Pang Tong (179-2 14) was born in Xiangyang, Jingzhou (now Xiangyang, Hubei) in the Han Dynasty. During the Three Kingdoms period, Liu Bei's important counselor became a corps commander together with Zhuge Liang. When Liu Bei entered Sichuan and broke with Liu Zhang, he put forward three strategies, and Liu Bei used three of them. When Pang Tong entered Luowei County, he led a group of people to attack the city, but unfortunately, he died halfway. At that time, he was only thirty-six years old, and he was named Hou Jing. Later, the place where Pang Tong was buried was named Luofengpo.
Cao Cao (155-0315,220), whose real name was Meng De, a native of Geely, and a native of Peiguoqiao County (now Bozhou, Anhui Province), was of Han nationality. At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, he was an outstanding politician, strategist, writer and calligrapher, and the founder of the Cao Wei regime in the Three Kingdoms. Conquering the Quartet in the name of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty eliminated the separatist forces such as Er Yuan, Lu Bu, Liu Biao, Ma Chao and Han Sui at home, surrendered the southern Xiongnu, Wu Huan and Xianbei abroad, unified the northern part of China, and implemented a series of policies to restore economic production and social order, which laid the foundation for the establishment of Cao Wei. Cao Cao was the prime minister of the Eastern Han Dynasty before his death, then Wang Wei, and after his death, posthumous title became King Wu. After his son Cao Pi proclaimed himself emperor, he was honored as Emperor Wu, with the temple name Mao.