Chu Suiliang, a famous minister in the early Tang Dynasty. Where are you from?
Chu Suiliang (AD 596-659), a politician and calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, was born in Qiantang, Hangzhou, and his ancestral home was Yangzhai (now Yuzhou, Henan). Chu Suiliang is well-read and proficient in literature and history. At the end of Sui Dynasty, he became the general manager with Xue Ju. Later, he served as an admonition officer and secretary in the Tang Dynasty. In the 23rd year of Tang Zhenguan (AD 649), he and Sun Chang Wuji were assisted by the imperial edict of Taizong. After resolutely opposing Wu Zetian, he was demoted to the governor of Tanzhou (Changsha). After Wu Hou ascended the throne, he was transferred to the governor of Guizhou (Guilin) and later demoted to the secretariat of Aizhou (now the northern border of Vietnam). Tang Xianqing died in the third year (AD 658); Chu Suiliang is a good calligrapher. He studied Yu Shinan at first, then took Wang Xizhi from France, and together with Ou Yangxun, Yu Shinan and Xue Qi, he was called "the four masters in the early Tang Dynasty". There are "Monument to Mencius" and "Preface to Wild Goose Pagoda" handed down from ancient times.