|
|
Fang,
Ching-Yun |
Wu,
Shuang-Shih |
Lu,
Che |
Lu,
Chu |
Lin,
Chia-Yu |
Lin,
Sung-Tzu |
Tu,
Lien-Hsi |
Chang,
Chao-Chi |
Chang,
Chi-Feng |
Chang,
Jung-Fa |
Chang,
Yin |
Chen,
Ta-Yeh |
Chen,
Yung-Tien |
Yeh,
Piao |
Cheng,
Chen-Ta |
Hsiao,
Jung-huang |
Hsieh,
Cheng-Chiang |
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name¡G |
Chen,
Ta-Yeh |
sex¡G |
Male |
anonymity¡G |
Tzu
Chien-Kung |
|
date of birth¡G |
The end
of Ching dynasty. Date of birth unknown |
date of death¡G |
Date of
death unknown |
place of birth¡G |
Chitou
village, Baisha towanship, Penghu county |
place of activity¡G |
Penghu
County¡BBaisha
towanship |
category¡G |
Historical figure |
educational background¡G |
Traditional private school |
experience¡G |
Advocated to rebuilding lecture rooms/ advocated to respect to words
and burning handwriting / conciliate local affairs |
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contribution¡G |
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|
Chen
lost his father since childhood, and served his mother with
filial piety that every drink and food was made with all
sincerity for more than 20 years that were just like a day. He
was studious and especially gave a great emphasis on the
reorganization for academies of classical learning. He once
asked local official to move Chief Star Story to the Southeast,
started to advocate to rebuilding lecture rooms, to make the
greatest tables, to donate money to offer sacrifices to gods or
ancestors and to burn handwriting on a chosen date. Whenever
TingShan residents had quarrels for small things, he could solve
it immediately with one word. His son, Kuei Lin, was talented
and good at manufacturing instruments for a fiesta in honor of a
deity. He had 4 handmade plain suffixes that are wonderful and
unsurpassed |
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