Chu Suiliang (596 ~ 658)
Minister and calligrapher in the early Tang Dynasty. Originally from Yangzhai, Henan (now Yuxian, Henan), he moved south to Qiantang, Hangzhou (now west of Hangzhou, Zhejiang) in the late Jin Dynasty. Father Chu Liang, one of the 18 bachelors of Li Shimin Literature Museum, is the King of Qin. Officials are scattered, riding is waiting. In the tenth year of Zhenguan (636), Secretary Lang was transferred to Live Lang. He was good at calligraphy and was recommended by Wei Zhi to Emperor Taizong, who was appreciated. Fifteen years, advised Taizong to suspend meditation. In the same year, Huolang moved to persuade doctors. During the Zhenguan period, Emperor Taizong doted on his fourth son, Wang Wei Taiwan, and Sui Liang proposed that the treatment of princes should have certain specifications. In seventeen years, Prince Chenggan was abolished for murdering Wei Wangtai, so Sui Liang and Sun Chang Wuji persuaded Taizong to make his ninth son, King Li Zhi of Jin, a prince (namely, Li Zhi and Tang Gaozong). The following year, Sui Liang was appointed assistant minister of Huangmen and participated in the state affairs. When Emperor Taizong planned an expedition to Koguryo, he held different opinions, especially against Emperor Taizong's personal expedition. Twenty-two years for the secretariat, twenty-three years, Taizong died, called and mowgli as life minister. In the first year of Emperor Gaozong Yonghui (650), Sui Liang bought the land of the target audience of Hanshu at a low price and disintegrated into a secretariat of the same state. In three years, he was recalled as Minister of History and Prime Minister. For four years, he was shot as the right servant of Shangshu. In six years, I wanted to abolish the king and become a queen. He believes that there is nothing wrong with the Queen of Kings being born in a noble family. She strongly opposed the abolition of the legislature, and was therefore demoted to Tanzhou Secretariat, transferred to Guangxi Governor (now Guilin) and demoted to Aizhou Secretariat (now Qinghua, Vietnam). In the third year of Xianqing (658), he died anywhere.
Chu Suiliang, Ou Yangxun, Yu Shinan and Xue Qi were four great calligraphers in the early Tang Dynasty. His calligraphy works handed down from generation to generation include Preface to Tang Sanzang, Biography of Yique Buddhist Shrine, Monument to Master Meng, Square Monument, and Preface to the Wild Goose Pagoda. , ink for Ni Kuanzan.