Zhang Bin (
Chinese: 張賓; died 323),
courtesy name Mengsun (孟孫),
formally
Marquess Jing of Puyang (濮陽景侯), was a key
strategist for
Shi Le, the founder of the
Chinese/
Jie state
Later
Zhao.
Biography
Zhang Bin's father Zhang Yao (張瑤) was a commandery governing during
the early
Jin Dynasty . Zhang
Bin was studious in his youth, and once, comparing himself to the
great strategist
Zhang Liang, said, "I
believe my intelligence and judgment to be no less than Zhang
Liang's, but I have not met
Gaozu (Liu
Bang, the founder of
Han Dynasty)." He
served on the staff of a Jin prince, but was not trusted, and so he
resigned his post.
Later, after various agrarian rebellions started against Jin rule
during the late reign of
Emperor Hui
of Jin, Zhang happened to meet Shi, and believed that Shi was
the most capable general he met, and so he joined Shi's army.
Initially, Shi did not consider him important, but after they
became more acquainted, Shi began to value his advice more and
more.
In
311, when Shi, who was then a Han Zhao
general who was winning many battles but failing to hold territory,
considered capturing the region between the Yangtze River
and the Han River
, it was Zhang who advised him against the plan,
apparently reasoning that Shi's army was suitable for mobility on
the plains, not the river- and lake-filled region near the
Yangtze. In 312, when Shi's army was facing a food
shortage and worried about an attack from the Jin general Sima Rui (later Emperor Yuan), Shi's
other main strategist Diao Ying (刁膺) suggested offering to declare
loyalty for Jin, which Zhang told Shi would be impossible, given
the great enmity that Jin forces had for Shi after his
participation in capturing and pillaging Sima
Yue's funeral procession and then the capital Luoyang
in 311 --
and that if he tried to retreat, Jin forces would not dare to
engage him. Agreeing with Zhang, Shi retreated north without
being attacked by Jin forces, and he made Zhang his right secretary
-- but referred to him as Right Marquess (右侯), a title that he
would use to address Zhang for the rest of Zhang's life, in lieu of
name, thus showing greater respect for Zhang than for other
subordinates.
In summer
312, it was at Zhang's suggestion that Shi finally occupied
Xiangguo (襄國, in modern Xintai
, Hebei
) and held it
permanently as his headquarters. For the next few
years, while he was ostensibly a Han Zhao general, with Zhang's
assistance he expanded the territory he held to most of the area
north of the Yellow
River
. By 316, Shi had (presumably under authority
granted by the Han Zhao emperor
Liu Cong)
created Zhang the Marquess of Puyang. In 319, after Shi declared
independence from Han Zhao and its new emperor
Liu Yao, thus creating Later Zhao, Zhang served as
the prime minister. Zhang died in early 323, and upon his death,
Shi mourned him greatly and exclaimed, "Is it that heaven does not
wish me to complete great things? Why was the Right Marquess robbed
from me?" After Cheng Xia (程遐), a capable administrator but not the
strategist that Zhang was (and the brother of Shi's
concubine Consort
Cheng), succeeded Zhang, Shi often sighed, "the Right Marquess
abandoned me and let me work with this man. Was it not cruel for
him to do so?"