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Where did Guangxi's surname come from, what was the name of its ancestors, and who were the historical celebrities?
All of Yu Liang

Quan (1379-1441) was originally from Wulin (now Wulin, Pingnan County, Guangxi), and was born in Liucheng and Shangcong on the first day of the first month. Hong Wu was born on June 29, and there were three in the Spring and Autumn Period. All of them were born in Liucheng, Guangxi. In July of the first year (1399), the prince of Yan rebelled against the Central Committee of the Ming Dynasty, and the world was in chaos. Yu Liang recruited soldiers from Liucheng, Guangxi, and recruited thousands of people. He went to the Wulin in Pingnan County, and elected all the commanders to crusade against the Prince of Yan. As a result, he failed to fight Judy's army and fled back to the Wulin. He claimed to be the king of Wulin for five years. Settle in Wulin.

Quanyugui

Quan Yugui was born in Baojing County in Qing Dynasty. When I was a child, I went to Guizhou with my father and sent my family to Zhenyuan. A little longer, he joined the martial arts, served in the army and was transferred to Zhenyuan Town. In the first year of Xianfeng (185 1), the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom revolted, and the Qing court sent troops to suppress it. With the army, he entered Guangxi, filled the commander-in-chief of Wulantai, and recruited 300 soldiers, not for one battalion. In February of the second year of Xianfeng, the Taiping Army broke through Yong 'an, and Quan Yugui led his troops to defeat the rear team of the Taiping Army with Wulantai, and captured Jiao Liang, the leader of the Heaven and Earth Society. In pursuit of Ulantai, the Taiping Army set an ambush at Dadong Mountain in Longliaokou, defeated the Qing army and beheaded four company commanders: Changshou, Changrui, Dong and Shao. At that time, the commander-in-chief of the Qing army pretended to be defeated and boasted, fabricated stories, and said that Hong was a leader of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, exaggerating his story and offering prisoners to the Qing court. The Qing court rewarded the whole jade with 700 taels of silver to escort the company. After the Taiping Army entered Hunan, Quan Yugui followed Xiang Rong to fight guerrilla warfare in Guizhou. In the fourth year of Xianfeng, the Taiping Army occupied Luzhou, Anhui Province, and the Qing court ordered the prefect of Jiangnan and Chuntong to take various soldiers to adjust the recovery. Quan Yugui was transferred to aid, added the rank of lieutenant, and stationed troops outside Luzhou to fight the Taiping Army. He was beaten several times. In an siege war, he was wounded by the Taiping Army's gun, and the bullet couldn't hit his abdomen. The following year, at the age of 23, he passed away. .