Liu Yong 劉墉 | |
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Grand Secretary of the Tiren Hall | |
In office 1797–1805 | |
Assistant Grand Secretary | |
In office 1783–1789 | |
Minister of Personnel | |
In office 1792–1797 Serving with Jin Jian (until 1795), Baoning (since 1795) | |
Preceded by | Sun Shiyi |
Succeeded by | Shen Chu |
In office 1783–1789 Serving with Umitai (until 1784), Heshen (1784–1786), Fuk'anggan (since 1786) | |
Preceded by | Cai Xin |
Succeeded by | Peng Yuanrui |
Minister of Rites | |
In office 1791–1792 Serving with Changqing | |
Preceded by | Ji Yun |
Succeeded by | Ji Yun |
Minister of Works | |
In office 1782–1783 Serving with Cokto | |
Preceded by | Luo Yuanhan |
Succeeded by | Jin Jian |
Viceroy of Zhili (acting) | |
In office 1783–1783 | |
Preceded by | Yuan Shoutong |
Succeeded by | Liu E |
Personal details | |
Born | 1719 Shandong, Qing China |
Died | 1805 (aged 85–86) Beijing, Qing China |
Parent |
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Occupation | Politician, calligrapher |
Courtesy name | Chongru (崇如) |
Art name | Shi'an (石庵) |
Posthumous name | Wenqing (文清) |
Liu Yong (simplified Chinese: 刘墉; traditional Chinese: 劉墉; pinyin: Liú Yōng; 1719–1805) was a Chinese politician and calligrapher of the Qing dynasty.[1]