Nangong School, Nangong refers to the Zhu Gong in Nanchang in Taoism, that is, the refining department in Nanchang, which is the place where the dead are resurrected by fire in Taoist refining devices. Taking "Nangong" as the name of the sect has two meanings in Taoism. One is the Nangong school, which was listed in the Taoist system table by Yi Xinying, a modern Taoist. It is a sect of Taoism, and its teachings include Yin and Yang, Five Elements, Six Benevolence, Strange Gate, Divine Symbol, Secret Taboo, Secret Curse, Imperial Decree, Yu Bu, False Form and Interpretation. Yi Xinying's Taoist Three-Character Classics also said: "Nangong Sect, the teacher of truth, the secret method, serving ghosts and gods. He also said that this case is "a symbol, a spirit, a cloud. "Therefore, his school is good at spells and scientific instruments, and it is also internal work. In addition, Chen Jiaoyou's The Origin of Taoism in Changchun in Qing Dynasty also lists the Nangong School, which belongs to the branch of Quanzhen Daolongmen School, with Dora in Longmen as its founder and Luofu Mountain in Guangdong as its activity center. Li Qingqiu's life story is unknown. As can be seen from Volume 7 of Changchun Daoyuan, his heirs are as follows: Dora → Zeng → Ke Guiyang → Tong Fukui → Jiang (another disciple is Lai Benhua) → Chen Mingxuan → Zhang Yongan, etc. It can be seen from the records in the Origin of Taoism in Changchun that the Nangong Sect, as a branch of the Dragon Sect of Quanzhen Sect, also practiced magic.
Refer to Yi Xinying: List of Taoism, and see Tibetan Daoism 3 1 book. Hu, editor-in-chief: China Taoist Dictionary (Beijing: China Social Sciences Press, 1995).