Yan Fu (1854 65438+October 8th - 1921 65438+October 27th), original name, real name Ling, later changed to Fu, first name, Han nationality, Fujian Yihouguan (later merged into Min County , called Minhou, today's Fuzhou). He once served as the director of the Translation Bureau of Shijing University, the president of Fudan University in Shanghai, the president of Anqing Normal University, and the editor-in-chief of the Qing Pronouns Museum. He was an influential bourgeois enlightenment thinker, translator, and educator in the late Qing Dynasty. He was one of the "advanced Chinese" who sought truth from Western countries in modern Chinese history.
Lin Zexu (August 30, 1785 - October 22, 1850), a native of Houguan, Fujian (now Fuzhou City), with the courtesy name Mu, was known as the old man in the village. He retired to the village in his later years. Retreat from the seventy-two peaks.
Xu Lin, a reformer in the late Qing Dynasty, was one of the Six Gentlemen of 1898. His posthumous works include "Wan Cuixuan Collection".
Lin Juemin (1887-1911) was a native of Minhou, Fujian. Lin Juemin is a revolutionary martyr who worships the theory of freedom and equality, devotes himself to the country, and establishes peace in order to get rid of tyranny. Lin Juemin's "Book of Accompanying My Wife" is an influential work in the history of modern Chinese prose. He, He and Lin, who were born and died in the same year when the Republic of China was founded, said that when Huang was a young hero, he accepted the ideas of democratic revolution and advocated the theory of freedom and equality.