Judge Dee
Judge Dee is a semi-fictional character based on the historical figure Di Renjie, county magistrate and statesman of the Tang court. The character appeared in the 18th-century Chinese detective and gong'an crime novel Di Gong An. After Robert van Gulik came across it in an antiquarian book store in Tokyo, he translated the novel into English and then used the style and characters to write his own original Judge Dee historical mystery stories.
The series is set in Tang Dynasty China and deals with criminal cases solved by the upright and shrewd Judge Dee, who as county magistrate in the Chinese imperial legal system was both the investigating magistrate and judge.
Dee Goong An
The Judge Dee character is based on the historical figure Di Renjie, magistrate and statesman of the Tang court. During the Ming Dynasty in China, a "folk novel" was written set in former times, but filled with anachronisms.Van Gulik found in the 18th-century Di Gong An an original tale dealing with three cases simultaneously, and, which was unusual among Chinese mystery tales, a plot that for the most part lacked an overbearing supernatural element which could alienate Western readers. He translated it into English and had it published in 1949 under the title Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee.
Van Gulik's stories
This gave van Gulik the idea of writing his own novels, set with the similar Ming anachronisms, but using the historical character. Van Gulik was careful in writing the main novels to deal with cases wherein Dee was newly appointed to a city, thereby isolating him from the existing lifestyle and enabling him to maintain an objective role in the books. Van Gulik's novels and stories made no direct reference to the original Chinese work, and so Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee is not considered to be part of the Judge Dee series.Initially Dee is assisted only by his faithful clerk, Sergeant Hoong Liang, an old family retainer. However, in The Chinese Gold Murders, which describes Dee's initial appointment and first criminal cases, the judge encounters two highwaymen, euphemistically called "men of the greenwood", Ma Joong and Chiao Tai, who attempt to rob him but are so impressed with his character that they give up their criminal careers and join his retinue on the spot.. A little later, in The Chinese Lake Murders, a third criminal, Tao Gan, an itinerant confidence trickster and swindler, similarly joins. Judge Dee ends his career in Murder in Canton being promoted to the position of senior Metropolitan Judge in the capital, and his assistants obtain official ranks in the Army and civil service.
Van Gulik also wrote a series of newspaper comics about Judge Dee in 1964-1967, which totalled 19 adventures. The first four were regular balloon strips, but the later 15 had the more typically Dutch textblock under the pictures.
Judge Dee, naturally, is responsible for deciding sentences as well as assessing guilt or innocence, although van Gulik notes in the stories that all capital punishments must be referred to and decided by officials in the capital. One of the sentences he frequently has to deal with is slow slicing; if he is inclined to mercy, he orders the final, fatal, cut to be made first, thus rendering the ceremony anticlimactic.
Other authors
Several other authors have created stories based on Van Gulik's Judge Dee character.- French author :fr:Frédéric Lenormand|Frédéric Lenormand wrote 19 new Judge Dee mysteries from year 2004 at Editions Fayard, Paris. Some of them have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Bulgarian, Czech and Polish.
- Sven Roussel, another French author, has written La dernière enquête du Juge Ti.
- The Chinese-American author Zhu Xiao Di wrote a book about Judge Dee called Tales of Judge Dee, set when the Judge was the magistrate of Poo-yang. Zhu Xiao Di has no relation to Robert van Gulik but tried to stay faithful to the fictionalized history of van Gulik's Judge Dee.
- Judge Dee appears, along with a fictionalized Wu Zetian, in Eleanor Cooney & Daniel Alteri's mystery novel Deception: A Novel of Mystery and Madness in Ancient China.
By van Gulik
Year | Title | Setting | Notes |
1949 | Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee | An "early phase of Judge Dee's career." | Translated from Chinese ; not part of the later continuity. Three stories: "The Case of the Double Murder at Dawn," "The Case of the Strange Corpse", and "The Case of the Poisoned Bride". Dee is the newly appointed Magistrate of Chang-ping in the Province of Shantung. He has all four lieutenants on staff: Sgt. Hoong, Chiao Tai, Ma Joong, and Tao Gan. |
1957 | The Chinese Maze Murders | 670, Lan-fang | Written in 1950, published in Japanese in 1951; Lan-fang is a fictional district at the western frontier of Tang China. Given its name, general location and supposed role in the trade route to Khotan, it has a real historical eponymous counterpart in Lanzhou. |
1958 | The Chinese Bell Murders | 668, Poo-yang | Written between 1953 and 1956; Poo-yang is a fictional wealthy district on the shores of the Grand Canal of China. |
1959 | The Chinese Gold Murders | 663, Penglai | Dee's initial appointment and first criminal cases, the judge encounters two highwaymen, euphemistically called "men of the greenwood", Ma Joong and Chiao Tai. |
1960 | The Chinese Lake Murders | 666, Han-yuan | Han-yuan is a fictional district on a lakeshore near the capital of Chang-An. Huan-Yuan is an ancient name for the modern day Hancheng city in Shaanxi province. |
1961 | The Chinese Nail Murders | 676, Pei-chow | Pei-chow is a fictional district in the far north of Tang China. |
1961 | The Haunted Monastery | 667, Han-yuan | Judge Dee is traveling and forced to take shelter in a monastery. |
1961 | The Red Pavilion | 668, Poo-yang | Judge Dee is drawn into a web of lies and sad stories in the world of the prostitutes of Imperial China. |
1962 | The Lacquer Screen | 664, Penglai | Judge Dee and Chiao Tai disguise themselves to go undercover and join a gang of robbers to solve the case. |
1963 | The Emperor's Pearl | 669, Poo-yang | Odd things going on at the deserted villa, an apparently cursed Imperial Treasure and a perverted madman. |
1965 | The Morning of the Monkey | 667, Han-yuan | A short novel from The Monkey and the Tiger |
1965 | The Night of the Tiger | 676, Pei-chow | A short novel from The Monkey and the Tiger |
1965 | The Willow Pattern | 677, Chang-An | Judge Dee is the Lord Chief Justice in the Imperial capital of Chang-An. |
1966 | Murder in Canton | 681, Guangzhou | Judge Dee is the Lord Chief Justice for all of China. |
1966 | The Phantom of the Temple | 670, Lan-fang | Mysterious phantom haunting a Buddhist temple. 20 bars of gold missing, and the merchant's beautiful daughter. |
1967 | "Five Auspicious Clouds" | 663, Penglai | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "The Red Tape Murders" | 663, Penglai | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "He came with the Rain" | 663, Penglai | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "The Murder on the Lotus Pond" | 666, Han-yuan | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "The Two Beggars" | 668, Poo-yang | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "The Wrong Sword" | 668, Poo-yang | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "The Coffins of the Emperor" | 670, Lan-fang | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | "Murder on New Year's Eve" | 670, Lan-fang | A short story from Judge Dee at Work |
1967 | Necklace and Calabash | 668, Poo-yang | Judge Dee is a magistrate in the fictional Poo-yang district. Last Judge Dee novel published during van Gulik's lifetime. |
1968 | Poets and Murder | 669, Poo-yang | During a festival in Chin-hwa, Judge Dee is a guest of a group of distinguished scholars. A young girl has been murdered and the accused is a beautiful poetess. |
By other authors
By the author :fr:Frédéric Lenormand|Frédéric Lenormand- Le Château du lac Tchou-an The Zhou-an lake castle
- La Nuit des juges The Night of the judges
- Petits meurtres entre moines Little murders among monks
- Le Palais des courtisanes The courtesans' palace
- Madame Ti mène l'enquête Mrs. Dee investigates
- Mort d'un cuisinier chinois Death of a Chinese cook
- L'Art délicat du deuil The Delicate art of mourning
- Mort d'un maître de go Death of a Go master
- Dix petits démons chinois Ten little Chinese devils
- Médecine chinoise à l'usage des assassins Chinese Medicine for murderers
- Guide de survie d'un juge en Chine Survival guide for the Chinese judge
- Panique sur la Grande Muraille Panic on the Great Wall
- Le Mystère du jardin chinois The Chinese Garden Mystery
- Diplomatie en kimono Diplomacy in a Kimono
- Thé vert et arsenic Arsenic and green tea
- Un Chinois ne ment jamais A Chinese never lies
- Divorce à la chinoise Chinese-style Divorce
- Meurtres sur le fleuve Jaune The Yellow River Murders
- Tales of Judge Dee, set in the time when Judge Dee is in Poo-yang
- La Dernière Enquète du Juge Ti set at the end Judge Dee's term of service in Lan Fang
- Deception: A Novel of Mystery and Madness in Ancient China,
- 狄仁杰 通天帝国, tie-in novel of Tsui Hark 2010 film: Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame,
- The Ingenious Judge Dee,
Adaptations
Comics
The stories have been adapted into comic strips by Dutch artists Fritz Kloezeman between 1964 and 1969 and Dick Matena in 2000.TV
Judge Dee has been adapted for television twice in English.- In 1969, Howard Baker produced six Judge Dee stories for Granada Television. These episodes were in black and white and were not a ratings success. English actor Michael Goodliffe portrayed the Judge.
- In 1974, Gerald Isenberg adapted the novel The Haunted Monastery into a television movie, titled Judge Dee and the Monastery Murders. It starred Khigh Dhiegh as Judge Dee. With the exception of the star, the movie had an all-Asian cast, including Mako, Soon-Tek Oh, Keye Luke, and James Hong. The writing was credited to Nicholas Meyer and Robert van Gulik. It was nominated for an Edgar Award, for Best Television Feature or Miniseries in 1975.
Movies
- Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame
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