Yu Shen Xing
(1545 ~ 1608) was a politician, scholar, poet and writer in the Ming dynasty. During the Wanli period, he served as a minister of rites and a university student of Dongge. Being honest and clean, he was familiar with the laws and regulations of past dynasties and made great contributions to the construction of etiquette system in Ming Dynasty. His literary attainments are also extremely high, and he is known to the world together with Feng Qi. Yu's words are far away and clean. Today, he is from Dong 'e Town, Pingyin County. When he was a teenager, he was intelligent and studious. 17 years old, he took the rural examination in the middle school. On the second day after having obtained the provincial examination, a rural drinking ceremony was held as usual to celebrate the examiner and China's juren. This is the so-called Ming Road Banquet. The examiner attached great importance to Shen Xing, a young genius, and proposed to hold a coronation ceremony (that is, an adult ceremony) for him at the Ming Road banquet. I was politely refused because he didn't obey his father's orders. It was a beautiful conversation for a while. Japanese lecturers used to be senior scholars in imperial academy, and it is extremely rare for Yu to become the emperor's teacher in his twenties.
Throughout his life, he was respected by the ruling and opposition parties for his honest and clean character. He "learned from Chinese and Western cultures, a hundred schools of thought contend, learned from others, focused on the core, but was good at it" (The History of the Ming Dynasty is the original biography, quoted from the next part) (meaning: his knowledge has a foundation, runs through hundreds of schools, he is familiar with laws and regulations, and he remembers the history of laws and regulations in a down-to-earth manner). He learned the etiquette system clearly, and he personally revised the etiquette system in North Korea. His poems, beautiful and fresh, were valued by people at that time and pushed to the peak of Wanli Ci. Zong Shen once praised him and Linqu Fengqi as "the crown of literature". It is of great reference value to the study of precious historical materials in social politics, economy, culture, military affairs and religion in Ming Dynasty. In addition, there are 20 volumes of Poems of Gucheng Mountain Museum and 42 volumes of Manuscripts of Gucheng Mountain Museum, which are now in the Shandong Provincial Library. After returning to China, he cared about the mulberry cause, participated in the reconstruction of Dong 'e County Records, and presided over the compilation of Yanzhou Prefecture Records. In the seventh year of Wanli, he wrote "Rebuilding the Monument of Dongchangfu", in which famous sentences such as "Ten thousand goods converge, Jiangbei is a metropolis" and "The throat of Caowan is the elbow of heaven" have been passed down from generation to generation.
Zhu (1603 ~ 1669) is rich. People in Pingyin, Yanzhou in the early Qing Dynasty. Descendants of Zhu Liangzu, Yongjia Hou of Ming Dynasty. In the sixteenth year of Chongzhen in the Ming Dynasty (1643), he was admitted to the Jinshi. In the early years of Shunzhi in Qing Dynasty, he was recommended by the governor of Qing Dynasty as the director of etiquette department, and moved to Langzhong to study the imperial history of Taoism in Yunnan. Later, he was appointed as Shao Qing of Taibu Temple, Zuoyou Zheng Tong, Zheng Tong of Taichang Temple, Ambassador, Zuoyou Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Industry, and overseer of the renovation of the Qing Palace. After completion, he was promoted to Shangshu of the Ministry of Industry. Begging for mother's illness for more than ten years, devoted himself to studying Zhu Cheng's Neo-Confucianism, and did not manage family property. He wrote to the imperial court many times, talking about governing the country, and advocated the coexistence of laws and ceremonies, the use of five punishments and eight discussions, and the combination of civil and military affairs. He is the author of Shu Shu, Ji Xiao Ji and Ecstasy.