The father of calligrapher Wang Xizhi

Calligrapher Wang Xizhi's father's name is Wang Kuang.

Wang Kuang, born in Linyi (present-day Shandong), was a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty and the father of Wang Xizhi. Li Guan Danyang satrap, Huainan civil history, Huainan satrap. Good officials and running scripts. ?

Real name: Wang Kuang.

Nickname: Wang Taishou

Font size: Zi Hongshi

Times: Western Jin Dynasty

Birthplace: Langxie Linyi (now Shandong)

Wang Kuang, Wang Xizhi's father, experienced more twists and turns. He was once the satrap of Danyang (now Nanjing, Jiangsu) and was attacked by Chen Minzhi. He fled to his hometown and joined the army for General Si Marui Pingdong, the king of Langya, which played a certain role in promoting Si Marui to cross the river. Later, under the call of Sima Yue, king of the East China Sea, he served as a civil servant in Huainan and sent troops north to crusade against Liu Cong. After the failure, he didn't know where to go.

The portrait of Wang Kuang painted in the Ming Dynasty is obviously a cross of official clothes, and the official position is also wrong. Huainan Taishou should be Huainan Internal History. In the Northern and Southern Dynasties, the princes of the vassal States all took counties as fiefs, and the counties where the kings fiefs were located were called "internal history" rather than "satrap" by the chief officials. Later, Wang Xizhi's "Historical Records and Internal History" was the same.