Who is Kai Tak, Essien Choro?

1, Aisingiorro Kai Tak, the eighth grandson of Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty, is a descendant of Prince Yong Xun. He has been proficient in poetry, painting and calligraphy since childhood. He is an active young painter and a master of the Book of Changes, and his judgment on geomantic numerology is quick and accurate.

2. Profile of people

Aisingiorro Jinyong, the ancestor of Kai Tak, was the 11th son in the 14th year of Qianlong (1789). Prince Cheng Yong Xun is famous for his calligraphy. There is a record in Volume II of Miscellaneous Notes written by Prince Li: "A king who is afraid of his filial piety is the eleventh son of the Qing emperor. Good at calligraphy, holding a pen when he was young, that is, writing, young worker Zhao. I also tasted that an internal supervisor of Kangxi said that Dong still held a pen when his teacher was young, but he used to hold a wrist book with three fingers. Therefore, Wang popularized his language as a way of dialing lights and talking about calligraphy. When fame was heavy, the scholar-bureaucrat got a piece of paper, which was as heavy as a treasure without saying a word. I was asked to post, and I was killed in the sea, thinking it was Rongyun. " Emperor Qianlong was proud of the calligraphy of his eleven sons Yong Xun. He carved Yong Xun's proud calligraphy works on the tablet, put them on the tablet, wrote the preface in his own hand, and gave the book paste of Yong Xun to the princes.

There are countless royal families who are good at calligraphy and painting in Qing Dynasty, but they are rarely mentioned in the history of various versions of calligraphy and painting, and Prince Yong Cheng is an indispensable figure in the history of calligraphy in Qing Dynasty. Yong Xun, Liu Yong, Weng Fanggang and Tie Bao are also called the four great calligraphers in Qing Dynasty.