Liu is one of the most popular surnames among hundreds of families. Which famous people in history have the surname Liu?

There are too many, how can I finish them all.

1. Liu Bang (247 BC-195 BC), Emperor Gaozu of the Han Dynasty, was the founding emperor of the Western Han Dynasty.

2. Liu Jiao (?-197 BC), King of Chu Yuan in the Western Han Dynasty. Word game. A native of Peixian County, Xuzhou. He is the half-brother of Emperor Gaozu of the Han Dynasty. At the end of the Qin Dynasty, he followed Liu Bang in his uprising against the Qin Dynasty and was named Lord Wenxin. In the sixth year of Emperor Gaodi (201 BC), he was established as King of Chu, with jurisdiction over the three counties of Xue, Donghai and Pengcheng and thirty-six counties, and governed Pengcheng (today's Xuzhou). Liu Jiao is good at poetry and writing, and has many talents. He wrote his own poetry biography "Poetry of the King of Yuan Dynasty".

3. Liu Bi (215 BC-154 BC), the prince of the Western Han Dynasty. A native of Pei County (now part of Jiangsu). Liu Bang's nephew. Conferred the title of King of Wu.

4. Liu Chang (198 BC-174 BC), King Li of Huainan in the Western Han Dynasty. A native of Pei (now Peixian County, Jiangsu Province). Liu Bang's youngest son. In 196 BC, he was granted the title of King of Huainan.

5. Liu An (179 BC-122 BC), a thinker and writer in the Western Han Dynasty. The son of Liu Chang, King Li of Huainan. Liu Chang committed suicide after the rebellion.

6. Liu Xiu (6-57 BC), Emperor Guangwu of Han Dynasty. A native of Caiyang, Nanyang (now southwest of Zaoyang, Hubei). The ninth grandson of Liu Bang, his father Qin once served as the Nandun Order.

7. Liu Zhang (?-219), a warlord in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. The courtesy name is Jiyu. He succeeded his father Liu Yan as the shepherd of Yizhou, but was defeated by Liu Bei and died of illness in Jingzhou.

8. Liu Shang, a Tang prose writer. The courtesy name is Fuyu, a native of Jingnan (one is Shangzhou, the other is Tonglu, and also Changsha).

9. Liu Ji (1311-1375), Mingchen. The name is Bowen. A native of Qingtian, Zhejiang. From the Yuan Dynasty to the Shun Dynasty, he was promoted to Jinshi. He was well versed in classics and history, and was especially good at studying Xiangwei. His contemporaries compared him to Zhuge Liang.

10. Liu Yong (1719-1804), Qing official and calligrapher. The courtesy name is Chongru and the name is Shi'an. He is a native of Zhucheng, Shandong Province. In the 16th year of Qianlong's reign (1751), he became a Jinshi and entered official career. He successively served as lecturer and editor of the Hanlin Academy, magistrate of Taiyuan, Daotai of Jining, cabinet bachelor, vice president of Sikuquan Library, governor of Hunan, etc.

11. Liu Mingchuan (1836-1896), a general of the Huai Army in the late Qing Dynasty. The word province is three. A native of Hefei, Anhui. In the fourth year of Xianfeng (1854), when the Taiping Army captured Luzhou (now Hefei) in Anhui Province, they held regiment training in the countryside, fought with the Qing army many times, and were awarded the title of Qianzong.

12. Liu E (1857-1909), a novelist in the late Qing Dynasty. The courtesy name is Tieyun, and he is not assigned to Bailiansheng in Hongdu. He was born in Dantu, Jiangsu Province (now Zhenjiang City), and his native place was Shanyang (now Huai'an).

Let’s write these first.