The top ten female poets in ancient times are as follows:
1: Cai Wenji - She beats her strings twice and feels heartbroken. Cai Yan, also known as Wenji and Zhaoji. The year of birth and death is unknown. She was a native of Yuxian County, Chenliu County (now Qixian County, Kaifeng, Henan Province) in the Eastern Han Dynasty, and the daughter of Cai Yong, a great writer of the Eastern Han Dynasty. Cai Yan is also good at literature, music, and calligraphy. "Sui Shu·Jing Ji Zhi" contains a volume of "Cai Wenji Collection", but it has been lost. The only works of Cai Wenji that can be seen now are two "Poems of Sorrow and Indignation" and "Eighteen Beats of Hujia".
Two: Su Hui - a virtuous minister and a holy wife to the Emperor of England, whose moral integrity is separated and floating in Jiangxiang. Su Hui, courtesy name Ruolan, was born in 357 AD. Ruolan has beautiful appearance and elegant manners. She has been very smart since she was a child. She learned painting at the age of three, composed poetry at the age of four, played the piano at the age of five, and learned brocade weaving at the age of nine. Just after the age of ten, she was able to depict dragons, embroidery and phoenixes. She applied all the charm of music, chess, calligraphy and painting to her brocades.
Three: Xie Daoyun - I sometimes see white rocks flying in the forest spring; I also think about the clear fragrance of catkins scattered in the forest. Xie Daoyun (date of birth and death unknown), courtesy name Lingjiang, was a poetess in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. She was the niece of Prime Minister Xie An, the daughter of General Xie Yi of Anxi, and the wife of Wang Ningzhi, the second son of the famous calligrapher Wang Xizhi.
Four: Zuo Fen - those with pure nature are honored, those with turbid nature are disgraced. Zuo Fen, a female writer of the Western Jin Dynasty, was born in Linzi, Qi State (now Zibo, Shandong). According to the unearthed epitaph, the name is Lanzhi and Fen Ying is _. She is one of the earlier female poets in my country. Less eager to learn, good at writing. As the concubine of Emperor Wu. There are now more than 20 poems, poems, odes, praises, and edicts, most of which were written in response to the imperial edict. "Li Si Fu" is the most famous. The original collection has been lost.
Five: Bao Linghui - Once Ronghua is gone, his love remains unchanged. Bao Linghui lived in 420 AD. She was a female writer in the Southern Dynasties and a native of Donghai. She was the sister of the famous writer Bao Zhao. She was born in a poor family, but she was good at poetry. Bao Linghui is the only female writer in the Southern Dynasties, Song and Qi dynasties who left works on chopsticks. There was once a "Xiang Ming Fu Collection" handed down to the world, but it has been lost now.
Six: Xue Tao - If you don’t have people of the same mind, you will have nothing to do with people of the same mind. Xue Tao (about 768-832), courtesy name Hongdu, was born in Chang'an, Jingzhao (now Xi'an, Shaanxi). A female poet in the Tang Dynasty and a prostitute in Chengdu. Xue Tao entered the music family at the age of 16 and had a relationship with Wei Gao and Yuan Zhen. During the relationship, Xue Tao made his own pink paper to write poems. Later generations copied it and called it "Xue Tao paper". Together with Zhuo Wenjun, Mrs. Huarui, and Huang E, they are known as the four most talented women in Sichuan. They have more than 90 poems that have been handed down to this day and are collected in "Jinjiang Collection".
Seven: Li Qingzhao - There is no way to lose your soul, the west wind blows behind the curtain, and the person is thinner than a yellow flower. Li Qingzhao (1084-about 1156), a female poet in the Song Dynasty (at the turn of the two Song Dynasties), named Yi Anju, was born in Zhangqiu, Jinan (now Jinan, Shandong). Li Qingzhao was a rare talented woman in ancient China. She was good at calligraphy and painting. He is proficient in epigraphy and stone, and is especially good at poetry. Her lyrics are unique and have been passed down through the ages, and she is known as "a major lineage of lyricists".
Eight: Ban Jieyu - the shadow of the firefly in the jade window, the sound of the people in the golden palace. Ban Jieyu (approximately 48 BC - 2 AD), unknown name, Lou Fanren, a female writer in the Western Han Dynasty, and a concubine of the Emperor Cheng of the Han Dynasty. Ban is the daughter of Ban Kuang, the aunt of Ban Biao, and the aunt of Ban Gu, Ban Chao and Ban Zhao. She wrote many works, but most of them have been lost. There are only three extant works: "Zi Mourning Fu", "Tao Su Fu" and "Song of Resentment (also known as Tuan Fan Song)".
Nine: Zhu Shuzhen - The bed is filled with cool parasol trees, and the moon shines brightly in the places where the parasol trees are missing. Zhu Shuzhen (about 1135~1180), also known as Youqi Jushi, was a female poet in the Song Dynasty and one of the female writers with the most abundant works since the Tang and Song Dynasties. The existing "Collection of Broken Heart Poems" and "Broken Heart Ci" have been handed down to the world, and they are the remaining chapters after the calamity.
Ten: Qiu Jin - A matter of life and death is a waste of money, and this is where Yingjie is born. Qiu Jin (November 8, 1875 - July 15, 1907), an advocate of Chinese women's rights and women's studies, and a patriot of the modern democratic revolution. He made great contributions to the Revolution of 1911; he advocated feminist studies and played a role in promoting the development of the women's liberation movement.