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Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words

Zhu Zhifan (1575–1624), courtesy name Yuansheng (元升), was a Ming Dynasty minister and calligrapher. In the twenty-third year of the Wanli Dynasty (1595), he was the right attendant of the official final ceremonial department, and was ordered to send an envoy to Korea. Later, he died as a mother and did not return to the throne. Gong calligraphy, good at painting landscapes and flowers, handed down works such as "Junzi Lin Tu Scroll", and other anthologies have been handed down.

During the Ming Dynasty, the plaque "Ying'en Gate" inscribed by Zhu Zhifan for the Ying'en Gate of the Joseon Dynasty is now in the National Museum of Korea.

Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words
Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words
Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words
Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words
Zhu Zhifan (朱之蕃) is a poem of seven words

Knowledge: Enguang Yishi Dai Yao Tian, more envious of the Scriptures Xiang Xian. The melon is rich in roots and morals, and there is little hanging on to Li Kui. YuShan is beautiful and floating high, and the sea is bright and the xia is colored. The wheel re-rhymes far away, before the cloud ballad continuation rope. Wanli Xinhai (1611) Summer Zhu Zhifan.