Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Shi
Shi Xiaolin
Shi Xiaolin is a Chinese politician currently serving as communist party secretary of Chengdu, capital of southwest China's Sichuan province. She is an alternate member of the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and a member of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
Shi Shengjie
Shi Shengjie was a Chinese xiangsheng comedian.
Shi Ping
Shi Hui
Shi Yan Ming
Shi Yan Ming es un Monje Shaolin de la 34va generación, maestro y actor, mejor conocido por ser el fundador del Templo Shaolin en Estados Unidos. Entrenado en el Templo Shaolin de la República Popular China (RPC) desde los 5 años, Shi Yan Ming abandonó el Templo y partió hacia Estados Unidos en 1992, antes de abrir el Templo Shaolin en Manhattan, donde ha enseñado a cientos de estudiantes, incluyendo numerosas celebridades. Él ha hecho apariciones en diversos programas de televisión, cine y publicaciones, incluyendo National Geographic, PBS, History Channel, la revista Time y en la película de acción samurai de 1999, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai.
Shi Ying
Shi Nai'an
Shi Nai'an escritor chino, coautor de la novela A la orilla del agua (水滸傅). Para algunos autores nunca existió y no fue más que un pseudónimo de Luo Guanzhong.
Shi Shiyuan
Shi Kefa
Shi Kefa, courtesy names Xianzhi and Daolin, was a government official and calligrapher who lived in the late Ming dynasty. He was born in Xiangfu and claimed ancestry from Daxing County, Shuntian Prefecture. He was mentored by Zuo Guangdou (左光斗). He served as Grand Secretary in the Ministry of War in Nanjing during the early part of his career. He is best remembered for his defence of Yangzhou from the Qing dynasty and was killed when Yangzhou fell to Qing forces in April 1645. After his death, the Southern Ming dynasty granted him the posthumous name "Zhongjing". Nearly a century later, the Qianlong Emperor of Qing granted Shi Kefa another posthumous name, "Zhongzheng" His descendants collected his works and compiled them into a book titled Lord Shi Zhongzheng's Collections (史忠正公集).
Shi Hu
Shi Hu, courtesy name Jilong (季龍), formally Emperor Wu of (Later) Zhao ( 趙武帝), was an emperor of the Chinese/Jie state Later Zhao. He was the founding emperor Shi Le's distant nephew, who took power in a coup after Shi Le's death from Shi Le's heir Shi Hong.