Question 2: Who knows the background or origin of ancestors named Qin? Ancestor: Boyi.
Emperor Zhuan Xu had a granddaughter named Nvxiu, who got pregnant and gave birth to a son after eating swallow eggs. Boyi, the son of the great cause, assisted Dayu in water control. Shun Di gave him the surname of Won and married his children as Yao. Fei Zi, a descendant of Boyi, is famous for his good herding. He raised thoroughbred horses for Zhou, which won the favor of Xiao Wang. He was appointed as a vassal state of Qin Ting (now Sol Zhang, Gansu) in west Gansu, and he was called the King of Qin. During the Warring States Period, Qin Xiaogong appointed Shang Yang to reform, and his national strength gradually became rich and strong. In 22 1 year BC, Ying Zheng, king of Qin, conquered six countries, unified the world and established the first feudal dynasty in the history of China. In 206 BC, the Qin Dynasty perished, and its royal descendants took the country name as their surname, which was called Qin surname. Boyi thus became the ancestor of Qin surname.
Question 3: What is the origin of Qin surname? Qin surname, also known as Qin family. Qin surname ranks 18 among hundreds of surnames, and its population ranks 74th among surnames in China today. Qin surnames are widely distributed, mainly in Henan, Sichuan, Guangxi, Jiangsu and other places, and overseas Qin surnames are mainly distributed in Southeast Asia and some countries in Europe and America. According to Records of Fu Qun, one of Shun's seven friends was Qin. This shows that the Qin family existed in the ancient Emperor Shun period. However, because there is no genealogical data to test after Qin bravado, genealogists in Tang and Song Dynasties have different views on Qin's ethnic origin, that is, taking the country as the surname and the city as the surname. Qin family originated from three branches: Ji surname, Won surname and foreign surname change. The first origin: it originated from the won surname, from the fief of Qin State, and was given to the descendants of Boyi by Zhou, belonging to the national title. The second origin: Qin Yi, which originated from the surname of Ji, is the fief of the descendants of Lu and belongs to Juyi. The third origin: judging from the Shunqi branch, Qin is not empty, and later generations continue to be surnamed Qin, which belongs to the name of the ancestors. The fourth origin: it originated from the Muqide family of Mongolians in Hubaqi, and it belongs to the sinicization and surname change. The fifth origin: it originated from foreign countries, from the ancient Daqin people who came to China (that is, the Roman Empire), and belonged to the sinicization and changed their surnames.
Question 4: Was there an emperor named Qin in all previous dynasties? Although there is no emperor with the surname of Qin, there are people with the surname of Qin and Wei in the source of the surname of Qin, who are basically nobles who won the surname left over from the Qin Dynasty. So some ancestors' brothers were emperors of the Qin Dynasty, such as Qin Shihuang and Qin Ershi.
Question 5: Are the descendants of Qin Shihuang surnamed Qin? "At the end of the Qin Dynasty, Hu Hai, the son of Qin Shihuang, and some descendants of Fuxi moved to North Korea, and then they moved from North Korea to Japan. At this time, they changed their surname to Qin. In the early days of their arrival in Japan, some of them were responsible for the cashier work in the Japanese court and worked as silkworms for the emperor. The emperor gave them surnames and asked some of them to change their surnames to "Uzumasanokimi". During the reign of Emperor Xionglue (AD 456-479), the descendant of Qin Shihuang, surnamed Qin, accounted for 92% of the population of the Japanese capital at that time, with a total population of *** 18670. By the first year of Qin Ming (AD 540), they had multiplied to 7,053 households with about 35,000 people in Kyoto. Taiqin, now near Kyoto, Japan, is the first residence of Qin family in Japan. By the ninth century, the Japanese Qin family had branched into Uzumasanokimi, Qin, Qin Guan, Hanoi Qin, Shancheng Qin, etc. 15 surnames. The Japanese Qin family has been divided into 44 surnames so far. During the Meiji Restoration, Japan * * * required all Japanese to have surnames (many Japanese did not have surnames or scientific names, but only posthumous title) and forced some descendants of Qin Shihuang to change their surnames to Haneda and Hato, and the Qinjia Temple (ancestral temple) in Kyoto and related historical documents were destroyed (genealogy is a kind of historical documents).
1Japanese prime minister haneda, who was elected in April 1994, publicly admitted that he was a descendant of China's first emperor Qin Shihuang. This shocked many people, including the Japanese. He said that his ancestor's surname was Qin, and it was only changed to "Haneda" 200 years ago. In Japanese, Qin is pronounced the same as Haneda.
Question 6: It is said that all people surnamed Qin are descendants of Qin Shihuang. Is this happening? No way. At that time, all the direct descendants of Qin Shihuang died. By the Han dynasty, other collateral descendants were extinct, so there were no descendants.
Question 7: Daqin, are there any descendants named Qin? After the Qin dynasty was destroyed, the descendants of the royal family took the country name as their surname, which was Shaanxi Qin, and Boyi became the ancestor of Qin surname.
Question 8: The origin of Qin family, Qin surname, also known as Qin family. Qin surname ranks 18 among hundreds of surnames, and its population ranks 74th among surnames in China today. The first origin: it originated from the won surname, from the fief of Qin State, and was given to the descendants of Boyi by Zhou, belonging to the national title. Zhou Qi originated from Qin Dynasty, and Qin Wei won the surname, which is the descendant of Emperor Zhuan Xu, taking the country name as his surname. According to Yuan He Shi Bian and Historical Records, there was a granddaughter named Nvxiu in Zhuan Xu who lived at ease all day. Once she went to play in the wild, she found a swallow egg and ate it without hesitation. As a result, she became pregnant and gave birth to her son Hao Tao (that is, Daye). Later, she married Shao Dianshi's daughter Hua and gave birth to Boyi. Shun Di, because Boyi assisted Dayu in water control, gave him a won surname, and at the same time married his own woman named Yao. The girl Yao gave birth to two sons. The youngest son, Ruomu, is Fei's ancestor. The eldest son's name is Dalian. Because he inherited his father's ability to tame birds and beasts, it is also called bird custom. The diligence of the bird custom was appreciated by the Shang emperor Taiwu and was named a vassal. In Shang Zhouwang, there was a descendant named Fei Lian. Fei Lian is a scud, and his son E Lai is a strongman. Both father and son became Shang Zhouwang's cronies. After Zhou Wuwang ruined the business, both Fei Lian and E Lai were killed. Fei Lian's son Jisheng has a great-grandson, Zhao Fu, who is a driving doctor in Zhou Muwang. He was sealed in Zhao Cheng for his meritorious service in quelling the rebellion in Xu Yanwang. At this time, Rhoda, a descendant of Hubei, also joined the kitchen husband and was rewarded by the kitchen husband. It was sealed in Goushan by Zhou Muwang (now Xingping in Shaanxi and Lixian in Gansu). Rhoda has an illegitimate child named Feizi, who likes to deal with cattle and sheep since childhood and is famous for being good at animal husbandry when he grows up. He raised thoroughbred horses for Zhou in Taolin (now Huashan, Shaanxi), and the horses multiplied rapidly. Zhou was very happy, so he was named the vassal state of Qin Valley (now southwest of Tianshui, Gansu Province) and asked him to continue to sacrifice the surname of Qin Won, which was called Qin Won in history. Sun Qinzhong, Feizi's third son, was appointed as a doctor by Zhou Xuanwang. After Qin Zhong was killed by the northern minority dog Rong, but his eldest son finally defeated the dog Rong. By the time of Qin Xianggong, the son of Zhuang Gong, Qin was promoted to a vassal state because of Qin Xianggong's contribution in protecting Zhou Ping from moving eastward (770 BC). Wen Gong, the son of Xiang Gong, once again repelled the dog Rong and occupied the vast area west of Qishan. The Qin Dynasty was founded in Yong (now Fengxiang, Shaanxi). Since then, he has moved the capital to make friends (now Luochuan, Shaanxi), Pingyang (now Baoji, Shaanxi), Yong (now Fengxiang, Shaanxi), Liyang County (now Lintong, Shaanxi) and other places. Later, Qin Mugong swept the twelve countries and initially established hegemony in Xirong. However, in the early Warring States period, due to the backward economy and frequent civil strife, the national strength gradually declined, and the Hexi area (now between Luoshui and the Yellow River in the north) was captured by Wei. In Qin Xiaogong, Shang Yang was ordered to carry out political reform, and his national strength gradually increased. He moved the capital to Xianyang (now Xianyang, Shaanxi Province) and became the head of the Seven Heroes in the Warring States Period and the gate of Qin's Ancestral Hall in Yangji Village, Yuexiu District, Guangzhou. King Hui of Qin defeated Wei, regained his glory, and finally recovered Hexi, and made efforts to open up territory to attack Bashu and capture Hanzhong, Chu. Zhao Haoqi of Qin constantly attacked the city and plundered the land, which greatly weakened Wei, Han, Zhao, Chu and other countries. In 227 BC, the king of Qin ruled the world, annexed all directions, finally wiped out the six countries, unified the world, and established the first unified dynasty in the history of China. The king of Qin considered himself "three emperors and five emperors", so he called himself "the first emperor". The capital of Qin Shihuang was Xianyang, which further unified the southeast and southwest regions. The Qin dynasty has been passed down for two generations for twelve years. Because of its strict management, it was overthrown by Liu Bang in 206 BC and replaced by the Western Han Dynasty. Zi Ying, king of Qin, was killed by Xiang Yu. After the Qin dynasty was destroyed, the descendants of the royal family took the country name as their surname, which was called Qin family. This is the Qin family in Shaanxi. The second origin: Qin Yi, which originated from the surname of Ji, is the fief of the descendants of Lu and belongs to Juyi. In Zhou Wuwang, his younger brother Zhou Gongdan was named Duke Lu (now Qufu). Duke Lu later stayed in Zhoudu for assisting King Zhou, and his son Boqin took over the state of Lu. Among his descendants, there is a food city in Qin (now the old city of Fan County, Henan Province). After taking the city as the surname. The most important form of political organization in the Western Zhou Dynasty is the patriarchal clan system, which originated from the patriarchal clan system, and its core is the "eldest son inheritance system", that is, the eldest son is the eldest son and the rest are the second sons. For example, the first generation of governors are often the brothers of kings. They are a small clan relative to the king, and their eldest son can inherit the status of a vassal. Other sons are naturally uncles and nephews, and so on. Patriarchal clan system has a far-reaching influence on the emergence and evolution of surnames. Generally, the eldest son of the monarch of a vassal state inherits his father as the monarch; The illegitimate son of the monarch, also known as his son, has no right to inherit the throne, and must be separated to form a new family and become the ancestor of this branch ... >>
Question 9: Did the monarch of Qin win the surname Zhao or Qin? They are of the same race. * * * consanguinity is the favorite. Lian and Qin's consanguinity are Lian's eldest son, E Lai, and Zhao's second son, Ji Sheng. These two countries developed separately in the Western Zhou Dynasty. Zhao Fu, the ancestor of Zhao, was appointed as a doctor in Zhao Cheng because of the rebellion. When he arrived, Zhao Kuangyin took Zhou away. Qin was killed by his ancestor Elei, and the clan of Zao Fu arrived in Zhou and attached to Ji Sheng. Its leader, Zhao Feizi (surnamed Zhao Wei because he lived with the Zao Fu clan), began to develop independently because he was good at raising horses, and became a doctor in the fourth Qin Dynasty. The reason is that the descendants of the Qin ancestor who followed Zhao Fu (Zhao Feizi was an illegitimate child) were killed by the dog Rong. Qin Zhuanggong, the fifth generation, Prince Qin Zhong. When he heard that his father had been killed, he immediately took his five brothers to Zhou Xuanwang for revenge. After a hard struggle, he finally defeated the dog, and Qin was finally promoted to a doctor by Zhou Tianzi. In the sixth generation, he sent troops to help Zhou Ping move the capital to the king. He was made a vassal, and the state of Qin was finally born!