Weng Fang-kang
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Weng Fang-kang
Summary
Weng Fang-kang is a human[1]. He was born on January 1, 1733[2]. He died on January 1, 1818[3]. He worked as a calligrapher[4], poet[5], and epigrapher[6]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- Weng Fang-kang was born on January 1, 1733[2].
- Weng Fang-kang died on January 1, 1818[3].
- A child of Weng Fang-kang was Weng Shuduan[8].
- A child of Weng Fang-kang was Wen Shuyu[9].
- A child of Weng Fang-kang was Weng Shupei[10].
- Weng Fang-kang held citizenship in Qing dynasty[11].
- Weng Fang-kang is identified as part of the Han Chinese people ethnic group[12].
- Weng Fang-kang worked as a calligrapher[4].
- Weng Fang-kang worked as a poet[5].
- Weng Fang-kang's professions included epigrapher[6].
- Weng Fang-kang's field of work was clerical script[13].
- Weng Fang-kang's field of work was epigraphy[14].
- Weng Fang-kang's field of work was kaozheng[15].
- Weng Fang-kang held the position of Shujishi of Qing dynasty[16].
- Weng Fang-kang was influenced by Ouyang Xun[17].
- Weng Fang-kang was influenced by Yu Shinan[18].
- Weng Fang-kang is recorded as male[19].
- Weng Fang-kang's instance of is recorded as human[20].
- Weng Fang-kang's ancestral home is recorded as Daxing County[21].
- Weng Fang-kang's Commons category is recorded as Weng Fanggang[22].
- Weng Fang-kang earned the academic degree of jinshi[23].
- Weng Fang-kang's family name is recorded as Weng[24].
- Weng Fang-kang's described by source is recorded as Qingdai Xuezhe Xiangzhuan[25].
- Weng Fang-kang's described by source is recorded as Seven Hundred Eminent People of the Qing Dynasty[26].
- Weng Fang-kang's described by source is recorded as Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Weng Fang-kang was born on January 1, 1733[2]. He is identified as part of the Han Chinese people ethnic group[12].
Education
Weng Fang-kang earned the academic degree of jinshi[23].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include calligrapher[4], poet[5], and epigrapher[6]. Fields of work include clerical script[13], a Chinese script style[28], in Eastern Zhou[29], founded in 0207[30]; epigraphy[14], an archaeological sub-discipline[31]; and kaozheng[15], a school of thought[32], in Qing dynasty[33]. Weng Fang-kang held the position of Shujishi of Qing dynasty[16].
Personal Life
Children include Weng Shuduan[8], a student[34], of Qing dynasty[35]; Wen Shuyu[9]; and Weng Shupei[10].
Death and Burial
Weng Fang-kang died on January 1, 1818[3].
Why It Matters
Weng Fang-kang ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[7] He is known by 86 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]
FAQs
What did Weng Fang-kang do for work?
Weng Fang-kang worked as calligrapher[4], poet[5], and epigrapher[6].