Chen Shou

Chen Shou
陳壽
BornFamily name: Chén (陳)
Given name: Shòu (壽)
Courtesy name: Chéngzuò (承祚)

233[note 1]
Nanchong, Baxi Commandery, Shu Han
Died297 (aged 64)[1]
Luoyang, Henan Commandery, Jin Dynasty
OccupationHistorian, politician, writer
Notable works
  • Records of the Three Kingdoms
  • Memoirs of Zhuge Liang
  • Biographies of Famous People from Yi Province
  • Records of Ancient States
  • Dissertation on Bureaucracy
  • Explaining Taboos
  • Guang Guo Lun
Relatives
  • Chen Fu (nephew)
  • Chen Li (nephew)
  • Chen Jie (relative)
Chen Shou
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese陳壽
Simplified Chinese陈寿
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinChén Shòu
Vietnamese name
VietnameseTrần Thọ
Korean name
Hangul진수
Hanja陳壽
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationJin Su
Japanese name
Kanji陳壽
Hiraganaちん じゅ
Transcriptions
RomanizationChin Ju

Chen Shou (Chinese: 陳壽; 233–297[1]), courtesy name Chengzuo (承祚), was a Chinese historian, politician, and writer who lived during the Three Kingdoms period and Jin dynasty of China. Chen Shou is best known for his most celebrated work, the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi), which records the history of the late Eastern Han dynasty and the Three Kingdoms period. Chen Shou wrote the Sanguozhi primarily in the form of biographies of notable persons of those eras. Today, Chen's Records of the Three Kingdoms is part of the Twenty-Four Histories canon of Chinese history.

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Chen Shou

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