The establishment and evolution of the Han Dynasty was in Luyang County, belonging to Nanyang County and the later Han Dynasty. Wei and Jin dynasties remain unchanged. In the Northern Wei Dynasty, Taihe County was renamed Rishan North, Luyang was reduced to a town, Jingzhou was established in the 18th year (494), and Luyang County was established as Xuanba County. In the second year of Yong 'an (529), the capital was moved to Guangzhou, with a large jurisdiction, equivalent to the Qing Dynasty's Ruzhou Zhili, Nanyang, Runing and other places. The following week changed to Riluzhou, and the county was Rilushan. Later, the state was abolished repeatedly, and the county remained unchanged. Ruzhou belonged to it for a long time, and it was changed to Nanyang House in the early Ming Dynasty. In the second year of Chenghua (1466), it was ruled by Ruzhou and was later cleaned up. At the beginning of the Republic of China, it belonged to Heluo Road and was directly under the provincial administration. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, it belongs to Xuchang District and is open to 65438.
The ambition of repairing the magistrate of a county can be traced back to Liu's Biography of Guangzhou Sages in the Northern Wei Dynasty. Although this does not refer to Luyang, it seems to be the main part of the book as a place of governance. Liu Fang was born in Pengcheng (now Xuzhou City, Jiangsu Province) and worked as a toast in imperial academy. Xuzhou is in the middle. The Book of Wei was circulated. In the Ming dynasty, the official revised it again: Jiajing revised it for the first time, and the original publication still existed. After being photocopied by Shanghai Ancient Books Bookstore, it was widely circulated. Wanli revised two books. However, it was lost in the 20th year of Wanli (1592). What Wang Shitu revised in the County Lessons Order was recorded in the Catalogue of Pavilion Books and the Catalogue of Ganqingtang.
It was written by Luo Xiu, a magistrate of a county. Chen Ying, a native of Wuhu, South Zhili, took office on an unknown date. Shilong Cangzhou (now Cangxian County, Hebei Province) in North Zhili paid tribute and took office in Shunzhi for ten years (1653). He inherited Kangxi. Both Gan Long and Jiaqing; During the Daoguang period, there were only two volumes of records compiled by Zheng Luan in Shanghai Library. In Ming and Qing Dynasties, there were eight kinds of local chronicles in this county. Today, only five kinds are left, and three kinds are lost. The second is Ming history, and the first is Qing history. "Guangzhou Sage Biography" was not only lost early, but also should not be counted as county annals, which was mentioned by the way above. To show the relationship with the county.