Ding is the 46th surname in China today. Famous people named Ding in history mainly include: General Ding Gu of Xiang Yu in the late Qin Dynasty, General Ding Fu in the early Han Dynasty, Confucian scholars in the Eastern Han Dynasty, General Wu of the Three Kingdoms, famous scholar Ding Yi of Wei State, General Ding Baozhen of the Tang Dynasty, General Ding of Beiyang Navy, and Governor of Jiangsu Province.
Ding Gong: Yang Shandongyu (now dongxiang county, Shandong Province) was a scholar in the Han Dynasty, and was called a "scholar". He used to be a doctor and a consultant. Later, he was promoted to serving as a waiter, riding a captain, and died in office.
Ding Wei: A native of Changzhou, Suzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), doctor you Jian, an ambassador to three northern provinces of Song Zhenzong, was later promoted to prime minister and was named Duke Jin. Its story of returning to the capital is regarded as a model of the application of ancient "operational research".
Ding Du: Xiangfu (now Kaifeng, Henan Province) was an exegetist in the Northern Song Dynasty, with a bachelor of science degree from Guan Zhi to Duan Mingdian. He co-edited Yun with Li Shu and others, and edited Guang Yun into Ji Yun.
Ding E: Born in Qinghe, Zhou En (now Hebei), he moved to Xiangfu, a famous bibliophile in the Northern Song Dynasty, with a collection of 8,000 volumes.
Ding Lian: A native of Panyu (present-day Guangdong Province), Yuan Feng was a scholar in the Northern Song Dynasty and was Ren Yilang.
Ding Jing: A native of Qiantang (now Hangzhou), Zhejiang Province, was a seal engraver in the Qing Dynasty. He is fond of epigraphy, good at identification, good at poetry and calligraphy, especially at seal cutting. The establishment of the "Zhejiang School" is known as the first of the "Eight Schools of Xiling".
Ding Bing, a native of Qiantang, Zhejiang, was a bibliophile in the late Qing Dynasty. He wrote a collection of rare books, which recorded the precious parts of his collection.
Ding Qian: Renhe, Zhejiang (now Hangzhou), a modern geographer. He is the author of 69 volumes of Penglai Xuan Geography Series.
Ding Ling, a native of Linli, Hunan Province, is a famous modern female writer in China. It is famous for The Diary of Ms. Sha Fei. His novel The Sun Shines on the Sanggan River won the Stalin Prize for Literature. After liberation, he served as the editor-in-chief of Wen Yi Newspaper and the standing committee member of China People's Political Consultative Conference.
Ding Ying: A native of Gaozhou, Guangdong, a modern agronomist and rice expert. He used to be a professor at the Agricultural College of Sun Yat-sen University. After liberation, he served as president of South China Agricultural College and China Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
Daquan Ding: A native of Zhenjiang (now Jiangsu Province) in the Southern Song Dynasty, he was the official to the right, remonstrated, signed a book for the Privy Council, and was the right prime minister.
Ding: Xiuning (now Anhui) was a painter in the Ming Dynasty. He is good at drawing figures, Buddha statues, landscapes and flowers, and writing poems.
Ding: He was born in Yongcheng, Henan Province in the Ming Dynasty.
Ding: A native of Zhucheng, Shandong Province, he was a writer during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. He is the author of the novel Continued Jin Ping Mei.
Ding: A native of the capital, a painter in the Qing Dynasty, is best at figure painting.
Ding: In the early Han Dynasty, he lived in the mountains of Huaiyang and refused to be an official. Emperor gaozu sent a minister to be an official in the imperial court with Shangshan No.4, but Yao Ying was determined not to go. When people say, "The Four Nobles in Shangshan are not as old as Huaiyang!" "