Jiang Hui
Jiang Hui, courtesy name Cilan, was a Chinese woman of the Qing dynasty who wrote a book of star charts based on an older work, whilst still a teenager.
Life
Jiang Hui was a native of Jiangjin, Chongqing Prefecture, Sichuan Province. Her father Jiang Hanchun was a writer and recluse who interested himself in alchemy, astronomy, and poetry. When she was nine years old, her father taught her the astronomical poem Song of [the Sky Pacers] which he also annotated in his book Lengyuan Xianshu. He also taught her how to watch the positions of stars.By the age of eleven or twelve Jiang Hui began to draw her own star chart based on her own observations. The older works she had possessed were no longer accurate. Titled the Tianwen Shan, her map was drawn on a hand fan. Her father wanted it published; but she refused.
In the early years of the Xianfeng era, Jiang Hanchun declined a government position, and by 1854 Jiang Hui was living in seclusion with her father at Longjingzhai. There she bought an anonymous astronomical treatise titled Zhongxing tu kao. She decided to update the book based on her own observations. She revised her work, titled Zhongxing tu zhu, over twelve times in more than a year. In her postscript, dated 1855, she wrote of her wishes to hide the work from public view.
Jiang Hui was soon married to the scholar Song Nan from eastern Sichuan. She discontinued her astronomical pursuits thereafter. In 1874, Song Nan brought her book to a friend named Yao Jinyuan, who approved it and wrote an enthusiastic commentary which greatly aroused public interest. Her book was finally published in 1880, the year her husband received an official post in Baixia, Nanjing, Jiangsu. That year, she accompanied him to Beijing and met Luo Yunqiao, who encouraged them to print it. It was published under the title Xinxiang ge kaoding ershisi qi zhongxing tu, often shortened to either Ershisi qi zhongxing tu or Xinxiangge kaoding zhongxing tu. It was so titled because positions of stars during all 24 solar terms are clearly noted in the book. Her life after its publication is unknown.
Reception of her work
As one of the few astronomical works by a Chinese woman, her book received considerable public interest. At least 15 contemporary men and two women wrote largely flattering commentaries or reviews, including her husband and many of his friends. Modern researchers have noted that none of them was an expert in astronomy.Modern researchers have also noticed major mistakes in her work, especially when she identified the times of sunrises and sunsets during the different solar terms of the year. Jiang Hui's strength lay in identifying stars and their positions ; she did not realize the importance of hours in astronomy and she apparently was also limited by her lack of knowledge about astronomical calculations.