Introduction
In the twenty-seventh year of Qianlong's reign (1762), he made a tour to the south, held examinations, appointed candidates, and was awarded the title of Secretary to the Cabinet. Next year, he will become the second Jinshi of Yijia and be awarded the title of editor. In the thirty-second year, he went to the Maoqin Hall and jointly wrote a sutra for the Empress Dowager. Over the past year, there was a great examination of Hanzhan, but the inner court did not take the examination. The imperial edict commended Chu for his excellent knowledge, promoted him to the first rank, and promoted him to serve as a lecturer. In the thirty-sixth year, he was in charge of the study and administration of Henan Province in Zhinan, but he did not take up his post. Grandma Ding was deeply worried. He served as a concubine and moved to the right as a concubine. He was promoted to the right minister of the Ministry of Rites and supervised the academic affairs of Fujian. Worried by his father, he served as a minister of the Ministry of War. Seeking mother's illness, begging for support. Later, he became an old official, supervised Shuntian's political studies, and was transferred to Jiangsu. After completing his term, he returned to Beijing, transferred the personnel department, and supervised the academic affairs of Jiangxi. Experience
He was very knowledgeable at the beginning and was informed by literature. He lived through the Qianlong and Jiaqing dynasties. He held the provincial examination once and served as academic administrator for 5 times. He successively served as the vice president of Siku Quanshu Library, Shilu Library and Santong Library. He continued to compile "Shiqu Baoji" and "Secret Palace Pearl Forest", and collated the "Shi Jing" of Imperial College. In the first year of Jiaqing (1796), he had a banquet with Qiansou and held a meeting to test the tribute. He was promoted to the imperial censor of Zuodu, granted the title of Minister of Military Affairs, and moved to the Ministry of War as the Minister of the Ministry of War and the Minister of the Ministry of Li and the Ministry of Household Affairs. In four years, he was dismissed from his post as an old man, removed from the inner court, and appointed as the vice president of the library. Soon after he died in officialdom, he was given the posthumous title Wen Ke and was enshrined in the Xianliang Temple. He is good at poetry and calligraphy. He is the author of "Collection of Poems of Lan Yuntang" and so on.
Qing minister and bibliophile. The name is Jingchu, the name is Cuiyan, and the name is Yunjiao. A native of Linjiadai, Pinghu, Zhejiang. He had few extraordinary talents, and his reading list was declining. In the 27th year of Qianlong's reign (1762), he was called for examination and awarded the title of Juren and the Secretary of the Cabinet. In the following year, he was awarded the title of editor and editor, and was promoted to the right minister of the Ministry of Rites. In the thirty-sixth year, he was in charge of the study and administration of Henan Province in Zhinan. He did not take up his post and was moved to the right as a concubine. He was promoted to Minister of Rites, supervising academic affairs in Fujian, supervising academic affairs in Shuntian, and was transferred to Jiangsu. After completing his term, he returned to Beijing, transferred the personnel department, and supervised the academic affairs of Jiangxi. In the first year of Jiaqing (1796), he was moved to Zuodu as censor, granted the title of minister of military aircraft, transferred to the minister of the Ministry of War, and transferred to the minister of the Ministry of Personnel and the Ministry of Household Affairs. He died as an official and was given the posthumous title Wen Ke. He was knowledgeable and lived in the Qian and Jia dynasties. He was good at poetry and calligraphy. He was first known for his literature, and served as the vice president of Sikuquan Library and Santong Library. He continued to compile "Shiqu Baoji" and "Secret Palace Pearl Forest" and collated the "Shi Jing" of Imperial College. Construction of his villa began in the 28th year of Qianlong's reign (1763), and it took 13 years to complete. It was used for book collection and residence, and was named "Shuyin Tower". Together with Ningbo's "Tianyi Pavilion" and Nanxun's "Jiaye Hall", it is known as one of the "three major libraries in the south of the Yangtze River during the Ming and Qing Dynasties". It has a rich collection of ancient books, calligraphy and paintings (one theory is that a plaque inscribed "Shu Yin Building" was written for it. not built by it). In 1987, the Shanghai Municipal People's Government was designated as a municipal cultural relics protection unit, and the Municipal Cultural Relics Management Committee recorded a stone record in front of the door. He is the author of 8 volumes of "Collected Poems of Lan Yuntang", 4 volumes of "Collection of Yu Lan", "Notes of the Western Qing Dynasty", etc.