Chinese women writers. Robin Wang's Images of Women in Chinese Thought and Culture (2003) gives the broader context. For Lessons for Women in modern translation, the version by Nancy Lee Swann remains standard. For Ban Zhao's contribution to the Book of Han, Burton Watson's Han Dynasty translations and historical studies are valuable.
Ban Zhao was just her brother's assistant.
She finished the Book of Han herself after Ban Gu's death in prison. She wrote eight chronological tables and an astronomical treatise. The emperor specifically summoned her to complete the project. She had access to the Imperial Library as the responsible historian. Many later Confucian writers downplayed her contribution and emphasised her brother. Modern scholarship has restored her central role. Calling her 'an assistant' repeats the historical erasure rather than the historical reality.
Lessons for Women is purely oppressive and should be ignored.
It is more complicated. The book contains arguments for educating girls that were progressive for its time. It also contains arguments for women's obedience that have caused serious harm in later centuries. Both are present. Ignoring the book misses an important text in the history of women's writing. Reading it carefully, with attention to what is admirable and what is troubling, is more useful than dismissing it. Many serious texts contain mixtures. Lessons for Women is one important example.
Ban Zhao's life matched the advice she gave in Lessons for Women.
It often did not. The book advises wives to be humble, quiet, and devoted to husbands and in-laws. Ban Zhao herself was widowed early, became a major scholar, completed a famous history, tutored empresses, and influenced government policy. The gap between her advice and her own life is striking. Some scholars argue she used the humble voice strategically while doing very different work in practice. Others argue she genuinely believed in different roles for different settings. Either way, treating her advice as a description of how she lived misses the actual woman.
There were no other women historians or writers in early China.
Ban Zhao is the most famous early Chinese woman historian, but she was not entirely alone. Other educated women existed in the Han period and after, including her own teachers and students. The poet Ban Jieyu, her great-aunt, wrote earlier verse. Later dynasties produced women historians, poets, and educators. Many of these women's names and works were lost or downplayed by later Confucian commentators. Modern scholarship is recovering some of them. Ban Zhao is exceptional partly because she is so well-documented, not because she was the only educated Chinese woman of her millennium.
For research-level engagement, Anne Behnke Kinney's collection The Lienü zhuan and Confucian Tradition explores how Ban Zhao's work fits in the longer tradition of Chinese women's writing. Lisa Raphals's Sharing the Light: Representations of Women and Virtue in Early China is a major scholarly study. The journal Nan Nü: Men, Women and Gender in China publishes ongoing research. For the Book of Han itself, A. F. P. Hulsewé's writings and the multi-volume scholarly translations of the Han shu offer the deepest engagement with Ban Zhao's historical work.
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