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Luo Zhenyu's children and grandchildren: Luo Fucheng and Luo Jizu

Luo Zhenyu had a good son, and the four sons Fucheng, Fu bao, Fu Chang, and Fu Yi had their own division of research, focusing on "Western Xia Studies", "Dunhuang Studies", "Oracle Bones", and "Ancient Seals", and had unusual achievements in their respective fields.

Luo Fucheng was the eldest son, the character Junmei, born on October 12, 1884, in Luojia Lane, Huai'an. In 1904, he went to Jiangsu Normal Hall, where his father was the president, and later went to Waseda University in Japan for further study. After the Xinhai Revolution in 1911, he lived in Kyoto, Japan, and followed his father to specialize in the ancient chinese national script, in addition to being proficient in Japanese, he was also familiar with the extinct Xixia, Khitan, Jurchen and other ancient scripts, and was the pioneer of Western Xia studies in China. His works include "Interpretation of the Lotus Sutra in Western Xia Translation", "Compilation of Western Xia Guoshu", "Fan Han Heshi Palm Pearl" and so on. In 1919, he returned to China with his father and settled in Tianjin, where he presided over the Yi'an Tang Bookstore, editing, publishing and selling books. In 1928, it moved to Lushunkou, Liaoning. He devoted his life to learning, indifferent to fame and fortune, and did not seek progress. The Japanese and puppet authorities repeatedly lured and coerced high-ranking officials Houlu, but he resolutely refused to comply. After liberation, he worked as a researcher at the Lushun Museum, was arrested and imprisoned in 1957, released three years later, and died shortly after with hatred. In 1981, the Lushunkou District Court of Dalian City re-examined his case and declared it an unjust case, and decided to rehabilitate him.

Luo Jizu was born in Kyoto, Japan in 1913, because he was the eldest grandson of the long house, Luo Zhenyu especially loved him and personally taught him to read and read. "Before the knee, there are reading grandchildren, and the innocent family looks forward to Ru Cun", this is Luo Zhenyu's high hopes for him. He had never entered school, but he was familiar with various classics from the Four Books and the Five Classics to the DonghuaLu, and had studied literature and history, and had made achievements in many fields, especially in the study of philology and the study of Northeast history. At the age of 18, he assisted his grandfather Luo Zhenyu in composing and publishing the "Chronology of the Zhu Zi River". At the age of 26, he wrote the "Survey of the History of Liao", which was engraved with the inscription of the Liao Dynasty epitaph and other nuclear schools, which established an academic status, and he taught at Shenyang Medical University and Kyoto University in Japan. In 1946, he joined the revolution and served as a first-class section member of the Lushun Municipal Education Bureau, responsible for sorting out more than 100,000 books left behind after the ransacking of the Dayun Library in his family, and donating them to the country in the name of his grandmother. Later, he served as a researcher at the Shenyang Museum and a professor in the History Department of Jilin University. Like his father, he despised fame and fortune, and he called his study the "New Four No Jai", which means "no prize", "no competition", "who's who is not listed", and "not subject to advisory titles". After Luo Jizu's death, his family donated more than 5,000 books and some daily necessities to the Dalian Library free of charge according to his last wishes.

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