Kong Rong (153-September 26th, 2008), with words and articles. Lu (now Qufu, Shandong) was born. [1] A writer in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, one of the "seven sons of Jian 'an", has a family background, the twentieth grandson of Confucius and the son of Kong Zhou, a captain of Mount Tai.
Kong Rong is rare and diligent, and is known as Tao Chen in the plain. After Emperor Xian of Han acceded to the throne, he served as the commander-in-chief of the northern army, a samurai corps commander and a Beihai officer, and was called Kong Beihai. After six years in office, he built a city, founded a school, promoted talents and showed Confucianism, and later served as the secretariat of Qingzhou. In the first year of Jian 'an (196), Yuan Tan attacked Beihai, and Kong Rong fought fiercely with it for several months, and finally fled to Shandong. Soon, he was recruited by the court, moved to Shaofu, and served as a doctor in Taizhong. A good-natured guest, who likes to discuss current affairs and has fierce words, was later killed for angering Cao Cao.
Kong Rong is good at poetry and writing, and Cao Pi called his writing "Yang () and Ban Gu (Ban Gu) also." The prose is sharp and concise, and the representative work is "Praise Meter Balance Table", and its six-character rhyme reflects the reality of the turmoil in the late Han Dynasty. The original Selected Works has been lost, and Kong Beihai Collection was compiled by Zhang Yan.