Background
Jin was a sixth generation descendant of the Qianlong Emperor"s fifth son, Yongqi (Prince Rong).
Jin was a sixth generation descendant of the Qianlong Emperor"s fifth son, Yongqi (Prince Rong).
In 1911, shortly before the fall of the Qing dynasty, he inherited a ducal title, feng"en zhenguo gong (奉恩鎮國公), from the Prince Rong peerage. After the Republic of China was established, he changed his family name from "Aisin Gioro" to "Jin" ("Jin" means "gold" in Mandarin, just like "Aisin" in Manchu). Jin died in 1966, during the Cultural Revolution.
Jin was a pioneer in the research on the Khitan scripts and Jurchen script.
During the 1920s and 1930s a number of memorial inscriptions in unknown scripts had been discovered, but it was not clear what the relationship between these scripts was, and how the newly discovered scripts corresponded to the "large" and "small" Khitan and "large" and "small" Jurchen scripts that were mentioned in the histories of the Liao and Jin dynasties. In 1957 Jin determined that the memorial inscriptions for Emperor Xingzong of Liao and his consort, and of Emperor Daozong of Liao and his consort, were written in a phonetic script influenced by the Old Uyghur alphabet, whereas the memorial of Xiao Xiaozhong which had been discovered in 1951 was written in a logographic script based on Chinese characters.
He identified the former script as the Large Khitan script and the latter script as the Small Khitan script, an identification that is now widely accepted. In 1962 Jin further identified the script used in the Sino-Jurchen Vocabulary of the Bureau of Interpreters (Nǚzhēn Yìyǔ 女真譯語) and on a number of Jin Dynasty monuments as the "large" Jurchen script.