1. Zhao Mengfu
A famous calligrapher from the late Southern Song Dynasty to the early Yuan Dynasty
Zhao Mengfu, courtesy name Zi'ang, Han nationality, also known as Songxue Taoist, also known as Crystal Palace Taoist, Ou Bo, in his middle age, he once signed a contract with Meng Fu. A native of Wuxing, Zhejiang (now Huzhou, Zhejiang). A famous calligrapher, painter, and poet from the late Southern Song Dynasty to the early Yuan Dynasty, he was the 11th grandson of Song Taizu Zhao Kuangyin and the direct descendant of Zhao Defang, King of Qin. His father, Zhao Yumin, served as the Minister of Household Affairs in the Southern Song Dynasty and as the pacification envoy to the west of Zhejiang Province in Lin'an Prefecture.
2. Xian Yushu (1246-1302), a famous calligrapher in the Yuan Dynasty. The courtesy name was Boji. In his later years, his camp was named "Kingxue Zhai". He called himself "Kingxue Mountain Miner" and also called "Ji Zhi Laoren". His ancestral home was Dexing Prefecture (now Zhuolu County, Zhangjiakou) in the Jin Dynasty, and he was born in Bianliang (now Kaifeng, Henan).
3. Kangli Xisi
Famous ethnic minority calligrapher in the Yuan Dynasty
Kangli Xisi (nao, second tone) (1295-1345) Mongolia (Kangli tribe), a famous ethnic minority calligrapher in the Yuan Dynasty. The courtesy name is Zishan, and the names are Zhengzhai and Shusou. He once served as the Minister of Rites and a bachelor of Kuizhangge. After serving as an official and a bachelor of the Hanlin Academy, he accepted the decree, knew how to make imperial edicts, and also studied national history. Famous for his books. The book is as famous as Zhao Mengfu, Xian Yushu, and Deng Wenyuan, and is known as "Northern Zhao and Southern Zhao". His achievements were mainly in cursive writing.
4. Ouyang Xuan
Historian and writer of Yuan Dynasty
Ouyang Xuan (1274-February 7, 1358), named Yuan Gong, His ancestral home was Luling (now Ji'an, Jiangxi Province). He was born in Liuyang (now Hunan Province). He was a descendant of Ouyang Xiu and was a historian and writer in the Yuan Dynasty.
5. Historian and litterateur in the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties
Wei Su (1303-February 27, 1372), courtesy name Taipu, nicknamed Yunlin, Jinxi, Jiangxi He was a descendant of Wei Quanxi, the governor of Fuzhou in the Tang Dynasty, and a historian and writer in the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties.