Zhong You, an important official of Cao Wei from the end of the Han Dynasty to the Three Kingdoms period, once ranked first in the three fairs and was promoted to be a teacher. Zhong You is also a great calligrapher. Good seal cutting, official script, truth, line and cursive script promoted the development of regular script and had a far-reaching influence on later calligraphy. He is regarded as the "originator of regular script". He and Wang Xizhi, the sage of books, are called "Zhong Wang".
Brief introduction of Guo Wei
Wei was one of the separatist regimes in the Three Kingdoms period, and later historians often called it Cao Wei. Since the Northern Wei Dynasty was later called the "post-Wei" and Cao Wei was also called the "pre-Wei" or "pre-Wei", it became the most powerful country among the three countries.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, there was chaos and competition. In the melee of warlords, Cao Cao's power gradually increased, and he controlled the court of the Eastern Han Dynasty, which laid the foundation for the establishment of Cao Wei. When Cao Cao was awarded the title, he ruled Ye, the seat of Wei Jun in the Eastern Han Dynasty. So Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty named him "Gong Wei" and "Wang Wei", and his son Cao Pi established the title of "Wei".
In the first year of Yankang (220), Cao Pi forced Emperor Xiandi of Han Dynasty to abdicate, officially replaced the Han Dynasty, established Cao Wei, and made Luoyang its capital. In the second year of Xian Di (265), he usurped Wei, changed his title to Jin, and Cao Wei perished.
Because Cao Wei occupied the Central Plains in the Three Kingdoms, its national strength far surpassed that of Shu Han and Wu Dong. During the period of Cao Wei, the most important reform was Chen Qun's nine-grade Zheng Zhi system, which had a far-reaching influence on the politics of the Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties.
On the territory, it inherited the rule of the Eastern Han Dynasty over the Western Regions, and set up the Western Regions Duhu Government to manage it. After Wu Qiujian conquered Koguryo, the northern part of the Korean peninsula was incorporated into the territory, and the southern States extended the Qinling Huaihe River to the border between Shu and Wu. In 263 AD, Yizhou and Nanzhong were conquered by Shu and Han, and the territory of Cao and Wei was about 4 million square kilometers.