List of people from Suzhou
This is an incomplete list of notable people who were born, were raised or lived in the Chinese city of Suzhou, or for whom Suzhou is a significant part of their identity.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
List
- Politicians
- Lu Xun (陆逊) (183–245) military general and politician of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms era
- Lu Kang (陆抗) (226–274) military general of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms era,the son of Lu Xun (Three Kingdoms)
- Lu Jianzhi(陆柬之)(585-638)
- Lu Wan(陆贽)
- Fan Zhongyan (范仲淹) (989-1052) politician and literary figure in Song dynasty
- Shen shixing(申时行)
- Weng Tonghe (翁同龢) (1830–1904) Chinese Confucian scholar and imperial tutor of the Tongzhi and Guangxu emperors in the late Qing dynasty
- Feng Jun (冯钧)
- Yen Chia-kan (嚴家淦) (1905-1993), President (1975-1978), Republic of China
- Qian Dajun (钱大钧), General
- Jin Renqing (金人庆) Minister of Finance
- Yuan Weimin (袁伟民) Chinese sports administrator
- Poets and writers
- Lu Ji (Shiheng) (陆机) (261–303) writer and literary critic of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period,the son of Lu Kang and grandson of Lu Xun (Three Kingdoms)
- Bai Juyi (白居易) (772–846) was a Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty. His poems mostly concern his responsibilities as governor of several small provinces. He is also renowned in Japan (where his name is read Hakkyo'i, はっきょい).
- Fan Chengda (范成大) (1126-1193 AD)
- Qian Qianyi (钱谦益) (1582–1664) late Ming official, scholar,poet and social historian,and along with Gong Dingzi and Wu Weiye was known as one of the Three Masters of Jiangdong (Chinese:江左三大家)
- Ye Shengtao (叶圣陶) (1894 — 1988) Writer, educator and publisher
- Yu Yue(俞樾)(1821.12.25-1907.2.5)
- Yu Pingbo (俞平伯) (1900–1990) Writer, historian and critic
- Gu Jiegang (顾颉刚) (1893–1980) Historian
- Lu Wenfu(陆文夫) (1927-2005) Novelist and short story writer
- Su Tong (苏童) (1963 -) Writer
- Playwrights
- Feng Menglong (冯梦龙) (1574-1645 AD) vernacular writer and poet of the late Ming Dynasty
- Zhang Yu (张裕)
- Zhang Rong (张融)
- Zhang Xu (张旭)
- Zhang Sengyou (张僧繇) famous Chinese painter in Liang Dynasty
- Shen Zhou (沈周) Painter and poet of the Ming Dynasty,the founder of Wu School (Chinese: 吴门画派),one of Four Masters of the Ming Dynasty
- Tang Yin (唐寅) Painter, calligrapher,and poet of the Ming Dynasty,better known by his courtesy name Tang Bohu (Chinese:唐伯虎)
- Zhu Zhishan (祝允明) Painter, calligrapher
- Wen Zhengming (文徵明) Painter and poet of the Ming Dynasty,the founder of Wu School (Chinese: 吴门画派),one of Four Masters of the Ming Dynasty
- Wen Peng (文彭) (1498-1573 AD) Painter,the son of Wen Zhengming
- Wen Jia (文嘉) (1501-1583 AD) Painter,Calligrapher
- Cai Yu (蔡羽) (?-1541 AD) Calligrapher
- Wen Zhenheng (文震亨) (1585-1645 AD) Painter
- Kuai Xiang (蒯祥) (1397-1481 AD) Architect and Engineer who is the designer of the Forbidden City.
- I. M. Pei (贝聿铭) (1917- ) Architect
- Scientists and engineers
- Tsung-Dao Lee (李政道) Physicist
- Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄) Physicist
- Zhang Guangdou (张光斗) Expert on Water Conservancy and Hydroelectric Engineering
- Wang Ganchang (王淦昌) Physicist
- M. T. Cheng (程民德) Mathematician
- An Wang (王安) Computer Engineer and Inventor
- Yang Jiachi (杨嘉墀) Space Automatic Control Scientist
- Cheng Kaijia (程开甲) Physicist
- Feng Duan (冯端) Physicist
- Pan Chengdong (潘承洞) Mathematician
- Thomas Dao (1921–2009), physician who developed breast cancer treatment alternatives.[1]
- Fei Xiaotong (费孝通) Social Scientist
- Huston Smith Religious studies scholar
- Gu Yanwu (顾炎武)
- Zhang Taiyan (章太炎)
- Entertainment
- Fei Mu (费穆) Movie director
- Wu Yonggang (吴永刚) Movie director
- Josephine Siao (萧芳芳) Actress
- Xia Meng (夏梦) Actress
- Carina Lau (刘嘉玲) Actress
- Li Shaohong (李少红) Movie director
- Others
- Huang Peilie (黄丕烈) Bibliophile
- Sun Tzu (孙武) Military General who wrote The Art of War (birthplace disputed)
- Lin Zhao (林昭) Dissident
References
- ↑ Hevesi, Dennis. "Dr. Thomas Dao, Expert on Treatment of Breast Cancer, Dies at 88", The New York Times, 25 July 2009. Accessed 26 July 2009.
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