Zhangzhou, a prefecture-level city under the jurisdiction of Fujian Province, is located in the southernmost part of Fujian Province. Zhangzhou's climate belongs to the South Asian tropical marine monsoon climate, with high mountains in the north to block the invasion of cold currents, and marine regulation in the south, and the latitude is low. Near the Tropic of Cancer, the climate is warm, the rainfall is abundant, there is no severe cold in winter, and no heat in summer. In the twenty-fifth year of Qin Shi Huang (222 BC), after "Qin had merged with the world", the ancient land of Minyue was divided into Minzhong County, which belonged to Minzhong County at the time of present-day Zhangzhou, which was the beginning of the official inclusion of the central territory. On December 9, 686, in the second year of Tang Dynasty (686), Zhangzhou was established, and the prefecture was governed by Xilin, which belonged to Lingnan Province, and had jurisdiction over Zhangpu and Huai'en counties.

Wu Yu (吴夲), also known as Dadao Gong (大道公), Wu Zhenren (979-1036 AD), also known as Hua Ji , was a native of Baijiao Village, Jishanli, Tong'an County, Quanzhou Province, Fujian Province, Northern Song Dynasty (now Baijiao Village, Jiaomei Town, Zhangzhou Taiwan Investment Zone). After his death, he was posthumously honored by the imperial court as Dao Zhenren and Baosheng The Great. Baosheng the Great is a long-standing folk belief in Fujian Province. Before his death, he was a good doctor in the world, and countless people benefited from him, his medical skills were brilliant, his medical ethics were noble, and he was famous, and the people called him Wu Zhenren and respected as "divine doctor". Villagers built temples to worship and revere them as the god of medicine. He is the author of the book "Wu Mao Materia Medica". Dedicated to Baosheng Emperor World Ancestral Temple is located in The White Reef Tzu Chi Palace, there are now more than 2,000 temples dedicated to Wu Meng in mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao and Southeast Asia, with nearly 100 million followers, one of the most famous medical gods in Chinese history, Baosheng The Great has become a Taoist deity commonly believed in by the descendants of Wu, one of the ten surnames in Fujian, Southern Fujian, Chaoshan region of Guangdong, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao and Southeast Asia and China.
Lan Dingyuan (1680-1733), the character Yulin, Luzhou, Fujian Zhangpu people. Lan Tingzhen's younger brother, in 1721, he entered Taiwan with Lan Tingzhen, and lived in Taiwan for more than a year after the platform. He went in and out of the military palace, planned military aircraft, handled government affairs, put forward many strategies for governing Taiwan, and was known as "the master craftsman of Taiwan.". The Qing government added Suihua County and tamsui Hall in Taiwan, and Shengpenghu was judged to be a coastal defense tongzhi, adding troops and dividing up troops, mostly from Lan Dingyuan's suggestion. There are "East Collection", "Platform Chronicle", "Luzhou Gong Case", "Women's Studies" and other works. In 1725, he went to the Inner Court School to study and revise the "Great Qing Unification Chronicle". In 1728, he was appointed as the county magistrate of Puningzhi County, Guangdong. In 1732, he was appointed prefect of Guangzhou, and died of illness a month after his appointment.
Cai Xin (1707-1799), also known as Ziming, Geshan, alias Jizhai, was a native of Zhangpu Xiabu (present-day Linxiyuan, Banxialou Village, Da Nan Ban, Zhangpu County). His father died early, his family was poor, and he and his brother helped his widowed mother to farm and earn a salary. When Cai Xin was young, he studied hard, especially liked the Confucian doctrine of the Mandate of Heaven, and was deeply loved by his cousin Cai Shiyuan. In the first year of Qianlong (1736), Dengjin Shidi was elected Hanlin Shujishi. After the library was dissolved, he was awarded the hanlin academy for editing. At that time, the Qianlong Emperor ordered the officials of the History Museum to submit daily lectures on the history of the classics, each expressing their own opinions in order to examine the depth of the foundation of their learning. Cai Xin presented dozens of lecture notes, which were deeply praised.
He Zixiang (1707–1771), courtesy name Xiangxuan, was a native of Pinghe (present-day Yunxiao County, Fujian). In the sixteenth year of the Qianlong Dynasty (1751), he was transferred from Pujiang Zhi County to Pingyang Zhi County in the thirtieth year. At the beginning of his term of office, he and the county ChengXiao duo built Longhu and other academies, Kunyang and other righteous studies, Guanlan and other social studies, and built more than ten social warehouses to prepare for the famine. Dredging the river channels that have been silted up inside and outside the county for more than 100 years (more than 800 zhang of inland rivers and more than 300 zhang of outer rivers), and the appearance of the county town has been changed.
Lin Yutang (October 10, 1895 – March 26, 1976), a native of Longxi (present-day Zhangzhou), Fujian Province, whose original name was Hele, later changed to Yutang and then changed to Yutang, was a famous modern Chinese writer, scholar, translator, linguist, and representative figure of new Taoism. He studied in the United States and Germany in his early years, and received a master's degree in literature from Harvard University and a doctorate in linguistics from Leipzig University. After returning to China, he taught at Tsinghua University, Peking University, and Xiamen University. In 1954, he went to Singapore to establish Nanyang University and served as president. He has served as UNESCO Director of Fine Arts and Literature and Vice-President of the International PEN Club. Lin Yutang was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature twice in 1940 and 1950. He has founded publications such as "Analects", "Human World", and "Cosmic Wind", and his works include the novels "Jinghua Smoke and Clouds" and "Laughing at Nothing". Essays and essays on the feast of life, the art of living, and the translations of Selected Poems of Dongpo and Six Notes of Fusheng. He settled in Taiwan in 1966 and was appointed As a Research Professor at the University of Chinese in Hong Kong in 1967, where he presided over the compilation of the Lin Yu Tang Contemporary Chinese-English Dictionary. He died in Hong Kong on 26 March 1976 at the age of 80.
Su Jing (1910 – November 28, 1997) was a former name of Su Xiaoshun. A native of Haicheng (present-day Longhai), Zhangzhou, Fujian Province. Outstanding members of the Communist Party of China, tried and tested loyal communist fighters, proletarian revolutionaries, outstanding political workers of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and senior generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. He was awarded the rank of lieutenant general in 1955. He was awarded the Order of August 1, 2nd Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the 1st Class, and the Liberation Medal of the First Class.
Lian Heng (February 17, 1878 – June 28, 1936), courtesy name Yunbin, was given the title of Tianzhong( 天承), Zi Yatang (字雅堂), Wu Gong (武公), Jian Hua (武公), Jian Hua (武公), Anderson Mu Tao (慕陶) and Mu Zhen (慕真). A native of Tainan, Taiwan Province, his ancestral home was Longxi County, Zhangzhou Prefecture, Fujian Province, and now Longhai, Zhangzhou. He is the author of "General History of Taiwan", "TaiwanEse Dictionary", "Taiwan Poetry", "Mainland Poetry Grass", "Sword and Flower Room Poetry Collection", etc., and is a famous patriotic poet and historian in Taiwan, and is known as "the first person in Taiwanese culture". During the Kangxi Dynasty of the Qing Dynasty (early 18th century), the seventh ancestor of Lianheng was saddened by the death of the Ming Dynasty, unwilling to submit to Manchu rule, crossed the sea to Taiwan, and chose to live in the Ningnanfang Horse Barracks in tainan, where Zheng Chenggong stationed troops in the quiet environment. The ancestor Lian Nanfu was a famous anti-gold hero.
Zhao Yicheng, the founder of neurosurgery in China, has made significant contributions to the clinical, teaching and scientific research of neurosurgery. He has researched all disciplines in neurosurgery. He was the first in The Country to establish a separate neurosurgery department. He created a special membrane to prevent brain tissue from adhesion to the meninges after craniotomy. He has trained a large number of neurosurgery backbones, so that neurosurgery outlets are spread throughout the country. Zhao Yicheng (1908–1974) was a neurosurgeon. A native of Longxi (present-day Longhai), Fujian. He graduated from Union Medical College in 1934 with a doctorate in medicine. In 1938, he entered the Institute of Neurology in Montreal, Canada. He returned to China in 1940 and was a lecturer at Union Medical College. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as a professor of Tianjin Medical College, the director of the Department of Brain Department of the Affiliated Hospital, the director of the Department of Neurosurgery of Beijing Tongren Hospital, the professor of Beijing Medical College, the director of The Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery, the president of Beijing Xuanwu Hospital, a member of the Medical Science Committee of the Ministry of Health, a vice chairman of the Neuropsychiatric Society of the Chinese Medical Association, a member of the International Society of Surgery and the International Society of Neurosurgery, and an elder member of the Chamber of Commerce of the Canadian Institute of Neurosurgery. He is a deputy to the Second and Third National People's Congresses. He has studied brain injuries, brain tumors, brain abscesses, and brain parasites. He is the chief editor of "Handbook of Neurologic Surgery" and "Handbook of Acute Head Injury".