Fudan University, located in Shanghai, is a national key university directly under the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China and directly managed by the central government, a world-class university construction university (Category A), a national "985 Project" and "211 Project" key construction university, and is a world-renowned and domestic top comprehensive research university. Fudan University, formerly known as Fudan Public School, founded in 1905, is one of the earliest non-governmental institutions of higher learning in China. After the reorganization of faculties in 1952, the school became a comprehensive university focusing on basic teaching and research in arts and sciences. Shanghai Medical University, formerly known as the Fourth National Sun Yat-sen University School of Medicine, founded in 1927, is the first national higher medical college independently founded by Chinese. In 2000, Fudan University merged with Shanghai Medical University to form the new Fudan University. Today, we have counted the eight most representative presidents of Fudan University, and they have made contributions to Peking University that cannot be ignored, do you know which of them?
<h1 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > Ma Xiangbo – principal term (1905-1906; 1910-1912).</h1>

Ma Xiangbo (April 7, 1840 – November 4, 1939), formerly known as Ma Zhide, holy name Joseph, also known as Qinshan, Jianchang, Shaoliang, Zi Sizang, also spelled Xiangbo, Xiangbo, Qianbo, in character lines, don't sign me, late Huafeng Old Man. Born in Danyang, Jiangsu, born in Majia Village, Danyang (now Danyang, Jiangsu), he is a famous Chinese educator, the founder and first principal of Aurora University, Fudan University, Fudan Middle School, Xiangming Middle School, patriot, and doctor of Jesuit theology. Outstanding educator Cai Yuanpei, senior official of the Republic of China Yu Youren, and Shao Lizi were his disciples. Later generations have "Collected Writings of Mr. Ma Xiangbo". His former residences include Danyang, Dantu, Shanghai Xujiahui, Songjiang Sijing and other places. The cemetery is located in the Shanghai Soong Ching Ling Mausoleum.
<h1 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > Yan Fu – Principal Term (1906-1907).</h1>
Yan Fu (January 8, 1854 – October 27, 1921), male, formerly known as Zong Guang, Zi Youling, later renamed Fu, Zi Dao, Han ethnicity, a native of Houguan County, Fujian Province, a very influential bourgeois Enlightenment thinker in modern times, a famous translator, educator, and representative figure of the new jurist. He graduated from the Fujian School of Shipping Administration and the Royal Naval Academy, and served as the general office of the Tang Translation Bureau of Beijing Normal University, the president of Shanghai Fudan Public School, the president of Anqing Higher Normal School, and the editor-in-chief of the Qing Dynasty Academy. During his teaching at the Beiyang Marine Division School founded by Li Hongzhang, he trained the first batch of naval talents in modern China, translated the "Theory of Heavenly Speech" and founded the "National News Daily", systematically introduced Western democracy and science, publicized the idea of reform and reform, and introduced Western sociology, political science, political economy, philosophy, and natural science to China. He has published the Complete Works of Yan Fu.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Lee Teng-hui</h1>
Lee Teng-hui (1872-1947), a famous educator in modern China, the old president of Fudan University (1913-1936), a native of Tong'an, Fujian Province, was born on the Dutch island of Java (now Indonesia), the seventh generation of Chinese in Indonesia, graduated from Yale University in the United States. He has trained many students for Fudan University, of which at least twenty-six are the presidents of the university, which is unique in the history of modern and contemporary education in China, and it is also extremely rare in the history of education in the world.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Zhang Zhirang</h1>
Zhang Zhirang (December 28, 1893 – April 26, 1978) was a famous contemporary Chinese jurist and legal educator. A native of Wujin County, Jiangsu Province. In his early years, he studied at Fudan Public School, then studied at Columbia University in the United States, and after returning to China, he served as the chairman of the school council of Fudan University, and a professor at Peking University and Soochow University. Zhang Zhirang actively participated in the torrent of the anti-imperialist and anti-feudal revolution and was a ardent patriotic and democratic volunteer. After the "918" incident in 1931, he actively participated in the anti-Japanese rescue activities and waged an indomitable struggle to rescue the patriots Shen Junru, Zou Taofen and other "seven gentlemen". After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Zhang Zhirang served as the chairman of the University Council of Fudan University, participated in the first plenary session of the Chinese Political Consultative Conference, was elected as a deputy to the First, Second, Third and Fourth National People's Congresses, held various leading positions in the National People's Congress and the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, and served as vice president of the Supreme People's Court and vice president of the China Political and Legal Society.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Chen Wangdao</h1>
Chen Wangdao (January 1891 – October 29, 1977), male, Han Ethnicity, member of the Communist Party of China, native of Yiwu, Zhejiang, educator and linguist. Chen Wangdao was the first translator of the Chinese complete translation of the Communist Manifesto, actively advocated the New Culture Movement, served as the editor of New Youth, and taught at Fudan University from 1927. After 1949, he actively supported the reform of writing and the promotion of Putonghua, engaged in cultural education and language research all his life, and was elected as a member of the Faculty of Philosophy Chinese and Social Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1955. He is the chief editor of "Cihai", and the author of "Rhetoric", "Brief Theory of Grammar", "Innovation of Punctuation" and so on. He was the president of Fudan University, a member of the Faculty of Philosophy and Social Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the chairman of the Shanghai Federation of Philosophy and Social Sciences. He is a deputy to the Second, Third and Fourth National People's Congresses, a member of the Standing Committee of the Fourth National People's Congress, a member of the Standing Committee of the Third and Fourth National Political Consultative Conferences, a vice chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a vice chairman of the Central Committee of the China Democratic League, and a chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Committee of the China Democratic League.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Su Buqing</h1>
Su Buqing (September 23, 1902 – March 17, 2003), a native of Pingyang, Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, was an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a famous mathematician and educator in China, the founder of the Chinese school of differential geometry, and was known as "the splendid mathematical star in the Eastern Kingdom", "the first geometrist in the East" and "the king of mathematics".
He graduated from the Department of Mathematics of Tohoku Imperial University in Japan in 1927, received his Doctor of Science degree from the university in 1931, was elected academician of academia sinica in 1948, was elected as a member of the Faculty of Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1955, joined the Communist Party of China in 1959, and after 1978 served as president of Fudan University, director of the Institute of Mathematics, honorary president and professor of Fudan University. Since 1927, he has published more than 160 mathematical papers at home and abroad, published more than 10 monographs, founded the internationally recognized school of differential geometry of Zhejiang University, and his research on the geometry and projective curves of "K exhibition space".
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Sheheed</h1>
Xie Xide (March 19, 1921 – March 4, 2000), a native of Quanzhou, Fujian Province, was a solid state physicist, educator, social activist, member of the Faculty of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (academician), academician of the Third World Academy of Sciences, former president of Fudan University, and former president of Shanghai Shanda University. In 1946, after graduating from the Department of Mathematics and Physics of Xiamen University, Sheaid entered Shanghai Hujiang University to teach; in 1947 she went to the United States to study at Smith College; after obtaining a master's degree in 1949, she transferred to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to specialize in theoretical physics; after obtaining a doctorate in 1951, she planned to return to China; in 1952, she returned to China after taking a detour to The United Kingdom and was assigned to the Department of Physics of Fudan University in Shanghai as a professor; in 1956, she was transferred by the State Council to Peking University to jointly establish a semiconductor professional group; and in the summer of 1958, Sheheed was transferred back to Fudan University He participated in the Institute of Technical Physics jointly sponsored by the University and the Shanghai Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and served as the deputy director of the Institute; in 1980, he was elected as a member of the Department of Mathematics and Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, in 1981 he received honorary doctorates from Smith College and New York College in the United States; in January 1983, he became the president of Fudan University; in 1989, he was elected as an academician of the Third World Academy of Sciences; in 1990, he was elected as a foreign academician of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; and in 1997 he became the president of Shanghai Shanda College He died in Shanghai on March 4, 2000, at the age of 79.
< h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Yang Fujia</h1>
Yang Fujia, originally from Zhenhai, Zhejiang, was born in Shanghai on June 11, 1936, 25 years after the Republic of China ,1936) is a nuclear physicist and educator, a member of the Faculty of The Chinese Academy of Sciences (academician), an academician of the International Eurasian Academy of Sciences, an academician of the Academy of Sciences for Developing Countries, a professor of Fudan University, and an honorary dean of Shanghai Jianqiao College. After graduating from the Department of Physics of Fudan University in 1958, Yang Fujia stayed on to teach at the university; in 1960, he served as the deputy director of the Department of Atomic Energy of Fudan University; from 1963 to 1965, he was a postdoctoral researcher at the Nils Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark; in 1980, he was promoted to professor of physics at Fudan University; from 1987 to 2001, he was the director of the Shanghai Institute of Nuclear Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences; in 1991, he was elected as a member of the Faculty of Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and an academician of the Academy of Sciences of Developing Countries From 1993 to 1999, he served as the President of Fudan University, from 1997 to 1999, he served as the Founding President of the China University Presidents Association, from 2001 he served as the President (Superintendent) of the University of Nottingham, becoming the first resident Chinese to serve as the President of a well-known institution in the United Kingdom; and founded and served as the President of the University of Nottingham Ningbo China in 2004.