Meaning & History
Confucius is the anglicized form of the Chinese name Kong Fuzi. The surname 孔 (Kong) means "hole, opening" and the title 夫子 (Fuzi) means "master". This name designates a 6th-century BC Chinese philosopher whose given name was Qiu (from his root name).
Etymology
The name Confucius is a Latinization (by 16th-century Jesuit missionaries) of Kong Fuzi — 孔 (+Kong) for "hole" (referring to the family clan name) and 夫子 (Fuzi) meaning "master" or "teacher". The philosopher’s personal name was Qiu, written with the character 丘 meaning "hill" or "mound". According to tradition, he was born with a prominent bump on his head resembling a hill, which inspired his name.
Historical Context
Confucius (c. 551–479 BCE) lived during the Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history, a time of political fragmentation and conflict. His teachings, known as Confucianism, stressed moral integrity, filial piety, ancestor veneration, and the importance of education and ritual. He served as a court official and later as a traveling teacher, compiling and editing the classics of Chinese literature such as the Five Classics. Although his immediate political influence was modest, his ideas became the official state ideology of imperial China from the Han dynasty onward.
Cultural Significance
Confucius is revered as the paradigmatic sage throughout East Asia. His philosophical school — Ruism (Rujia) — emphasizes harmony in one’s relationships and society, a concept encapsulated in the "Silver Rule": "What you do not wish for yourself, do not do to others." Modelled in his Analects, his ethical framework shaped Chinese bureaucracy, law, and everyday conduct for centuries.
Sources: Wikipedia — Confucius