A Chinese Biographical Dictionary/Chao Ch'i (趙岐)
146 Chao Ch'i 趙岐 (T. 邠卿). Died A.D. 201, aged over ninety. A native of 長陵 Ch'ang-ling, near Nanking. He was a nephew by marriage of Ma Jung, and was himself a scholar of distinction. But his outspoken denunciation of 唐玹 T'ang Hsien, or 唐寶 T'ang Pao, Governor of Lo-yang, brought him into trouble, and he had to flee to 北海市 Pei-hai-shih(?), where he changed his name from 趙嘉 Chao Chia (T. 臺卿) to that by which he is now known. Disguised as a seller of cakes, he was accosted by 孫嵩 Sun Sung, who suspected him to be no common man, and asked how he bought and sold his cakes. "They cost me thirty cash," he replied, "and I sell them for thirty cash." "You are no cake-seller," cried Sun Sung, and carried him home in his chariot. By the year A.D. 195, Chao had risen to be a Minister in the Court of Sacrificial Worship; and one day chancing to meet Sun Sung, the two old friends burst into tears. Besides writing a commentary upon Mencius, whose seven books he subdivided into sections, chapters, and paragraphs, he was an artist of no mean repute; and among other pictures he painted portraits of himself, Chi Cha, Tzŭ Ch'an, Yen Ying, and 叔向 Shu Hsiang, sitting together at a feast.