List of Shanghainese and Lower Yangtze people in Hong Kong

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Politics

  • Tanya Chan (born 1971 in Hong Kong), politician[1]
  • Audrey Eu (born 1953 in Hong Kong), politician[2]
  • Tung Chee-hwa, Chief Secretary for Administration
  • Anson Chan (Her father Fang Shin-hau was a banker and textile businessman who moved his family to the British colony of Hong Kong in 1948), and
  • Yang Ti-liang, former Chief Justice
  • Rita Fan, politician, daughter of Hsu Ta Tung
  • Carrie Lam (born 1957 in Hong Kong), HKSAR Chief Executive, ancestry in Zhoushan
  • Richard Lai, (1946 in Shanghai – 2008), politician, former member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, born to a family doing jewellery and property business before he moved to Hong Kong in 1950[3]
  • Denny Huang (born in Shanghai, 1920), politician

Literature

  • Claire Chao (born 1962 in Hong Kong), author[4]
  • Liu Yichang ( 1918 in Shanghai –2018), or Lau Yee Cheung in Cantonese, writer, editor and publisher. He is considered the founder of Hong Kong's modern literature, ancestry in Zhenhai, Ningbo[5][6]
  • Ni Kuang (born in Ningbo), novelist
  • Jin Yong (Louis Cha Leung-yung, born in Haining, Zhejiang), novelist

Entertainment

Business

  • Hsu Ta Tung, business magnate, father of Rita Fan
  • Morris Chang (born 1931 in Ningbo), founder of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), lived in Hong Kong briefly in 1948
  • Vincent Fang, (born 943 in Shanghai), the leader of the Liberal Party of Hong Kong. He is a Hong Kong entrepreneur in the garment industry[19]
  • Z.Y. Fu (1919 in Shanghai - 2011), Chinese-American businessman[20]
  • Tao Ho (1936 in Shanghai – 2019) architect, he was the designer of the Bauhinia emblem, ancestry in Guangdong[21]
  • Norman Hsu, (1951 in Hong Kong – 2019) American businessman who is a convicted pyramid investment promoter
  • Kung Yan-sum, (born 1943 in Shanghai), is the younger brother of Nina Wang Kung Yu-sum, the former Asia's richest woman and the late chairman of Chinachem Group, one of the biggest privately held property developer in Hong Kong.[22]
  • Nina Wang, born Kung Yu Sum (Chinese: 龔如心; pinyin: Gōng Rúxīn) 1936[23] – 2007) was Asia's richest woman, with an estimated net worth of US$4.2 billion at the time of her death.[24]
  • Teddy Wang, (born 1933 Shanghai -?) Chinese businessman and founder of the Chinachem Group who was kidnapped for ransom in 1990, and later declared legally dead. Ancestry in to Wenzhou.[25]
  • Henry Fan (born 1948 in Shanghai), executive at Cathay Pacific, Ningbo ancestry[26]Members|url=http://app.legco.gov.hk/member_front/english/library/member_detail.aspx?id=593%7Caccessdate=6 May 2013}}</ref>
  • David Shou-Yeh Wong (born c. 1941 Ningbo), billionaire banker and philanthropist, founder Dah Sing Bank Limited.[27]
  • Kwok family of the Wing On Group
  • Yue-Kong Pao (born 1918 in Ningbo – 1991), shipping magnate
  • Frank Tsao (born 1925 in Shanghai), shipping magnate (International Maritime Carriers [IMC Group]) and financier who later settled in Singapore. Tsao lived in Hong Kong for a few years after leaving mainland
  • Tang Ping Yuan (born 1898 in Wuxi – 1971) a Hong Kong textile entrepreneur and politician.
  • Y.L. Yang (Yang Yuanlong born in Shanghai), eminent textile industry figure, Wu County descent

Other

References

  1. ^ "隔牆有耳:陳淑莊穿豹紋行catwalk - 李八方 | 蘋果日報". Apple Daily 蘋果日報.
  2. ^ https://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/History/documents/54401/54612/g_1.pdf
  3. ^ {{cite web|title=Database on LegCo
  4. ^ ‘Remembering Shanghai’ A Memoir of Socialites, Scholars & Scoundrels.
  5. ^ Su, Xinqi (9 June 2018). "Liu Yichang, author whose works inspired Wong Kar-wai films, dies at 99". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  6. ^ Yue, Huairang (9 June 2018). 香港文学泰斗刘以鬯逝世,特区政府致哀:是文化界一大损失. The Paper (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  7. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20160626194821/http://www.hongkonggay.info/archives/tag/%E9%99%B3%E6%BE%A4%E6%B0%91
  8. ^ 一对老夫妇自称与陈慧琳爷爷熟识 提供照片为证
  9. ^ a b Sudden Weekly, Issue no. 656, 22 February 2008, cover page Archived 31 July 2008 at the Library of Congress Web Archives
  10. ^ Big5.cri.cn. "CRIonline." 五好男人張學友. Retrieved on 12 April 2009.
  11. ^ https://www.voguehk.com/en/article/celebrity/maggie-cheung-style-file/
  12. ^ Lo, Clifford; Nip, Amy; Chan, Samuel (17 March 2015). "Former ATV boss Deacon Chiu dies, aged 90". South China Morning Post.
  13. ^ http://www.tvbusa.com/tvb-weekly/tvb-weekly-star-talk/niki-chow/
  14. ^ 肖连兵 [Xiao Lianbing]; 胡萌 [Hu Meng] (1996). 面对'97回归——记港事顾问朱幼麟 [Facing the 1997 return of sovereignty: Hong Kong affairs advisor Chu Yu-lin]. 未来与发展 [Future and Development] (1). Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  15. ^ Reference to Judy Dan, hongkongsfirst.blogspot.com; accessed January 18, 2018.
  16. ^ "Beauty in Myriad Shades: A Tribute to Betty Loh Ti on Her 80th Birth Anniversary". Hong Kong Film Archive. Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  17. ^ https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/susan-shaw-says-li-ching-064200136.html
  18. ^ "王嘉尔个人资料 王嘉尔妈妈周平". Todayonhistory.com. 7 January 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  19. ^ "Kang Fang SBS, JP". Bloomberg Business.
  20. ^ "School Benefactor Z.Y. Fu Dies". Columbia School of Engineering and Applied Science. 25 August 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  21. ^ "香港區旗區徽設計者何弢離世 終年83歲 | 蘋果日報". Apple Daily 蘋果日報.
  22. ^ "Kung Yan Sum - List of Registered Doctors". Archived from the original on 2008-03-29. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
  23. ^ (in Chinese) 龔如心傳奇一生, Ming Pao; accessed 4 April 2007.
  24. ^ "# 204: Nina Wang". Forbes.com. 8 March 2007.
  25. ^ "Flashback: the kidnapping of Hong Kong billionaire Teddy Wang". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
  26. ^ https://www.scmp.com/article/655870/old-school-ties-hk-live-ningbo-scions
  27. ^ Cite error: The named reference Big in Asia was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  28. ^ Hutton, Mercedes (3 October 2019). "Remembering Hong Kong's first Chinese bishop, Francis Hsu". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  29. ^ Watts, Geoff (2014). "Victor Dzau: Change and controversy at the Institute of Medicine". The Lancet. 383 (9936): 2203. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61073-4.
  30. ^ Kao, Charles K. (2013) [original Chinese translation published in 2005]. 潮平岸闊——高錕自傳 [A Time And A Tide: Charles K. Kao ─ A Memoir] (autobiography) (in Chinese). Translated by 許迪鏘 (First ed.). Joint Publishing (Hong Kong). ISBN 978-962-04-3444-0.