Category
page 1Qing dynasty Buddhist monks

Shitao
thumb|right|Shitao, Master Shi Planting Pines, c. 1674, ink and color on paper, National Palace Museum.
Bada Shanren
Chinese artist (1626-1705)
Ingen
Ingen Ryūki (, ) (December 7, 1592 – May 19, 1673) was a Chinese poet, calligrapher, and monk of Linji Chan Buddhism from China. He is most known for founding the Ōbaku school of Zen in Japan.

Taixu
Taixu (Tai-hsu, ; January 8, 1890 – March 17, 1947), also called Shi Taixu, was a Buddhist modernist, activist and thinker who advocated for a reformation and revival of Chinese Buddhism by drawing upon eclectic domestic and foreign sources and ideologies.

Su Manshu
artist (1884-1918)
Hong Yi
Buddhist monk, painter, musician (1880-1942)
Kun Can
Chinese painter (1612-1674)
Hongren
Chinese artist (1610-1663)
Jee Sin Sim See
Chinese wushu practitioner
Bak Mei
legendary Chinese martial arts master

Mu'an
'''Mu'an (; Japanese Mokuan Shōtō''') (1611–1684) was a Chinese Chan monk who followed his master Ingen to Japan in 1654. Mokuan was from Chuanchow in what was then Fukien Province. He and Sokuhi Nyoitsu were the two disciples most involved in spreading Ingen's teachings.
Sokuhi Nyoitsu
Chinese calligrapher (1616–1671)