Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Wu
Wu Mingyi
Wu Ming-yi is a multidisciplinary Taiwanese artist, author, Professor of Sinophone literature at National Dong Hwa University and environmental activist. His ecological parable The Man with the Compound Eyes (2011) was published in English in 2013.
Wu Li-hua
Wu Li-hua, known in the Rukai language as Saidhai Tahovecahe, is a Taiwanese Rukai educator and politician. She is the first member of the Democratic Progressive Party to sit in the Legislative Yuan as a representative of the Highland Aborigine Constituency, to which she was elected in 2020.
Wu Youji
Wu Youji (武攸暨), formally Prince Zhongjian of Ding (定忠簡王), was an imperial prince of Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty and an official of Tang Dynasty. He is best known as the second husband of Wu Zetian's powerful daughter Princess Taiping.
Wu Ma
Wu Ma (chino simplificado: 午 马, chino tradicional: 午 马, pinyin: Wǔ Mǎ, nombre real: chino simplificado: 冯宏源, chino tradicional: 冯宏源, pinyin: Feng Hongyuan fue un actor, director, productor y escritor chino. Hizo su debut en la pantalla en 1963, y con más de 240 apariciones en su haber, Wu Ma es uno de los rostros más conocidos de la historia del cine de Hong Kong, paticularmente por su papel de fantasma taoísta en A Chinese Ghost Story.
Wu Tai-hao
Wu Tai-Hao (Chinese: 吳岱豪; born February 7, 1985 in Taoyuan County is a Taiwanese basketball player.
Wu Cherng-dean
Wu Cherng-dean is a Taiwanese politician. As of 2003 and 2006 he was of the New Party of the Republic of China in Taiwan and served as a legislator. In 2003 he and Sisy Chen joined the People First Party (PFP) legislative caucus. By 2007 he was a legislator with the Kuomintang. He has been the chairperson of the New Party since 21 February 2020.
Wu Chun-li
Wu Chun-li is a Taiwanese politician from Taitung county. He was elected Taitung County Magistrate in 2005 but was barred from taking office due to a corruption conviction.
Wu Shihuo
Wǔ Shìyuē was the father of Wu Zetian, the only woman in the history of China to assume the title of Empress Regnant. Posthumously honored with the title of King Zhongxiao, Wu was the son of Wu Hua and became a timber merchant. He was also known as the Duke of Ying and King of Wei serving as army commander of Yingyang Prefecture during the final years of Emperor Yang of Sui and subsequently as Minister of Revenue and superintendent of Jingzhou City, Hubei during the reign of Emperor Taizong of Tang.
Wu Aiying
Wu Aiying is a former Chinese politician who served as the Minister of Justice of China from 2005 to 2017, in the cabinets of Premiers Wen Jiabao and Li Keqiang. Previously she held numerous political positions in her native Shandong province. She was investigated for corruption and expelled from the Communist Party in 2017.