Huo Qubing, Jin Yuelin, Lin Hejing, Wang Bo, Chen Tianhua.
1. Huo Qubing
Huo Qubing (140 BC - 117 BC), Han nationality, was born in Pingyang, Hedong (now southwest of Linfen, Shanxi). He was a famous general and strategist in the Western Han Dynasty. The nephew of the famous general Wei Qing and the brother of the Grand Sima Huo Guang. In the sixth year of Yuanshou, he died of illness at the age of twenty-four and was buried in Maoling.
2. Jin Yuelin
Jin Yuelin (July 14, 1895 - October 19, 1984), male, named Longsun, native of Zhuji County, Shaoxing City, Zhejiang Province, born in Changsha, Hunan. He combined Western philosophy with Chinese philosophy and established a unique philosophical system. He wrote "On Tao", "Logic" and "Theory of Knowledge". On October 19, 1984, Jin Yuelin passed away at his residence in Beijing at the age of 89.
3. Lin Hejing
Lin Bu (967-1028), courtesy name Junfu, later known as Mr. Hejing and Lin Hejing, Han nationality, from Huangxian Village, Dali, Fenghua, Northern Song Dynasty The famous reclusive poet Lin Bu lived in seclusion on a lonely mountain in the West Lake. He never married or became an official, but he liked to plant plums and raise cranes. He said that he "took plums as his wife and cranes as his sons", and was known as "the plum wife and the crane's son".
4. Wang Bo
Wang Bo (about 650-676), courtesy name Zian, was a Han nationality and a writer in the Tang Dynasty. A native of Longmen, Jiangzhou (today's Hejin, Shanxi), he was born into a Confucian family. Together with Yang Jiong, Lu Zhaolin, and King Luo Bin, he was known as the "King Yang Luluo" and the "Four Heroes of the Early Tang Dynasty". In August of the third year of Shangyuan (676), Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty, when he was returning from Jiaozhi to visit his father, he unfortunately crossed the sea and drowned, and died of panic.
5. Chen Tianhua
Chen Tianhua (1875-December 8, 1905), a modern democratic revolutionary in China, whose original name was Xiansu, also named Xingtai, also named Guoting, alias Sihuang, a native of Lishu Fengyangping, Ronghua Township, Xinhua County, Hunan Province, was one of the founders of the Huaxing Society, a member of the China Tongmenghui, and a revolutionary martyr in the late Qing Dynasty.
In 1905, in order to protest against the "Regulations on Banning International Students of the Qing Dynasty" promulgated by the Japanese government, he angrily jumped into the sea and died for his country in Omori Bay, Tokyo, Japan. He was 30 years old.
Baidu Encyclopedia—Huo Qubing
Baidu Encyclopedia—Jin Yuelin
Baidu Encyclopedia—Lin Bu
Baidu Encyclopedia—Wang Bo
< p>Baidu Encyclopedia—Chen Tianhua