Xu Ziming
This data is missing
Overview chart
, add related content, make data more complete, but also quickly upgrade, come on!
Xu Ziming (? - shortly after 1220), a native of Yongjia, was named Chengfu. In the fifth year of Chunxi (1178) of the Southern Song Dynasty, he was a Jinshi and was appointed as the chief of Fuyang county.
In August of the same year, the National Academy of Education issued a solution, and was appointed as the examination paper officer. In June of 2005, he was a doctor of Guozijian. The next year, he was promoted to Dr. Taichang, and then he was released. Eight years later, he returned to the office of general judge of Changzhou and transferred to the court. In December of the 10th year, he served as governor of Yongzhou until the 13th year. He died soon after his resignation. Lu Zengxiang's volume 92 "inscription on Wuxi" in the supplement and correction of eight Qiong rooms' gold and stone was collected from the stone carving poems of Ren Nei in Yongzhou of Ming Dynasty. His posthumous works include the book of rites, Fu Guang Tu Zhi, Ling Ling Zhi and the chronicle of song Zaifu. Annals of 20 volumes, from the first year of Jianlong (960) in the Northern Song Dynasty to the eighth year of Jiading (1215) in the Southern Song Dynasty, is prefaced by Chen Fang of Pingyang, a scholar of Duanming palace and a minister of the Ministry of officials. In the fourth year of Baoyou (1256), it was published by his son Xu Juyi as a magistrate in Fuzhou. It is an important material for the study of Song History and can be called a masterpiece handed down from the world.
Chinese PinYin : Xu Zi Ming
Xu Ziming