Historical Celebrities
Lu Longqi: A native of Pinghu, a famous scholar in the Qing Dynasty. Together with Lu Shiyi, he was known as the "Erlu". He studied with Cheng Zhu and opposed Wang Shouren's "Zhiliang Theory". The main principle is "judgment and poverty alleviation".
Lu Xinyuan: A native of Wuxing, Zhejiang, he was a bibliophile in the Qing Dynasty. He collected two hundred rare books from the Song Dynasty and became famous all over the world for his collection of books. Author of "Collection of Qianyuan".
Lu Guang: a famous painter of the Yuan Dynasty, a native of Wu.
Lu You: A native of Shanyin, a famous poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. He once served as an official in the imperial court. Politically, he resolutely resisted the Jin Dynasty and advocated enriching armaments. In his later years, he retired to his hometown and his belief in regaining the Central Plains remained unchanged. He wrote many poems in his life, and there are more than 9,000 of them in existence. They are extremely rich in content, expressing political ambitions, reflecting the suffering of people's lives, criticizing the humiliating peace-seeking of the ruling group at that time, with a powerful and bold style, and showing a strong desire to restore national unity. . "Moon over Guanshan", "Book of Anger", "Farmer's Sigh" and "Showing Children" are all masterpieces handed down from generation to generation.
Lu Yu: A native of Jingling, Fuzhou, a famous tea ceremony expert in the Tang Dynasty. He was humorous and wrote behind closed doors. He did not want to be an official. He once made a living by doing odd jobs. He had a deep friendship with the female poet Li Jilan. . His lifelong hobby was drinking tea, and he was the highest authority on tea tasting at that time. Known as the "Tea God".
Lu Xiaofeng: Gu Long’s original fictional character, a legendary person with four eyebrows.
Lu Jia: A famous politician and poet in the Western Han Dynasty. Since the emperor of the Han Dynasty established the world, he often served as a lobbyist on envoys to the princes. He strongly advocated Confucianism and "practice benevolence and righteousness, and the law will prevail first", supplemented by Huang Lao's idea of ??"governing by doing nothing". As a ruling tool of the landlord class, it had a great influence on the politics of the early Han Dynasty.
Lu Xun: A famous general of the Wu Kingdom in the Three Kingdoms. He was good at strategy. He made plans to defeat Guan Yu. He also defeated Liu Bei in the water attack. He was promoted to prime minister due to his outstanding military exploits.
Lu Haodong: (1867-1895) was born in Xiangshan, Guangdong in the late Qing Dynasty. His original name was Zhonggui and his courtesy name was Xianxiang. He first studied telegraph technology in Shanghai and worked as a telegraph translator and foreman. In the 20th year of Guangxu's reign, he accompanied Sun Yat-sen to Tianjin to submit a letter to Li Hongzhang. Then he went south to Wuhan to observe the situation in the Yangtze River Basin. The following year, he and Sun Yat-sen formed the Hong Kong Revival China Association to plan the Guangzhou Uprising. He was arrested for informing and killed unyieldingly.
Lu Deming: (approximately 550-630) A native of Wu in Suzhou in the Tang Dynasty, his name was Yuan Long, and his name was Yuan Long. He is good at talking about mystical principles and is proficient in classics. He served as an official in the Chen and Sui Dynasties, and served as an assistant to the emperor. After entering the Tang Dynasty, he became a bachelor of literature in the Qin Palace and became a doctor of Guozi. With five or six years of effort, he gathered more than 230 scholars of music from the Han, Wei and Six Dynasties, collected exegesis from various Confucian scholars, distinguished the similarities and differences, and examined the origins, and compiled the "Classic Commentary", which was the first of its kind in the Tang Dynasty.
Lu Xiaoman: (1903-1965) Female. A native of Wujin (Changzhou), Jiangsu (born in Shanghai). The nickname is Xiaomei. In 1920, she married Wang Geng at the behest of her parents, but they later divorced due to different interests. In 1926, he married Xu Zhimo. Good at painting and performing Peking Opera. After liberation, he worked at the Shanghai Chinese Painting Academy, the Museum of Literature and History, and as a counselor in the Municipal Counselor's Office. He edited "Ai Mei Xiaozha" and collaborated with Xu on "Bian Kungang". Father Lu Ding.
Lu Dingyi: (1906- ) native of Wuxi, Jiangsu. The pen name is determined. Graduated from Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Joined the Communist Party of China in 1924. He has successively served as Secretary of the District Committee of the *** Youth League, Member of the Central Committee of the League, Director of Propaganda, Member of the Executive Committee of the Youth League of the Youth League, Representative of the *** Youth League in the International of the Youth League of the Youth League, Director of the Propaganda Department of the General Political Department of the Red Army, and Deputy Director of the Political Department of the Eighth Route Army. Director etc. He later served as a member of the Seventh, Eighth and Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, and a standing member of the Central Advisory Committee of the Communist Party of China. Since the 1920s, he has published works in the semi-monthly magazine "Flood", including "Shanghai on May 30th" and so on. Later, he appeared in magazines such as "Literary Position", "Eighth Route Army Military and Political Magazine", "Mass" and other publications, and there were articles such as "Miscellaneous Notes on the Army in Southeast Shanxi".
Lu Li: (1908-1942) was born in Tiantai, Zhejiang. The original name is Kaoyuan and Shengquan. writer. In 1926, he entered Hangzhou Zhijiang University as an undergraduate. In the autumn of the following year, he transferred to the Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Shanghai Labor University, and graduated in 1931. Later, he worked as a physics and chemistry teacher at Quanzhou Civilian Middle School in Fujian Province. He has always liked science and literature. He is proficient in English, French, Japanese, Russian and Esperanto. He devotes himself to translation and writing in his spare time. He founded the Quanzhou Chinese Literature Society with Wu Langxi and others. In 1935, he joined Shanghai Culture and Life Publishing House and was responsible for editorial work together with Ba Jin, Jin Yi, Lini and others. In 1937, he founded the bimonthly "Youth Books" and served as editor-in-chief. When the Pacific War broke out, Zi Qian worked hard and Xin, a student studying abroad in Shanghai, took charge of the work. Later, he was searched by Japanese military police, detained, tortured and died. He is the author of "Starfish", "Bamboo Knife", "Prisoner Elephant", "Collected Prose of Lu Li", and has translated "Grazilla", "Luo Ting", "Smoke", "Greek Mythology", "Robinson Robinson" "Wandering", "Fable Poems", etc.