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Chinese modern celebrities

Modern Chinese celebrities include Cai Yuanpei, Lu Xun, Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao and so on.

Cai Yuanpei, also known as Heqing, also known as Zhongshen, Minyou, and Jiemin. His nickname was Apei. He also had the pseudonyms Cai Zhen and Zhou Ziyu. He was a Han nationality from Shanyin County, Shaoxing, Zhejiang (now Shaoxing, Zhejiang). He was originally from Zhuji, Zhejiang.

Revolutionary, educator, politician.

Democratic progressive, member of the Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang, member of the National Government and president of the Supervisory Yuan.

The first Director-General of Education of the Republic of China, he served as the President of Peking University from 1916 to 1927, innovating the "academic" and "liberal" style of Peking University; from 1920 to 1930, Cai Yuanpei also served as the President of the Sino-French University.

He participated in the struggle against the Qing imperial system in his early years. In the early years of the Republic of China, he presided over the formulation of the first decree on higher education in modern China - the "University Order".

Lu Xun (September 25, 1881 - October 19, 1936), whose original name was Zhou Zhangshou, later changed his name to Zhou Shuren, with the courtesy name Yushan, and later changed to Hecai. "Lu Xun" was the pen name he used when he published "Diary of a Madman" in 1918.

It is also his most widely influential pen name, from Shaoxing, Zhejiang.

Famous writer and thinker, important participant in the May Fourth New Culture Movement, and the founder of modern Chinese literature.

Mao Zedong once commented: "The direction of Lu Xun is the direction of the new culture of the Chinese nation. Kang Youwei (1858-1927), formerly known as Zuyi, with the courtesy name Guangsha and the nickname Changsu, was also named Mingyi, Gengwang and Xiqiaoshan.

, You Cunsou, Tianyouhua, a native of Danzaosu Village, Nanhai County, Guangdong Province, known as Kang Nanhai, was an important politician, thinker, and educator in the late Qing Dynasty in China, and a representative figure of bourgeois reformism. Kang Youwei was born into a feudal bureaucracy.

In the 5th year of Guangxu's reign (1879), Kang Youwei came into contact with Western culture. In the 14th year of Guangxu's reign (1888), Kang Youwei once again went to Beijing to take part in the Shuntian Provincial Examination, and took the opportunity to petition Emperor Guangxu for reform for the first time, but was blocked by Guangxu.

Seventeen years later (1891), Wanmu Thatched Cottage was established in Guangzhou to accept apprentices and give lectures. In the 21st year of Guangxu (1895), he learned that the Treaty of Shimonoseki had been signed, and more than 1,300 people signed a letter with tens of thousands of words, which was called "Gongche".

"Submit a letter". Liang Qichao (February 23, 1873 - January 19, 1929), also known as Zhuoru, Renfu, Rengong, also known as the owner of the Yinbing Room, Yinbingzi, Ai Shike, and the Master of China

Xinmin, Master of Freedom Zhai. He was a thinker, politician, educator, historian, and writer in modern China. He was one of the leaders of the Hundred Days Reform and a representative figure of modern Chinese reformists and neo-Legalists.