Zhang and Zhun in Tang Dynasty;
Sun He, Wang Zeng, Song Yao, Yang Zhi, Wang Ruocuo and Feng Jing in the Song Dynasty;
Meng Songxian of Jin Dynasty;
Wang Chongzhe of Yuan Dynasty;
Huang Guan and Shang Lu in Ming Dynasty;
Qian Ming, Chen Jichang and Dai Quheng in Qing Dynasty.
In addition, there have been two "Wu Sanyuan" in history.
First, during the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, Wang, a native of Yongjia, Zhejiang Province, entered the Chinese Martial Arts Department for three yuan, and there were more than a thousand officials to the Royal Guards. He is proficient in classics and history and is good at writing poems. At that time, he called his martial arts, poetry and calligraphy "three unique skills". What is particularly commendable is that he is honest and clean, does not flatter powerful people, and is quite a gentleman.
The second is that Wang Yubi, who was also a native of Zhejiang during the Shunzhi period of the Qing Dynasty, actually joined the Chinese Martial Arts School for the sake of Sanyuan. At the end of the Ming Dynasty, this man was admitted to Wu Xiucai. He was the first archer and was known as the "dead shot", so people praised him as "Wu Siyuan". Although he was born as a samurai, he never let go of his books, and his writing style was brilliant, and he also had the reputation of being an all-rounder in civil and military affairs.
Huang Guan won the first place in the imperial examination of Ming Dynasty in six times: county examination, government examination, academy examination, township examination, general examination and palace examination. Later generations praised him for creating a miracle in the history of imperial examinations with "three yuan in the world and six songs in the world", but his name could not be found in the records of Jinshi in the Ming Dynasty. Because in the "Jingnan Change", Huang Guan kept the honor of being a loyal minister and sacrificed himself for the traditional concept of "the righteousness of the monarch and the minister"