Du Ji
| Du Ji | |
|---|---|
| 杜畿 | |
| Supervisor of the Masters of Writing (尚書僕射) | |
| In office 222 – 224 | |
| Monarch | Cao Pi | 
| Colonel-Director of Retainers (司隸校尉) | |
| In office 220 – 222 | |
| Monarch | Cao Pi | 
| Administrator of Hedong (河東太守) | |
| In office 205 – 220 | |
| Monarch | Emperor Xian of Han | 
| Chancellor | Cao Cao (from 208) | 
| Succeeded by | Zhao Yan | 
| Administrator of Xiping (西平太守) | |
| In office ? – 205 | |
| Monarch | Emperor Xian of Han | 
| Personal details | |
| Born | Early 160s Xi'an, Shaanxi | 
| Died | 224 Tao River, Henan/Shanxi | 
| Children | 
 | 
| Parent | 
 | 
| Occupation | Official | 
| Courtesy name | Bohou (伯侯) | 
| Posthumous name | Marquis Dai (戴侯) | 
| Peerage | Marquis of Fengle Village (豐樂亭侯) | 
Du Ji (early 160s – 224), courtesy name Bohou, was an official who lived in the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. He later served as a high-ranking official in the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period. He had the reputation of being a model governor, valiant, loyal and wise. He was the grandfather of Du Yu, the author of the most influential Zuo Zhuan commentary, who gave the work its modern form.