According to traditional accounts,
Laozi was a scholar who worked as the Keeper of the Archives for the royal court of
Zhou. This reportedly allowed him broad access to the works of the
Yellow Emperor and other classics of the time. The stories assert that Laozi never opened a formal school but nonetheless attracted numerous students and loyal disciples. There are many variations of a story retelling his encounter with Confucius, most famously in the
Zhuangzi.
Sima Qian stated that Laozi grew weary of the moral decay of life in
Chengzhou and noted the kingdom's decline. He ventured west to live as a hermit in the unsettled frontier at the age of 80. At the western gate of the city (or kingdom), he was recognized by the guard
Yinxi. The sentry asked the old master to record his wisdom for the good of the country before he would be permitted to pass. The text Laozi wrote was said to be the
Tao Te Ching, although the present version of the text includes additions from later periods. In some versions of the tale, the sentry was so touched by the work that he became a disciple and left with Laozi, never to be seen again. Laozi's disciples
Yinxi and
Wenzi went on to write their own works, the
Guan Yi and
Tongxuan zhenjing, respectively.
Lie Yukou was born in the
State of Zheng, near today's
Zhengzhou,
Henan Province. He was living in the
Chêng State not long before the year 398 BC, when the Prime Minister Tzu Yang was killed in a revolution. It was at this time that Yukou wrote the
Liezi.
Zhuang Zhou was born around 369 BCE in a town called
Meng, in the
state of Song, where he worked as a minor town official. Zhuang made himself well acquainted with all the literature of his time, but preferred the views of Laozi; and ranked himself among his followers. He wrote stories to satirize and expose the disciples of
Confucius, and clearly exhibit the sentiments of Lao. These were collected in the
Zhuangzi, which contains stories and anecdotes that exemplify the carefree nature of the ideal
Taoist sage. Zhuang died in 286 BCE. During the late
Warring States period, a hermit named Guigu Xiansheng was said to have compiled the
Guiguzi, a work that discusses techniques of
political lobbying based in Taoist thinking. He conveyed the teachings of this
School of Diplomacy to
Su Qin,
Zhang Yi,
Sun Bin and
Pang Juan, who would all go on to become famed military strategists and diplomats. Zhang Yi, in particular, paved the way for the domination of the
Qin dynasty and helped found the school of
Legalism as the dynasty's guiding philosophy. After the Qin centralized power and brought the period of civil conflict to a close, they engaged in the
burning of books and burying of scholars – many Taoist works were presumed lost. As such, many of the Zhou-era Taoist texts are sourced during the Han dynasty, and the existence of many of the Zhou-era Taoist sages and texts are still disputed. ==Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE)==