It is named after Chinese author Jin Yong, whose birthdate falls on the same day the asteroid was discovered.
In The Deer and the Cauldron, a novel written by Jin Yong, the main character retells a humorous mythical account of Basalawarmi's defeat.
In Europe, he received top honors at the 33rd annual Angoulême International Comics Festival for his work in "Demi Gods and Semi Devils" written by Chinese novelist Jin Yong, who is the best-selling Chinese author alive.
She was fictionally portrayed in Chinese novelist Jin Yong's novel The Deer and the Cauldron in which the young protagonist Wei Xiaobao went to Russia and helped her lead the coup against her half-brother Peter I.
In Jin Yong's novel The Deer and the Cauldron, the Sutra of Forty-two Chapters is the key to the Manchu's treasures.
He is considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern genre of wuxia, along with other established wuxia writers such as Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng.
Jin Yong | Jin | Jin Dynasty | Wu Yong | Park Jin-young | Johnny Yong Bosch | Jin Dynasty (265-420) | Yeon Woo-jin | Sin-Jin Smyth | Ri Yong-ho | Jun Jin | Jin Records | Jin Dynasty (265–420) | Jin Dynasty (1115–1234) | Jin (Chinese state) | Hur Jin-ho | Francis Hong Yong-ho | Emperor Yuan of Jin | Yong Nyuk Lin | Park Ye-jin | Park Hae-jin | Noh Jin-Kyu | Kim Yong | Kim Yi-Yong | Jin Se-yeon | Jin-Roh | Jin Mao Tower | Jin Jong-oh | Jin Jingdao | Jin (Five Dynasties) |
Xuzhu (虛竹), one of the three protagonists of the wuxia novel Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils by Jin Yong