The Eighth Master of Hell was the First Master and Second Master, Judge Cui Jue, Judge Zhong Kui, Bull Head, Horse Face, Golden Shackle and Silver Lock, Black Impermanence, and White Impermanence.

The Eighth Master of Hell included First Master and Second Master, Judge Cui Jue, Judge Zhong Kui, Bull Head, Horse Face, Golden Shackle and Silver Lock, Black Impermanence, and White Impermanence.
The Eighth Master of Hell was the First Master and Second Master, Judge Cui Jue, Judge Zhong Kui, Bull Head, Horse Face, Golden Shackle and Silver Lock, Black Impermanence, and White Impermanence.
The eight departments of the underworld included the Department of Reward for Good, the Department of Punishment for Evil, the Department of Inspection, the Department of Yin Law, the Department of Teaching and Sign, the Department of Life and Death, the Department of Life and Death Hook and Investigation, and the Department of Buddhist and Taoist Affairs.
The eight kings of hell were First Master and Second Master, Judge Cui Jue, Judge Zhong Kui, Bull Head, Horse Face, Golden Shackle and Silver Lock, Black Impermanence, and White Impermanence.
The Eight Immortals of Hell were Tie Guaili, Han Zhongli, Zhang Guolao, Lu Dongbin, He Xiangu, Lan Caihe, Han Xiangzi, and Cao Guojiu.
The eight kings of hell were King Qinguang, King Chujiang, King Song, King Wuguan, King Yanluo, King Biancheng, King Taishan, and King Dushi.
The Eight Prose Masters referred to the eight outstanding prose masters in the history of modern Chinese prose: Zhou Guoping, Zhu Ziqing, Bing Xin, Jia Pingao, Chen Zhongshi, Mo Yan, Liu Zhenyun, and Yu Qiuyu. Their works have a profound influence in the Chinese prose world and have made important contributions to the development of modern Chinese prose.
The Eight Great Essayists of the Tang and Song Dynasties were the collective name of the eight essayists of the Tang and Song Dynasties. They were Han Yu and Liu Zongyuan of the Tang Dynasty and Ouyang Xiu, Su Xun, Su Shi, Su Zhe, Wang Anshi, and Zeng Gong of the Song Dynasty. These eight writers played an important role in the ancient prose movement, and their works had a great impact on the literary world at that time and later generations. Among them, Han Yu and Liu Zongyuan were the leaders of the ancient prose movement in the Tang Dynasty, Ouyang Xiu and the three Sus (Su Shi, Su Zhe, Su Xun) were the core figures of the ancient prose movement in the Song Dynasty, and Wang Anshi and Zeng Gong were the representatives of Linchuan literature. The works of these eight writers were compiled into the Collection of Mr. Eight, which became the source of the name of the Eight Great Masters of the Tang and Song Dynasties.
The first master of the underworld was Cui Jue, the judge of literature, and the second master of the underworld was Zhong Kui, the judge of martial arts.
The first master of the underworld was Cui Jue, the judge of literature, and the second master of the underworld was Zhong Kui, the judge of martial arts.