In the tenth year of Taikang in the Western Jin Dynasty (AD 289), Liu saw that the image of chaos in the world had been born at that time, so that the old ministers could discuss countermeasures in May of the lunar calendar. Liu said, "I've been here for a long time, and I'm afraid I'll be wiped out." I heard that Dongguo is in Japan and has a holy son of heaven. " So he decided to take his family east to take refuge in Japan. In this way, Liu led his son Liu, his uncle Zhao Yude, and his people Liu, Liu Taozi, Liu, Liu and other men and women, totaling 2,040 people, to leave China and cross the ocean. After many twists and turns, he arrived in Japan on September 5, 2009. After arriving in the slave country, King A Zhi was awarded the title of Ambassador to the Eastern Han Dynasty by the king of the slave country, and was ordered to settle in Chiqian Village, Dahe Gaoshi County. According to the Japanese Secretary, Emperor Xionglue ordered A Zhi to send his master to Liang Wudi via Koguryo, and obtained four weavers, Brother Yuan, Brother Yuan, Wu Zhi and Dong Zhi, to Japan. Before Emperor Lu Zhong ascended the throne, the Prince of Jizhong attempted to murder him and replace him. Fortunately, A Zhi let the chief detective hear the news and informed Lu Zhong to save him. Later, when he ascended the throne, he promoted A Zhi to be the chief Tibetan official and gave him a large food city. A Zhi made the main clan prosperous, distributed in Shejin, Linjiang, Bomo, Sanhe, Abo and other countries. Later, he was given the surname "Han Zhi" by the emperor, also known as "Dong Wen's". There are more and more ethnic groups. They are divided into Dazang, Sakamoto, Harada, Gao Qiao, Danbo, Duozhi, Shibuya, Jinbao, Qiuyue, Hatai, Jiang Shang, Tanaka, Sanyuan, Koganamaru, Ye Ping, Tomoji, Tamura and Tanabe. . . . . . Wait for dozens of people. In today's Japan, there is "A Zhi Palace", which is a place where later generations worship King A Zhi.
However, this incident is not recorded in China's history books, but only recorded in Japan's newly written surnames, Japanese secretaries, old sayings and Japanese chronicles.