Jun Chen in the Tang Dynasty was born in Tangquan Village, Yongtai County, Fujian Province (now Tangcheng Village, Wu Tong Town, Yongtai County). Fujian Yongtai county records that he was born in 88 1 and died in 1324 at the age of 443. The Republic of China edition of Miscellaneous Notes on County Records reads impressively under the column: Chen Junsheng was born in Tang Xizong and died in Dingjiazi, Thailand. This is the oldest person ever found on record. Liu, a famous monk in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, was born in 526 AD and died in 8 16. He is the oldest person in China, living 290 years. The Summary of Biographies of Celebrities in Past Dynasties records that monk Zhao Hui lived for 290 years. The year of birth and death of Zhao Hui, a monk, is clearly recorded in Chronology of Birth and Death of Monks in Past Dynasties: "Zhao Hui, male, was born in 526 and died in 8 15 at the age of 290. This is clearly recorded and should be true.
Li Qingyuan was born in the 18th year of Qing Emperor Kangxi (1679) and died in the 24th year of the Republic of China (1935) at the age of 257. He was originally from Yunnan, and settled in Kaixian County, Sichuan Province in his 90s, with many children. Because of his extraordinary attainments and achievements in traditional Chinese medicine, especially in health care and fitness, he is known as the "immortal". When he was 250 years old, his fellow countryman Mr. Liu Chengxun interviewed him specially. Li Qingyun married 24 wives in his life, and all his children were plump. It has been recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records, and it must have been strictly researched.
Wupu was born in Guangling (now Jiangdu County, Jiangsu Province) in the Han Dynasty. He is a disciple of the famous doctor Hua Tuo. Good at medical skills, specializing in materia medica and health preservation. Upp studied Hua Tuo's "Wu Qin Xi" and insisted on exercising. He is over 90 years old, but his teeth are strong and his eyes and ears are smart. He has lived for more than 200 years.
Leng Qian, whose real name is Jing, was born in Wulin (now Pingnan County, Guangxi) and was a famous health care scientist in Ming Dynasty. According to Ming History, he lived for more than one hundred and fifty years, and wrote the book Essentials of Aging.