The following is a list of Poets who wrote or write much of their poetry in the languages of China.
A
B
- Bai Juyi or Bo Juyi
 - Consort Ban
 - Ban Gu (32–92 A.D.)[1]
 - Bei Dao
 - Bei Ling
 - Bian Zhilin
 
C
- Cai Wenji
 - Cai Yong
 - Cao Cao 曹操
 - Cao Pi
 - Cao Zhi
 - Cen Shen
 - Chen Sanli
 - Chen Yinke
 - Chen Zi'ang
 - Chūgan Engetsu (1300–1375), Japanese poet who wrote in Chinese, a figure in "Japanese Literature of the Five Mountains" (literature in Chinese written in Japan)
 - Cui Hao, Tang dynasty poet
 
D
- Dai Biaoyuan
 - Dai Wangshu
 - Dong Xiaowan
 - Du Fu 杜甫, the "Poet Sage"
 - Du Mu (803-852), Tang poet, official
 - Duo Duo
 
E
F
G
- Gao Qi, Ming dynasty poet
 - Gidō Shūshin
 - Gong Zizhen
 - Gu Cheng
 - Gu Taiqing
 - Guan Daosheng
 - Guo Moruo, poet, historian, archaeologist
 
H
- Hai Zi 海子, modern mystic poet
 - Han Yu 韩愈
 - Han Shan, "Cold Mountain"
 - He Zhizhang
 - Huang Tingjian 黄庭堅 (1045–1105)
 - Huarui Furen
 - Huang Zongxi
 
I
J
- Jao Tsung-I
 - Ji Xian (b. 1903), leading Taiwanese modernist[2]
 - Jia Dao 贾岛
 - Jia Yi
 - Jiang Yan
 
K
L
- Leung Ping-kwan[3]
 - Li E
 - Li Bai (Li Po), the "Poet Immortal"
 - Li He
 - Li Qiao
 - Li Qingzhao
 - Li Shangyin
 - Li Yu (Li Houzhu)
 - Liang Desheng
 - Liang Huang
 - Lin Huiyin
 - Liu Yuxi
 - Liu Zongyuan
 - Lu Guimong
 - Lu Ji
 - Lu You
 - Lu Yu
 - Lu Zhaolin
 - Lu Zhi
 - Luo Binwang
 
M
- Ma Rong
 - Mang Ke
 - Mao Zedong
 - Mei Yaochen, Song dynasty poet
 - Meng Haoran, Tang dynasty poet
 - Mi Heng
 - Mu Dan
 
N
- Natsume Sōseki, Japan's modern composer of Chinese poetry
 - Nalan Xingde
 - Nie Gannu
 
O
P
Q
R
S
- Shangguan Wan'er (上官婉儿)
 - Shen Shanbao (沈善宝)
 - Shen Yue (沈约)
 - Shen Quanqi (沈佺期)
 - Shi Zhi"index finger" (食指,郭路生)
 - Shih-Te, "Pick-Up" (拾得)
 - Shih-wu, "Stonehouse" (石屋)
 - Shivaza Iasyr, wrote in the Dungan (Soviet Hui people) dialect (雅斯尔·十娃子 or 亚瑟尔·十娃子)
 - Shu Ting (舒婷)
 - Sima Xiangru (司马相如)
 - Song Yu (宋玉)
 - Su Shi (苏轼)
 - Su Xiaoxiao (苏小小)
 - Shang Ting (商挺)
 
T
- Tao Qian, also known as Tao Yuanming
 
W
- Wang Anshi
 - Wang Bo
 - Wang Can
 - Wang Changling
 - Wang Rong
 - Wang Wei (Tang dynasty), the "Poet Buddha"
 - Wang Wei (17th-century poet)
 - Wang Yi-Ch'eng, poet
 - Wang Yun (Qing dynasty)
 - Wei Yuan
 - Wei Zhuang
 - Wen Tingyun
 - Wen Yiduo
 - Wu Cheng'en, Ming novelist, poet
 - Wu Jiaji
 - Wu Zao[4]
 
X
Y
Z
- Zhai Yongming
 - Zhang Heng
 - Zhang Hua
 - Zhang Ji (poet from Hubei)
 - Zhang Ji (poet from Jiangnan)
 - Zhang Jiuling
 - Zhang Xu
 - Zhang Yaotiao (Tang courtesan poet)[5]
 - Zhao Luanluan (Yuan dynasty poet)[6]
 - Zhao Luorui
 - Zhang Zhidong
 - Zheng Min
 - Zheng Yunduan
 - Zhu Shuzhen
 - Zhuo Wenjun
 - Zuo Si
 
See also
- Chinese poetry
 - Song Dynasty poets (list)
 - List of Three Hundred Tang Poems poets
 - Tang Dynasty poets (list)
 - List of Chinese authors
 - List of Chinese women writers
 - List of Hong Kong poets
 
Notes
- ↑ Minford, John, and Joseph S. M. Lau, Classical Chinese Literature: An Anthology of Translations, New York: Columbia University Press ISBN 0-231-09676-3 and Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press ISBN 962-201-625-1 , 2000
 - 1 2 Greene, Roland; et al., eds. (2012). "Modern poetry of China". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics (4th rev. ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 232–235. ISBN 978-0-691-15491-6.
 - ↑ "Cha: An Asian Literary Journal - Leung Ping-kwan". Asiancha.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
 - ↑ Barnstone, Tony; Chou, Ping (2010). The Anchor Book of Chinese Poetry: From Ancient to Contemporary. pp. 341–42. ISBN 978-0307481474.
 - ↑ Chang, Kang-i Sun; Saussy, Haun; Kwong, Charles Yim-tze (1999). Women Writers of Traditional China: An Anthology of Poetry and Criticism. p. 79. ISBN 0804732310.
 - ↑ Lee, Lily Xiao Hong; Wiles, Sue (2015). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: Tang Through Ming 618-1644. Vol. II. pp. 899–900. ISBN 978-1317515616.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.