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Introduction and examples of celebrities named Ding

Brief introduction of people named Ding in the past dynasties

The surname Ding is the 46th most common surname in China today. The main celebrities named Ding in history are as follows: Ding Gu, a general under Xiang Yu in the late Qin Dynasty, Ding Fu, a general in the early Han Dynasty, Ding Gong, a classics scholar in the Eastern Han Dynasty, Ding Feng, a general in the Wu State during the Three Kingdoms period, Ding Yi, a famous scholar in the Wei State, and Ding Gong, Taichang Qing in the Tang Dynasty. , Qing Dynasty general Ding Baozhen, Beiyang Navy Admiral Ding Ruchang, Jiangsu Governor Ding Richang, etc.

Ding Gong: A native of Dongmin, Shanyang (now east of Jinxiang County, Shandong Province), he was a scholar in the Han Dynasty and was known as a great Confucian at that time. He once served as an admonishing doctor and a doctor. Later he was promoted to the rank of Shizhong Jijiu and Cavalry Captain, and he died in office.

Ding means: A native of Changzhou, Suzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), Zhenzong of the Northern Song Dynasty served as the official Youjianyi and the third envoy of Quan. He was later promoted to prime minister and was named the Duke of Jin. The story of his restoration of the capital is revered as a model for the application of "operations research" in ancient times.

Ding Du: A native of Xiangfu (now Kaifeng, Henan), he was a literary exegesis expert in the Northern Song Dynasty and became a bachelor of Duanming Palace. He once published and revised "Yun Lue" with Li Shu and others, and also revised "Guang Yun" into "Ji Yun".

Ding Yi: His ancestral home is Qinghe, Enzhou (now part of Hebei Province). He later moved to Xiangfu. He was a famous bibliophile in the Northern Song Dynasty. He collected 8,000 volumes of books.

Ding Lian: A native of Panyu (today's Guangdong Province), he was a Jinshi during the Yuanfeng period of the Northern Song Dynasty and served as the imperial minister.

Ding Jing: A native of Qiantang (now Hangzhou), Zhejiang, he was a seal engraver in the Qing Dynasty. He liked epigraphic characters and was good at identification. He was good at poetry, calligraphy and painting, and was especially good at engraving. He founded the "Zhejiang School" and was known as Known as the first of the "Eight Families of Xiling".

Ding Bing: A native of Qiantang, Zhejiang Province, he was a bibliophile in the late Qing Dynasty. He wrote the Book Collection of the Rare Book Room, which recorded the precious parts of his collection.

Ding Qian: a native of Renhe, Zhejiang Province (now Hangzhou City), a modern geographer. He is the author of sixty-nine volumes of "Penglaixuan Geography Series".

Ding Ling: a native of Linli, Hunan Province, a famous modern female writer in China. Famous for "The Diary of Ms. Sophie". His novel "The Sun Shines on the Sanggan River" won the Stalin Prize for Literature. After liberation, he served as editor-in-chief of "Literary Newspaper" and member of the Standing Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.

Ding Ying: A native of Gaozhou, Guangdong Province, a modern agronomist and rice expert. He once served as a professor at the School of Agriculture, Sun Yat-sen University. After liberation, he successively served as president of South China Agricultural College and president of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.

Ding Daquan: A native of Zhenjiang (now part of Jiangsu Province) in the Southern Song Dynasty, he served as an official to the right to advise, sign letters to the Privy Council, and become the right prime minister.

Ding Yunpeng: A native of Xiuning (now part of Anhui Province), he was a painter of the Ming Dynasty. He was good at painting figures, Buddhist statues, landscapes, and flowers, and could also write poems.

Ding Qirui: A native of Yongcheng, Henan Province in the Ming Dynasty, he served as Minister of the Ministry of War.

Ding Yaokang: A native of Zhucheng, Shandong Province, a writer of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. He is the author of the novel "Continuing the Plum in the Golden Vase" and so on.

Ding Guanpeng: A native of the capital (now Beijing), he was a Qing Dynasty painter who was best at figure painting.

Ding Ying Yao: In the early Han Dynasty, he lived in seclusion in the mountains of Huaiyang and did not want to become an official. Emperor Gaozu of the Han Dynasty sent a minister to invite him and Shangshan Sihao to serve as officials in the imperial court, but Ying Yao refused to go.

People at that time said: "The four bright spots in Shangshan are not as good as the one in Huaiyang!"