Hu Zongzhao (1882-1942), also known as Fengsun and Naiweng. During the Republic of China, he was born in Fujiazhuang, Ji County (now Jizhou City). Born in a family of poets and writers whose profession is teaching. Great-grandfather Wenkui was a lifelong educator. His grandfather served as a teacher at a free private school. He was the first scholar in both the Linzhou Examination and the Academy Examination in his father's court. He was good at calligraphy and seal sealing. He once taught at Xindu Academy. He wrote 20 volumes of "Ji County Chronicles" written by Wang Shunan, "Chronology of the Three Kingdoms" and several volumes of poems and essays. Zong Zhao received good education and influence from his family since he was a child, and he loves calligraphy and painting. He first studied Yan and Liu Zhengkai, and then studied the Wei stele calligraphy of Chang Yuzhao, and received oral instructions from Chang Yuzhao himself. The calligraphy layout is properly dense, the brushwork is concise and strong, the visual sense is elegant and unrestrained, the essence, energy and spirit are integrated into one, and the aftertaste is endless. When she was a child, she ranked first among the last batch of talents in the late Qing Dynasty with excellent results. She was admitted to Baoding Excellent Normal School for further study. After graduation, she served as the principal of the county high school and junior high school for girls in Hebei County and also taught Chinese and calligraphy for the county high school. He has strict requirements on students. He once set up an extracurricular calligraphy group in the school and held many calligraphy and painting exhibitions, so there were many masters. Fu Zhenlun, a master of Chinese history, said: "His calligraphy is popular in Shunzhi and southern Hebei. His painting techniques are as far away as the Tang and Song Dynasties, and he learned from the Yangzhou School more recently. He is good at freehand brushwork, sketching in real scenes, and expressing emotions in real scenes. Although he adopts the six methods, he is not restricted. The paintings of flowers, birds, insects and fish are concise and vigorous, with splashes of ink and color, making them natural and elegant." Qi Baishi praised him as "the master of northern calligraphy and painting". Zong Zhao died of illness in Beijing in the 31st year of the Republic of China (1942).