According to the research of Huizhou clan history, Huizhou migrated from the north except the local clan. Especially in the Jin, Tang and Song dynasties, three migration climaxes were formed. The first immigration climax originated from the Yongjia Rebellion in the Jin Dynasty, and nine families came to Huizhou, including Cheng, Bao, Yu, Yu, Huang, Xie, Zhan, Hu and Zheng. The climax of the second migration occurred in the Anshi Rebellion and Huang Chao Uprising in the Tang Dynasty. Attending the emblem are 24 nationalities including Lu, Chen, Ye, Sun, Hong, Luo, Shu, Yao, Zhao, Dai, Kang, Shi, Feng, Xia, Li, Zhu, Pan, Liu, Cao, Bi, Wang, Jiang, Xu and Liao. The third wave of emigration began in the Song Dynasty with the Jingkang Rebellion. The nationalities who came to Huizhou were Ke, Song, Zhang, Zhou, Ruan, Yang, Jiang, Liu, Rao, Ma, Teng, Kong, Xu, Lu and Han 15. Of course, joining the emblem is not for the official return, and it is also a reason that scholars and bachelors yearn for the beautiful scenery of Xin' an to stay here.
Judging from the dynasties, there were 57 families that could be tested before the Ming Dynasty. The main families are Cheng, Wang, Wu, Huang, Hu, Wang, Li and Fang, followed by Hong, Yu, Bao, Dai, Cao, Jiang, Sun, Bi, Zhu and Ba. The migration of foreign surnames to Huizhou was mainly in the Han, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, Tang, Five Dynasties and Song and Yuan Dynasties, with the largest migration in the Tang Dynasty, with 24 surnames in total. Followed by the Song Dynasty, there were 15 clans. This is consistent with the above-mentioned three great clan migrations in the Central Plains. The origins of Hui nationality are mainly distributed in Shandong, Henan, Hebei, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu, Anhui, Fujian and other provinces. It can be seen that the Central Plains is the base camp of Huizhou clans.