Whose calligraphy is known as the first writer in the early Qing Dynasty?

Fu Shan

Fu Shan, together with Gu, Huang Zongxi, Wang Fuzhi, Li Qing and Yan Yuan, was called by Liang Qichao as the "Six Masters in the Early Qing Dynasty". He learned poetry, calligraphy and painting and made good use of them. His profound attainments and great achievements were unparalleled in Confucianism in the early Qing Dynasty, especially his calligraphy, which was called "the first writer in the early Qing Dynasty".

Brief introduction of Mr. Fu Shan

Fu Shan (1606- 1684) was born with a distinguished family background. For seven or eight generations in a row, his ancestors ruled all the philosophers or Zuozhuan and Hanshu, and he became an outstanding family. Great-grandfather Fu Chaoxuan was a distinguished guest and servant of Ninghua Mansion, and grandfather Fu Linlei was a member of Guanshan East Senate and a soldier of the Three Seas. He has made great achievements. His father, Fu, has been an official all his life and is good at learning. Fu Shan received a strict family education when he was young. He read a lot of books by heart and read them several times, so he could memorize them. 15 years old, doctoral student, 20 years old, admitted to higher education. After entering the academy, he studied under Shanxi scholar Yuan Jixian, who was Yuan's favorite pupil.

Fu Shan was deeply influenced by Yuan Jixian, a famous loyal minister in the late Ming Dynasty, and Fu Shan was proud of Yuan Jia's exquisite attention to solar terms. Yuan Jixian was an assistant minister of the Korean Ministry of War. Because the official was honest, upright and outspoken, he offended powerful Wei Zhongxian and others and was demoted to Shanxi Jinshi. In the ninth year of Chongzhen (1636), Wei Zhongxian's best friend patrolled Zhang's suggestion, fabricated charges and falsely accused Yuan Jixian who was trapped in Jingshi prison. Fu Shan was unfair to Yuan Ming, and contacted Xue and other students 100, and jointly went to Beijing to vindicate Yuan Ming. He led all sentient beings to publish and post posters everywhere in Beijing, stating the truth and testifying twice.