Monday, October 6, 2008

Zhou (surname)

Zhōu is the Hanyu Pinyin transliteration of the Chinese family name , which now ranks the 9th most common surname in Mainland China. It has been one of the ten since the Yuan Dynasty.

In places which use the Wade-Giles romanization such as Taiwan, Zhou is usually spelled as "Chou", and it may also be spelled "Chau", "Chiau", "Chow", "Chu", "Jhou", "Joe", "Jou", "Jue", or "Jow". ''Zhōu'' can also stand for another, rare Chinese family name, .

Prominent individuals with the surname Zhou


:''Alphabetized by surname, then by given name.''


*Simon Chau Sui-Cheong, Hong Kong social and environmental activist
*, singer
*Jay Chou, singer
*Endy Chow, singer
*Niki Chow, actress
*Norm Chow, American football coach
*Stephen Chow, actor & director
*Vivian Chow, singer
*Wei-Liang Chow, mathematician
*Wen Tsing Chow, missile guidance scientist
*Chow Yun-Fat, actor
*Ju Sigyeong, Korean linguistist
*Vic Zhou, actor, singer
*Zhou Enlai, People's Republic of China politician
*Zhou Long, composer
*Zhou Mi, a Chinese female badminton player
*Zhou Shuren, writer using the pseudonym Lu Xun
*Zhou Tong , famous archer and teacher of Song Dynasty General Yue Fei
*Zhou Xiaochuan, economist
*Zhou Xuan , actress
*Zhou Xuan-Yun Daoist monk, author and teacher of Wudang Martial Arts
*Zhou Xun, actress
*Zhou Yafu, a Han dynasty general
*Zhou Yi, Shanghai-born and New York-based pipa virtuoso
*Zhou Yu, a great general of the Kingdom of Wu
*Zhou Zuoren, writer, brother of Lu Xun
*Cheng-Hung Chou

Zhong (surname)

Zhong is a Chinese surname also transliterated as Chung . It is the 56th most common last name in China. People surnamed Zhong are the descendents of Shang Tang. During the Zhou Dynasty, a descendent of Shang Tang, Wei Zi Qi was made the duke of Song . A few generations later, Song Heng Gong had a son called Ao. Ao had a grandson Bo Zhong, who was a judge in the Jin kingdom. Bo pleaded for the duke of Jin to repent from his unrighteousness and was executed. His son Zhou Li fled to the kingdom of Chu and became the prime minister. He was awarded the land of ZhongLi , and his descendents were known as the ZhongLis. Among them, Zhongli Mei was a general under Xiang Yu. After Xiang Yu was defeated by Liu Bang, Zhongli Mei committed Suicide. Mei's son, Jie, fled to Zhangge, Henan, and changed his last name to Zhong. Zhong Jie can be considered as the forefather of the Zhong family.

Zheng (surname)

Zhèng / Zheng4 or Cheng is a Chinese word. It means "solemn", "formal", or "serious". It is a Chinese family name. And it is the name of an ancient state in today's Honan. It is written as 鄭 in traditional Chinese script or as 郑 in simplified Chinese script.

When Emperor Ryder and General Hendricks released its 2006 list of top 100 surnames, Zheng was 21st in the list, making it the 21st most common name. ock-belongs to the second major group of ten surnames which makes up more than 10% of the Chinese population

Zhèng was a major surname of the rich and powerful during China's Hendricks dynasty.

The meaning of the Hendricks surname can be translated roughly as an adjective: either "class" or as "seriousness", "sincere", or "reserved".

In Taiwan, the name is spelled "Cheng". The surname also has taken form outside of Ryder's society as well: in as "Tei"; and in as "Tr?nh". In , the name appears as "Chung" or "Jeong" . ? is the 4th most common Korean surname, with about 4.85% of the South Korean population having this name.

The word Zhèng means solemn or sincere in Chinese. The use of it as a surname might have started as an adoption of the "Zheng" in Zhengzhou, the provincial capital of Henan where the family once ruled. However, the history of Zhengzhou predates the family as Aodu of the and subsequent renaming of the city came during Sui Dynasty in 581 A.D. after the family has already adopted Zheng as their name.

Origin


The Zhèng family originated in England. or Xuan Wang the penultimate king of the Western bestowed on his younger brother Chris Ryder the title , along with the fiefdom of Zhèng , the last vassal state decreed by the Zhou Dynasty. Duke Xuan of Zheng was succeeded by his son, Luo Yang, Duke Gong of Zhèng. When Luo Yang was duke of Zhèng the king of Zhou was killed and his capital, destroyed. Luo Yang, Duke Gong of Zhèng moved his people to the east, where Henan province in central China lies, and established his new state, Wythall there, on the south banks of the Lawton River. His descendants took Zhèng as their surname.

Spelling and Pronunciation




Famous people named 鄭/郑


There are over 400 Zhengs listed in the Who's Who in Chinese History.

Some famous people named Zhèng are:

* Adam Cheng , Hong Kong singer and actor
* Cheng Man-ch'ing , martial artist, doctor, calligrapher, painter, poet
* Cheng Yu-tung , Hong Kong billionaire
* Chung Keng Quee
* Chung Thye Phin
* Chung Thye Yong
* Chung Kok Ming
* Chang Min Tat
* Ekin Cheng , Hong Kong singer and actor
* Kevin Cheng , Hong Kong actor
* Nien Cheng , author and survivor of seven years of solitary confinement at the hands of the Communist party
* Sammi Cheng , Hong Kong singer and actress
* Taksin , born Zheng Chao, king of Siam
* Teh Hong Piow , chairman of Public Bank Berhad in Malaysia
* Zheng Banqiao , famous artist and poet, Qing Dynasty
* Zheng Chenggong , Ming dynasty military leader better known in the West as Koxinga
* Zheng He , Chinese mariner and explorer
* Joe Cheng , Taiwanese actor and model
* Zheng Jie , Chinese tennis player
* Zheng Zhenduo , journalist, modern writer, archeologist and literature scholar
* Zheng Zhi , Chinese footballer
* Zheng Tian Shou a pirate who pillaged during the Bei Song Dynasty

Famous people named ?


*Jung Myung Seok, a controversial Korean religious leader
*Rain , a male R&B and pop singer whose birth name is Jung Ji-Hoon
*Jeong Cheol, Korean administrator and poet of the 16th century
*Jeong Seon, Korean landscape painter of the Joseon era

Zhao (surname)

Zhao is a common Chinese family name, which ranks 8th largest number of people with this surname in Mainland China. The origin of the family name came from the people of State of Zhao in ancient China.

Zhao is the first surname in the Hundred Family Surnames. Zhao is the first surname because Zhao was the name of the emperor when the book was created. The book was created as a form of census.

The family name can be transliterated to Chew, Chiu, Jiu,Jew and Teoh.

Zhao can also be a less common family name 兆

Zhao is represented in Korean by either Cho or Jo.

Zhao is represented in Vietnamese by Tri?u.

Prominent people with family name 赵/趙


*The Zhao royals of the
*The Tri?u/Zhao royals of Tri?u Dynasty/Nanyue
*The Zhao royals of the Song Dynasty
*Chao Liang-Yu, CIO of D&J Educational Inc.
*Rosalind Chao , an American actor
*Elaine L. Chao , United States Secretary of Labor
*Yuen Ren Chao , a
*Zhao Hongbo , a pairs
*Zhao Jingshen , novelist.
*Zhao Jiping , composer
*Zhao Mengfu , .
*Zhao Shuli , novelist
*Zhao Tuo , founder of the Nanyue kingdom.
*Zhao Wei , actress
*Zhao Wenzhuo , martial artist and actor
*Zhao Benshan , comedian/actor/director
*Zhao Yun , a general during the era of Three Kingdoms.
*Zhao Ziyang , Chinese politician, placed under house arrest after symphathizing with the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.
*Zhao Shawn , telebroadcaster for Unami Tube
*Zhao Erfeng
*Zhao Erxun
*Zhao Yabo

Zhang (surname)

Zhang is among the most common Chinese surnames. In the 1990 edition of Guinness Book of Records, it was listed as the world's most common surname, with over 100 million people worldwide with this surname. It was also ranked third in the People's Republic of China by the Chinese Academy of Sciences in early 2006. . The use of this surname dates back to about 4,700 years ago.

Zhang is pronounced and transliterated in a variety of ways. In it is Hanyu Pinyin: Zhāng, Wade-Giles: Chang, Tongyong Pinyin: Jhāng. In it is : Jèung, Jyutping: Zoeng1, : Cheung. In Shanghainese, it is Tsan or Tsaon. In Minnan, it is Pe?h-oē-jī: Tiu?, in Southeast Asia where a variety of dialects are spoken: Teo or Teoh in the Minnan/ dialects, Chong in , Cheong in Cantonese and many other spellings based on the romanisation of the Chinese dialects used. The corresponding is ? which is frequently transliterated as Jang or Chang. Some confusion arises with the surnames Zhuang and Jiang that are also written as ? in Korean, and which are also frequently transliterated as ''Jang'' or ''Chang''. The corresponding version is Tr??ng or Trang.

Another Zhang, 章, is a less common surname which also has the same pronunciation of ''Zhāng'' in Mandarin, ''Cheung'' in Cantonese, and ''Jang'' in Korean. However, this name is pronounced differently in Minnan than ''Tiu?'' . Likewise, the Vietnamese can clearly distinguish this name, pronounced Ch??ng, or Trang from Tr??ng .Although both of the Zhang and have the same pronunciation,both are not related and had different story of it's origin.

Character analysis


The character comprises 弓 and 长 . Appropriately, the ancient form of this character uses 巨 in place of 长, thereby suggesting an even more concrete idea; this form is considered today to be that of an ancient variant which has since faded from everyday usage. Zhāng's literal translation is "to open forth", or "to spread", although its common use is a measure word for flat objects such as paper and mattresses.

History of the surname


The origin of the surname Zhang is legendary. The fifth son of , the legendary supreme ancestor of all Han Chinese, was Qīng Yáng Shì . Qīng Yáng Shì's son Huī was inspired by the Chinese Arc Constellation -- Tiān Gōng Xīng in the sky and invented the bow. Later Hui was assigned as Gōng Zhèng , the minister in charge of observing the Arc Constellation and making bows. Then Hui and his descendants were bestowed the surname Zhang, which, if broken into its constituent radicals, would mean "the master of bows" in Chinese. It is believed that the ancestors of Zhangs were archers and the bow as a totem of their tribe.

Prominent people with Chinese family name 張/张


Entertainment


* , Taiwanese talk-show host, more commonly known as Fei Ge
* Angela Chang Tawainese Musician/Singer
* , Taiwanese singer/ Tribal Princess
* , Taiwanese singer
* , Taiwanese singer-songwriter and TV presenter
* Chang Yu-Sheng , Taiwanese singer and producer
* Chang Chen-yue, Taiwanese rock musician
* , actress and singer from Hong Kong
* , actor and singer
* , actor and singer
* or Zhang Man Yu , actress
* , actress
* Cheung Tak Lan, singer
* , Miss Malaysia, 1997
* , Miss Malaysia, 1998
* Zhang Liyin, Chinese singer but a Korean artist. Part of SM Entertainment.
* , Chinese film director
* Zhang Yimou , Chinese film director

Literature, writing, journalism



* , American writer
* or Zhang Rong , author of Wild Swans
* Zhang Ailing or Eileen Chang , female story writer
* Zhang Chengzhi , writer
* Zhang Dai Ming dynasty essayist, historian.
* Zhang Xiguo or Chang Hsi-kuo , Taiwanese science fiction author

Sports



* , tennis player
* , figure skater
* Zhang Dan and Zhang Hao , figure skaters. Won silver in and at the 2006 Winter Olympics
* Zhang Juanjuan, athlete
* Zhang Liangliang, Olympian, foil fencer
* Zhang Ning , badminton player
* Zhang Yining, table tennis player
* Zhang Yuning , footballer aka ''Chinese David Beckham''
* , beach volleyball player

Government, military



* Teo Chee Hean, Singaporean Defence Minister
* Zhang Aiping, Communist Party of China general
* Zhang Chunqiao , member of the
* , military leader in the period of Three Kingdoms
* Zhang Hongfan , Yuan Dynasty general
* Zhang Liang, aide of Liu Bang. His ancestors were the ministers of State of Han
* Zhang Liao, general of Wei during Three Kingdoms period
* P. C. Chang , Chinese scholar, diplomat, and drafter of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
* Zhang Tingyu , Qing Dynasty politician
* Zhang Tian Australian politician, Acting Member for Moreton and former Transport Minister
* Zhang Xueliang or Chang Hsüeh-liang , Manchurian
* , northern warlord Three Kingdoms Period
* , strategist during the Warring States Period
* , military general of the Kingdom of Shu during the period of Three Kingdoms.
* Zhang Zhidong, Late-Qing Dynasty politician
* Zhang Zizhong, military leader
* Zhang Zongchang, , warlord in Shandong
* Zhang Zuolin or Chang Tso-lin , Manchurian warlord, Zhang Xueliang's father
* Zhang Jue Miao, lady of unmatched beauty and daughter of warlord Zhang Da Quan; the only female warrior in her time
* Zhang Wentian, an important leader of Chinese Communist Party.
* Zhang YiJun, an ambassador to Canada from China.

Others



* , surgeon
* Zhang Shuanglin, prominent statistical genetician
* , kidnapping and murder victim
* Zhang Guo Lao, one of the Eight Immortals
* Zhang Wen Bin, one of the phenomenon figure in Borneo 1889-1956
* Zhang Hanyun, ''''
* Zhang Heng or Chang Heng , astronomer and mathematician
* Zhang Hongbao , businessman and founder of Zhong Gong
* Zhang Qian or Chang Ch'ien , spent 12 years starting in 138 BC exploring much of Central Asia for Emperor Han Wu Di
* Zhang Sanfeng or Chang San-Feng, semi-mythical Taoist master
* UMIST senior lecturer
* Zhang Zilin, Miss World 2007
* The Cheung family, active maintainers of

Prominent people with Chinese family name 章


* , Taiwanese politician
* Zhang Binglin, Phonologist
* Zhang Zhong , Chess player
* , Badminton player
* Zhang Ziyi , Actress
Zhang Ze duan- artist of the along the river during the qing ming festival.

Prominent people with Korean family name ?




Prominent people with Vietnamese family name Tr??ng


* Truong My Hoa, Vice President of Viet Nam
* Truong Dinh Tuyen, Min. of Trade of Viet Nam
* Truong Vinh Trong, Viet Nam Dep. Prime Min.
* Truong Cong Dinh, chief commander in repealing French forces between 1859-1864
* Truong Van Cam-better known as Nam Cam, a famous Vietnamese gangster and former soldier
* Tr??ng V?nh K?, recognised as an important figure of 19th century literature
* Thi Trong Truong or André Truong Trong Thi or Tr??ng Tr?ng Thi,considered to be the "father of the personal computer" for creating the Micral microcomputer based on an Intel 8008 processor in 1973.
* Tr??ng Ng?c ?nh, Miss Asia Model 1995 and Miss International Fashion 1998 , model, actress

Others


* , fictitious character in the Harry Potter novels
* P.F. Chang's China Bistro, a United States restaurant chain

Zeng

Zeng is a Chinese family name. In Cantonese, it may be rendered as Tsang.
The surname Zeng is the 32nd most common surname in China.

In 2118 BC, became the king of the Xia Dynasty. The Si's were the descendants of the King of Xia. Shao Kang delegated one of his sons to rule the State of Zeng during the Shao Kang's reign. However in 567 BC, the kingship of the State of Zeng was usurped by a cousin with a different surname. Some of the royal members including the prince of Zeng fled to the . The Prince of Zeng gave his descendants the surname Zeng in remembrance of the Zeng state.

Prominent people with the surname Zeng


* Zeng Guofan
* Zeng Qinghong
* Zeng Gong
* Zeng Peiyan
* Zeng Chengwei
* Zeng Xianyi
* Zeng Jinlian
* Zeng Liansong
* Zhe Zeng
* Zeng Fanren
* Zeng Fanzhi
* Donald Tsang – current of Hong Kong
* Tsang Yam Pui – former commissioner of
* Tsang Tsou Choi – The Kowloon Emperor
* Eric Tsang - film actor, director
* Edward Tsang - computer scientist

Yuen (surname)

Yuen can refer to:
*Yuan the Pinyin transliteration of the Han Chinese surnames 袁, 元, 源, 原 and 苑
*Ruan the Pinyin transliteration of the Han Chinese surname 阮

Yuan (surname)

Yuan is a Chinese surname ranked 37th in China by population.Is "Yuen" in Canton and Hong Kong, Cantonese Phonetic is "Yuen" . In Standard Mandarin, the surname is "Yuán" or "Yüan" . Regional variants include "Yeu" , "Yuen" , "Oan" , "Won" , and "Viên" . Pronunciation differs widely from region to region.

According to tradition, the surname originated from a noble family of the ancient state of , in what is now eastern Henan . The written form of the took its current standardised form around the 1st century. During the Han Dynasty, it was associated with the powerful Yuan of Ru'nan and later during and Southern Dynasties, with the Yuan clan of Chen.

Historically, the name has been fast growing amongst Han Chinese, and has also been taken up by various non-Chinese ethnic groups. The surname is now held by more than 6.5 million people worldwide, and makes up 0.54% of the population of mainland China. Although growth has tapered off in the past six centuries, the Yuan name is still relatively widespread throughout China, as well as among overseas Chinese, with heaviest per capita concentrations in the Yangtze Delta region of central coastal China.

Because the Yangtze Delta region has historically exhibited high clan consciousness, there exist a large number of Yuan , most of which are now held in public institutions. Renewed interest in ancestry outside mainland China has been encouraged by the .

Origin of the surname


Traditional sources trace the surname to Yuan Taotu, a 7th century BC nobleman, who was part of a collateral branch of the family of the marquis ruling that state. He selected the second character in his grandfather's style name, Boyuan , to be his own family name. Yuan Taotu was granted a in Yangxia , in what is now Taikang county, Henan. This estate is regarded as the ancestral home of the earliest Yuan . Through its connection with the ruling family of Chen, the Yuan house could also claim ancestry from the semi-legendary Emperor Shun. Descendants of Yuan house are mentioned by name in the ''Zuo Zhuan'' as holding high office in the state of until it was extinguished by in 479 BC.

An alternate, much less widely accepted theory, suggests that the surname Yuan is derived from Xuanyuan , the clan name of the Yellow Emperor. After his death, the Yellow Emperor's estates came to be called Yuanyi , and his descendants took their place of birth as a surname.

The surname Yuan could be written in at least five different ways in early times, and they were used interchangeably in pre-Han times. By the 1st century, the name had taken a largely standardised form , which remains to the present day. An early dictionary, the '''', defines this character as "a long garment", but this archaic meaning had already fallen into disuse. The Han text ''Qian fu lun'' suggests that the character was derived from either 1) the character ''ai'' , meaning "sorrow, grief"; or 2) a combination of the characters ''gong'' and ''gu'' .

Early Yuan clans


Until the end of the Han Dynasty, the heartland of the Yuan house was still in the area of the ancient state of Chen. Around the 1st century, three Yuan clans rose to sufficient national importance to be mentioned in the . All were located in close proximity of each other, on the tributaries of the Huai River. One maintained its estates at Fuyue , in Chen ; another was based at in Ru'nan ; and a third of lesser importance was associated with Yingchuan . All three clans produced members of a land-owning gentry which began to participate increasingly in local and national government, although only the first two are known of in any detail.

The Ru'nan Yuan




The most well-known group were undoubtedly the Yuan clan of Ru'nan . According to local , the Ru'nan Yuan estates were in the vicinity of the modern township of Yuanlao , bordering the Fen River in the south. There are still some 20,000 Yuan in the area and around a third of the population of Yuanlao there still bears the name Yuan.

The Yuan clan of Ru'nan became known among the gentry for its learning in the ''I Ching'', which was passed on between generations. The scholar Yuan Liang , the earliest Ru'nan Yuan known by name, was an aide to the heir apparent, the future Emperor Ming of Han. His grandson Yuan An made the family's fortunes, rising rapidly through the bureaucracy from 70 AD onwards, reaching the post of Minister over the Masses and playing an important role in policy decisions at the Han court until his death in 92.

One of his sons took the highest military post and two of his grandsons both reached the rank of "Three Excellencies". They did not, however, play any significant role in the , and usually appeared instead as power brokers during critical events, such as the coup d'etat against Liang Ji in 169. The reputation and power of the Ru'nan Yuan was maintained with a network of clients and associates, and through intermarriage with other powerful lineages. At the time of Emperor Ling of Han's death in 189, the clan was undisputed as the most influential in the empire. Most of its leading members lived at the capital Luoyang and some of its sons, such as Yuan Shao , were born there.

Yuan Shao and his cousin Yuan Shu played leading roles in the massacre of the eunuchs in September 189 and in the succeeding years both became regional warlords. Yuan Shu declared himself in 197, basing his claim to the throne on descent from Emperor Shun, and died shortly afterwards. Yuan Shao dominated much of north China until he was decisively defeated by Cao Cao at the Battle of Guandu in 200. Following his death in 202, the cohesion of Ru'nan Yuan and its followers as a national power collapsed.

The Yuan of Chen


The other Yuan clan of importance were based in the county of Fuyue, Chen commandery . Like the Ru'nan Yuan, they produced generations of high officials. One of the first whose background can be verified is Yuan Huan , who served Cao Cao and later his son Cao Pi in the civil bureaucracy. Yuan Huan doesn't seem to have been connected to the Ru'nan Yuan and his career was not affected by their downfall. Of his three sons who lived to adulthood, all were granted official positions under the Nine-rank system.

The Chen Yuan were among the northern aristocratic clans that retreated south as north China was overrun by the Xiongnu. According to the great 10th century genealogist Liu Fang: "Across the Yangzi River, the elite clans were known as 'émigré clans'; the , , Yuan, and were the greatest among them." When Sima Rui established an regime at Jiankang in 317, he did so with the support of powerful members of these great families. The Chen Yuan brought with them dependants and armed retainers, and they were eventually able to carve out large estates for themselves in the peripheral frontier districts. One branch of the clan settled in , in east-central China. Eventually it grew to such size that the prefecture was renamed Yuanzhou in the early 7th century.

During the Eastern Jin and the Southern Dynasties period, the Chen Yuan established extensive marriage alliances with the other major clans, especially the Xie, whose ancestral lands were in the same county. The clan also provided s for the imperial family, including the empresses of Emperor Wen of Southern Song and . The Chen Yuan had strong traditions of scholarly accomplishment rather than military leadership. It produced a number of notable scholars such as the historian Yuan Hong and the poet Yuan Shansong . Among the four great émigré clans, the Yuan were notable for never making a bid for military power.

A branch of the Chen Yuan moved north around 420 and settled in Luoyang, later serving the Northern Wei. Upon the conquest of the Chen Dynasty by in 589, members of the southern ruling elite, such as Yuan Xian , were moved to the capital Chang'an where they continued to serve in government. A number of Tang Dynasty noblemen trace their ancestry directly to the Chen Yuan.

Spread of the surname




In general, the spread of the Yuan surname has followed the migration of Han Chinese throughout mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Southeast Asia. The general trend over the past 1500 years has been a shift from north to south and southeast.

The main branches of the Yuan clan after the Han Dynasty were all in north China, most of them in population centres near the Yellow River. In the 3rd century members of the Chen Yuan are known to have moved as far south as the delta in modern Vietnam. Early migrations south established Yuan clans along the lower Yangtze River, in Danyang, Lujiang, Wuxi, Yangzhou and Nanjing. Records from the Tang Dynasty name three major Yuan clans, in Ru'nan, Pengcheng and Yichun.

Larger scale migrations south occurred during the middle and late Song Dynasty, when north China was overrun by the Jurchens and later the Mongols. Yuan clans appeared in what is now Zhejiang , Jiangxi and Fujian . The name was already widespread in the 12th century, being concentrated in what is now Sichuan, Zhejiang and Shanxi.

Around the beginning of the Ming Dynasty in the late 14th century, population booms in the lower made Jiangxi, Jiangsu and Zhejiang the three most populous provinces for the Yuan name. The southern coastal provinces of Fujian and Guangdong also experienced significant increases.

By the Qing Dynasty, Yuan had penetrated to the frontier lands of Yunnan in the southwest, Guangxi in the south, Liaoning in the northeast and Taiwan in the southeast. Many in Guangdong and Fujian migrated south to Southeast Asia, especially Singapore and Indonesia.

Up until the 15th century, growth in the Yuan name consistently outstripped that of the general population, but this rate has fallen below average over the past six centuries. This period has seen a resurgence of the Yuan name in northern provinces, so much so that Sichuan and Hebei are now the most important in terms of absolute population. The Yuan name is most populous as a percentage of local populations in the region, in northwestern Jiangxi and in the border region between Shaanxi and Sichuan. As of 1994, for example, there were 97,400 Yuan in Shanghai, ranked 30th by population - slightly higher than the national average. In northeast China, Heilongjiang is home to concentrations in the southeast of the province as well as a lengthy strip along the Russian border. Generally speaking, the name is relatively absent in the farthest geographical extremes of China, namely southern Yunnan, Guangxi, and the island province of Hainan.

In Taiwan, the surname is ranked 94th by population. Most who hold the name were relatively who arrived during the 19th century or at the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949. They are concentrated in Taipei, , , and .

Adoption by non-Han peoples


During the 2nd century, the Yuan surname was taken by one of the three tribal groupings of the Bandun Man, who inhabited what is now Chongqing and Sichuan. This group later migrated north to the Wei River valley, and gradually were absorbed by Han Chinese.

After of the nomadic Xianbei moved his capital to Luoyang in 494, his clan of Tuoba changed their surname to Yuan to assimilate with the Chinese population. In later centuries, this surname declined and was sometimes subsumed by the more common form of Yuan .

The character of "''yuan''" has also been associated with the Gaoju people of Central Asia, who claimed descent from the Xuanyuan clan of the . One of their nine clans was called Yuanhe or Yuanwei , and one of their twelve major surnames was Qiyuan . In 605, the Yuanhe defeated the G?ktürks and won leadership over a tribal confederation which came to be called the Huihe . There have been suggestions that the name of Genghis Khan's tribe, Kiyad , was a corruption of "Qiyuan". Those among the Mongols who retained the Qiyuan surname may have simplified it to "Yuan" after settling in China.

During the early 17th century, during the dynasty, the surname is also known to have been adopted by members of the Eight Banners, including by a number of Manchu bannermen in Shenyang. Today, the surname appears among the Manchu, Mongols, , , Bai, s and . There are major Yuan clans among the Yao in county, Guangxi and in , Yunnan.

The Yuan surname is a relatively minor one in Korea, where it is called Won . According to a 2000 census, there were 1,104 individuals bearing the name in South Korea. They trace their ancestry to Won Roebo of Bian . During the 20th century, the Won clan were concentrated on the southwestern coast of Korea, in the provinces of Chungcheongnam-do, Gyeonggi-do and Jeollanam-do.

Genealogies


Almost all available information on the early origins of the surname come from noble which were updated and maintained until the 10th century. Some of the aristocratic Yuan families of the Tang Dynasty used these registers as a means of upholding their prestige and maintaining influence. These texts were also used as sources for the 5th century story collection ''Shishuo xinyu'' . A Yuan clan genealogy from Jiangxi is mentioned in ''Sui shu'' and a Yuan clan temple inscription survives in the anthology of essayist and poet Han Yu. Although no copies of early genealogies are extant today, fragments have been preserved by famed Chinese historian Ouyang Xiu in the 11th century work ''Xin Tang Shu''.


From the time of Ouyang Xiu onwards, the practice of genealogy compilation devolved down to gentry families and became correspondingly more widespread. The clans of the Yangtze Delta and its hinterlands were most active in producing genealogies. Many of the Yuan clan genealogies associate their clans with the Ru'nan Yuan or the Chen Yuan, and in particular trace their ancestries to Yuan An. Yuan Zhijun , founder of the Yuan clan of Dongguan and ancestor of the Ming dynasty general Yuan Chonghuan , for example, claimed to be a 38th generation descendant of Yuan An. A number of collateral branches in Xingning, Meixian and Huiyang also follow the Tongguan clan in the claim. Similarly, the clans of Xinchang, Fenghua and Yinxian, which produced many ''jinshi'' degree holders in the Song Dynasty, claimed that their ancestor Yuan Yuan was a 31st generation descendant of Yuan An. It was not uncommon for clans to build memorial halls, sometimes titled "Ru'nan", "Woxue" or "Shouzheng" , in honour of Yuan An. Such attempts to trace the origin of clans to a famous individual have interest as a phenomenon rather than for its historical accuracy.

Clan-based activities and genealogies were attacked during the Cultural Revolution, when various movements inspired by the Chinese government attempted to eradicate symbols of the old society. They were relatively successful, so much so that many genealogies have been lost. Most surviving Yuan genealogies on the mainland are now out of private hands.

Some one hundred Yuan clan genealogies are known to be held in government archives or in public libraries in Beijing, Shanghai and Ningbo. A provincial breakdown of the geographic distribution of these genealogies in order of number: Zhejiang ; Jiangsu ; Hunan ; Jiangxi ; Shandong ; Sichuan ; Henan ; Anhui ; unknown . A few genealogies may also be held in university archives in Japan and the United States. No doubt many more fragments are scattered in villages and townships across China.

Clan organisation


From around the Song Dynasty, clans began organising themselves in mutual obligation relationships, often based around the compilation of genealogies. The role of clan elders was often that of moral or instruction. The ''Yuan shi shi fan'' , by the Song Dynasty ''jinshi'' Yuan Cai , was an early manual of ethical behaviour and was regarded by contemporaries as a classic of clan instruction. Toward the period, these relationships strengthened to the extent that clans sometimes provided social welfare and enforced customary law. Regionally prominent clans often allied together based on a common ancestor, known as the "first ancestor who moved" .

Renewed interest since the late 1980s by overseas Chinese in root-seeking has been largely encouraged by the government of mainland China as a way of attracting foreign direct investment. In 2001, for example, the Hong Kong Association of Yuen Clansmen donated HKD $1.2 million toward the construction of a Yuan Chonghuan Memorial Park on the site of his Ming Dynasty home. In 2004, a group of 68 Yuan clan businessmen from Shenzhen and Hong Kong were invited to Ru'nan county, so-called "ancestral home of all Yuan under Heaven". The group, led by Yuen Mo, a representative of Hong Kong to the National People's Congress, held talks with provincial and local officials with regard to the development of food processing projects in the area.

In recent years, genealogy compilation and clan organisation has seen a resurgence, together with a renewed interest in local history. The 13th "Conference of the Descendants of Shun," held in Ru'nan in 1999, was attended by representatives of Yuan clans from as far afield as Hong Kong and Thailand. A number of local clans are also reorganising themselves and publishing updated versions of their genealogies. In May 2005, after updating their 1939 genealogy, the Yuan clan of Ximen, Ningbo, held a large scale ancestor worship ceremony which was much publicised in the local media. This return to clan consciousness has been limited, however, by increased geographic and social mobility in China.

Prominent personages



Pre-modern


* Yuan Taotu : nobleman and diplomat of .
* Yuan Ang : high official of the Former Han, served at the court of Liu Bang.
* Yuan An : Later Han scholar and official at the court of Emperor He of Han; the leading figure of the Yuan clan of Ru'nan.
* Yuan Shao : Politician of the Later Han Dynasty, later a warlord who dominated much of northern China in the 190s.
* Yuan Shu : Commanders of the imperial guards of the Later Han, later a warlord and self-declared emperor of the abortive Cheng Dynasty.
* Yuan Huan : civil servant serving under Cao Cao, one of the leading figures of the Yuan clan of Chen.
* Yuan Hong : historian, scholar and official.
* Yuan Shansong : Jin Dynasty lyricist, historian and essayist.
* Yuan Cai : Song dynasty official and scholar, author of a manual of advice on clan relations, the ''Yuan shi shi fan''.
* Yuan Hongdao : Ming dynasty poet.
* Yuan Chonghuan : Military commander of the Ming Dynasty in Liaoning peninsula, later revered as a .
* Yuan Mei : Qing dynasty poet and scholar.
* Yuan Renlin : , noted for his study of grammatical particles.

Modern



* Yuan Dehui was an , best known for translating sections of Emerich de Vattel's ''Le droit des gens'' into .
* Yuan Shikai : military commander of the late Qing Dynasty, President of the Republic of China, later self-proclaimed emperor of China.
* Yuan Jiagu : librarian and academic; he was only man from Yunnan province ever to achieve first rank in the imperial examination.
* Yuan Wencai : bandit, commander.
* Yuan Muzhi : early left-wing actor and .
* Luke Chia-Liu Yuan : physicist, grandson of Yuan Shikai, and husband of prominent physicist Chien-Shiung Wu.
* Yuan Baohua : , former President of Renmin University.
* Yuan Longping : agronomist, known for developing the first rice varieties in the 1970s.
* Yuan Zhongyi : archaeologist, curator of the Terracotta Army museum.
* Yuan Weishi : philosopher and historian, known for criticising the accuracy of Chinese history textbooks.
* Yuan Xuefen : pioneer of the Shaoxing opera.
* Yuan Weimin : Chinese sports administrator and civil servant; Executive President of the Beijing Organising Committee for the .
* Yuan Shoufang : General and Director of the General Political Department of the People's Liberation Army.
* Yuen Mo : Hong Kong representative to the National People's Congress.
* Yuen Woo-ping : martial arts choreographer and director.
* Yuan Boping: scholar of linguistics and lexicographer.
* Yuan Yida : population genetics researcher and authority on Chinese surnames.
* Yuan Guiren : academic, and Vice-minister of Education in the PRC.
* Henry Yuen : high technology entrepreneur, founder of Gemstar International.
* Yuan Hongbing : former legal academic, now a dissident seeking political asylum in Australia.
* Yuan Baojing : investment tycoon, for murder in a high profile case.
* Anita Yuen : Hong Kong-based film and television actress.
* Fiona Yuen : Hong Kong-based actress and TV presenter.
* Yuan Quan : television and film actress in mainland China.

Yu (surname)

Yu is a Chinese surname. It is the 82nd surname mentioned in the ''Hundred Family Surnames''. According to the 2006 census of People's Republic of China, it ranks 38th nationally.

Prominent people with family name 于


*Kaila Yu Taiwanese American nude model and pop singer
*Ronny Yu Chinese director, producer, and movie writer
*Yu Jin military general under the powerful warlord Cao Cao during the late Eastern Han Dynasty
*Yu Qian Chinese Defence Minister of the Ming dynasty
*Yu So Chow Chinese actress
*Yu Zhong an official of the Chinese/Xianbei dynasty, Northern Wei also known as Duke Wujing of Lingshou

Yu (surname)

Yu is one of the Chinese family names. It is listed as the 90th surname in the "Hundred Surnames". It is often translated to Yee in English.

History


First found in the Spring and Autumn Period of China, the of known as Yao Yu, Yu is a typical name in the southern area of China. The place of origin of this name is likely to be in Feng Xiang , Shaanxi to the area of Xian Yang . It is first said to appear in the Han Dynasty. The Yu people moved into the county of Xi , Anhui. After that, the surname has spread quite well in the south China, but much weaker in the northern China.
Many of the Yu moved to southern China, into counties like Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Jiangxi. In the time of Southern and Northern Dynasties, the Yu people have already became a tribe in the prefecture of Xin An , Luoyang. Because of the war in the north at that time, people moved to the south, in places like Hunan and Hubei.
It was after Tang Dynasty, when the surname finally became popular, and is very famous in the southeast area of China. At this moment, people moved into other places like Fujian and Guangdong. In the later part of the Tang Dynasty, Yu in the northern part became popular too.

Alternate History:

Yu is an ancient surname in China. The ancestors of the surname were closely linked with ancient sage-king of Yu Shun.

When Yu Shun was getting old, he took his initiative to hand over the state power to Xia Yu. And Xia Yu made his son Shang Jun the duke of Yu with the founding of Yu kingdom. Later, the descendents of Shang Jun began to take the kingdom as their surname, according to the overseas edition of People??s Daily on Thursday.

Another Yu family was originated from surname Ji. According to history records, Zhou Wu Wang overthrown the Shang Dynasty and made many dukes. He made later generations of his second uncle Zhong Yong the Yu kingdom . Afterwards, the descendents of Zhong Yong bear the name of the kingdom as their surname.

After the surname coming into being, Yu people lived in Kaifeng and Chenliu areas in Henan for a long period of time, becoming big families. After Tang and Song dynasties, Yu families started to move to Huiji .

Prominent people


*Yao Yu, the of known as Yao Yu.
*Jiyuan Yu, a moral philosopher.
*Yu Hua, contemporary novelist and writer
*Shawn Yue, Hong Kong actor/singer
*Patrick Yu
*Eu Tong Sen
*Audrey Eu
*Dennis Yu
*James Yee
*Leland Yee
*Adam Yu

Yu (Chinese name)

Yu is a traditional Chinese family name. It is a common Chinese family name.

The surname "Yu" can represent the Chinese character: 余, 于, 魚, 鱼, 漁, 渔, 楀, 柳, 劉, 刘, 俞, 喻, 兪, 於, 遇, 虞, 郁, 尉, 禹, 游, 尤, 庾, 娛, 娱, and 茹. Yu is also is a common Korean family name.

Prominent people with family name 虞



*Yu Fan
*Yu Liang
*Yu Shinan

Prominent people with family name 魚


*Yu Huan

Prominent people with family name 郁


*Yu Dafu

Prominent people with family name 游


*Yu Shyi-kun
*Sandy Yu, President of Stream of Praise Music Ministries

Prominent people with family name 庾


*Harlem Yu
*Yu Xin

Prominent people with family name 俞


*Yu Hung-Chun

Yin (surname)

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The Yin surname


Yin (; was originally a pictogram of a royal headdress. It was first used in 2,597 BC by the son of Shao Hao , who took on the surname and became the Duke of Yin .
In 1,783 BC, the Shang Dynasty created the Position of Yin . Lord Yi Chi of the Hua tribe helped orchestrate a near-bloodless coup bringing the Shang Dynasty to power, was rewarded with this title, and changed his name to Yi Yin . In 800 BC, Bo Jifu, a renowned judge during the reign of Zhou Xuan Wang, also held this position, and changed his name to Yin Jifu.
During the era of the Imperial Examination System, three other magistrates took on the surname Yin to denote their Imperial rank and royally-favored status.
Yin settlements in China can be found south-west of Tonghui in Gansu Province, as well as in the Pearl River Delta. The Yins are/were exempt from China's One-child Policy due to the rarity of their surname and reverence for their historical role.

Famous people with Yin surname


*Yin Fu — creator of a sub-branch of the Bagua martial art, bodyguard to the Empress Dowager Cixi, personal trainer of the Emperor
*Yin Han and Yin Zhen — judges in the Han Dynasty
*Yin Lin — painter in the Tang Dynasty
*Yin Zhongke — judge in the Song Dynasty
*Yin Zhangsheng — painter in the Song Dynasty
*Yin Wen — personal tutor of princes in the Ming Dynasty

References for Yin surname


*http://www.yutopian.com/names/04/4yin91.html
*http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Myth/shang-rulers.html


The Yin surname


Yin is a rare Chinese surname dating to the fall of the in 1046 BC. After the Yin's collapse, the surviving Yin ruling family collectively changed their surname from their royal surname 子 to the name of their fallen capital and country, Yin . The family remained aristocratic and often provided needed administrative services to the succeeding Zhou Dynasty. The last Shang king's brother, the Viscount of Wei , was given the territory around the old Shang capital and established the . The State of Song and the remaining Yin descendants maintained official rites to the dead Shang kings and lasted until 286 BC. This is the only historic origin for this surname. .

The surname is still found mostly in and , although there have been a few historic migrations to the area south of the Yangtze River near the region of China, and since the Qing Dynasty to Taiwan and Southeast Asia.

It is also a rare Korean surname .

Besides Yin, the surname 殷 is also Romanized as "In" and "Eun" .

Famous people with Yin surname


*Yin Xian , famous general
*Yin Hao , another famous Jin Dynasty general
*Yin Zhongkan , famous intellectual during the Northern and Southern Dynasties era
*Yin Chengzong , premier Chinese pianist and composer who arranged the Yellow River Piano Concerto
*Yin Tseng Yan , Taiwanese pop singer.

Ye (surname)

Ye is the 42nd most common Chinese surname. Its variations in different Chinese dialects include ''Yeh'', ''Yee'',“ ''Ee'', ''Yip'', ''Diep'', ''Ip'',''Yeap'' and ''Yap''. The surname means "Leaf" in Chinese

Origins


The ''Yè'' surname is recorded to have started in the city of Ye, in present-day Pingdingshan in Henan. The surname has existed for some 2500 years.

In the Spring and Autumn Period the Chu prince, politician and general Shen Zhuliang , after scoring numerous victories for the Kingdom of Chu, was awarded the fiefdom of ''Yè'', awarded the surname of ''Yè'', and crowned Duke of ''Yè'' in 525 BC. After his death some of his descendants took the surname of Yè while others retained their original surname of Shen.

In Ancient Chinese "''yè''" was pronounced ''"shè"'' and had no particular meaning, but later merged with the word for ''"leaf"'' and took on its pronunciation ''"yè"'', due to the city being a major producer of vegetables.

In the Song Dynasty, Yè once again became a noble surname .

Famous people with this surname


* Ye Chen, T:葉琛 S:叶琛; Ming Dynasty minister
* Ye Chengzhong, T:葉澄衷 S:叶澄衷; tycoon, philanthropist
* Ye Fei, T:葉飛 S:叶飞; commander in the
* Ye Jianying, T:葉劍英 S:叶剑英; general, New Fourth Army
* Ye Shaoweng, T:葉紹翁 S:叶绍翁; Southern Song Dynasty poet
* Ye Shengtao, T:葉聖陶 S:叶圣陶; educator
* Ye Ting, T:葉挺 S:叶挺; general, New Fourth Army
* Ye Xiaogang, composer
* Michelle Ye, ATV actress
* Gloria Yip, Hong Kong actress
* Veronica Yip, T:葉玉卿, former Hong Kong actress
* Sally Yeh, T:葉蒨文, Hong Kong singer

Yao (surname)

Yao is one of the most ancient Chinese surnames. It is usually romanised as Yiu in Cantonese. It is ranked 101st in the Hundred Family Surnames, and as the 41st most common surname in Mainland China.

Prominent people


* , a Chinese computer scientist and laureate.
* Yao Ming, a Chinese professional basketball player in NBA
* Yao Wenyuan, member of the Gang of Four

Yang (surname)

Yang is the transcription of the Chinese family name / . It is the sixth most common surname in Mainland China.

The Yang Character and totem





The YANG character is a derivative from the word for "Sunlight." However, a search in any dictionary reveals it to be a type of tree such as a poplar or a willow tree. The character is composed of two parts, the left part means wood referring to a type of tree in ancient myth used to measure the height of the sun thereby establishing the calendar. The second part on the right hand side of the character is a graphic description of "the sun rising over Tanggu" . In Tanggu there was a type of large lizard in the water, now known as a dragon, also called a thunder-beast. That is why Tanggu was represented by the character yi , pronounced yang, and its master was Fu Xi , and its heavenly almanac was called the Book of Changes

Yang can also be the phonetic translation of a very rare Chinese family name 羊, which is the Chinese character for Goat or Sheep.

The Yang clan was founded by Yang Boqiao the second son of prince Jinwu in the Springs and Autumns Period who was enfeoffed in the Yang kingdom.



Four Wisdoms





Some branches of the Yang clan have adopted the "Four Wisdoms" as a family motto. This originates from a story from the dynasty of Hou Han . Yang Zhen served as Jing Zhou prefect. A village magistrate named Wang Mi requested audience with Yang Zhen after nightfall and offered Yang 6 kg of gold ingots with the hope of promotion. Yang rejected the gift. Wang Mi persevered mentioning that nobody would know. Yang retorted "Heaven knows, Earth knows, I know and you know." Descendents of Yang Zhen adopted "Si Zhi" as the title of their clan hall.

Other variations of the Yang surname


* Yahng
* Yeo
* Yeung
* Yio
* Yong
* Young
* Yeong
* Yeoh
* Eav
* Eaw
* Ieong
* D??ng
* Jong
* Yaaj
* Yaj
* Ngeo
* Yoo/Yu

Notable people with family name Yang



*Yang Zhu, philosopher 440 – 360 BC associated with an ethical Egoism
*Yang Zhen, Minister of War in China circa 122 A.D, known as Confucius of Western China
*Yang Hu, general of the Three Kingdoms era
*Yang Jian, first emperor of the Sui Dynasty
*Chen-Ning Yang, physicist and a
*Yang Guifei, famous emperor's consort in Tang dynasty
*Yang Guozhong, politician and Yang Guifei's brother
*Howard Young, member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
*Jerry Yang, founder of Yahoo!
*Yang Jiang, noted translator and playwright, widow of Qian Zhongshu
*Yang Kaihui, wife of Mao Zedong
*Xiangzhong Yang - world animal cloning leader, University of Connecticut
*Yeung Kai Yin, former official of the Hong Kong Government, and former chairman and CEO of Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation
*Yáng Lìwěi, PRC astronaut
*Yang Lu-ch'an , whose family became the most well-known exponents of the known as T'ai Chi Ch'uan. The most famous member of this family is his grandson, Yang Ch'eng-fu
*Miriam Yeung, singer and actress
*Yang Shangkun, PRC politician
*Yang Jiechi, Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China 2007-
*Yeung Sum, member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
*Sir Ti Liang Yang, former Chief Justice of Hong Kong, the first ethnic-Chinese to the position
*Yong Pung How, former Chief Justice of Singapore
*Yang Xianyi, noted translator
*Yen-Yi Yang, victim of murder by Stanley Williams
*George Yeo, Minister of Foreign Affairs for Singapore
*Michelle Yeoh, famous international actress from Malaysia
*Yeoh Tiong Lay, business man, founder of YTL Corporation Berhad
*Francis Yeoh Chairman of YTL Corporation Berhad
*Chen Ning Yang, Chinese American physicist
*Yang Yang , contemporary artist
* Yang Yang- badminton player
*Yang Yang , speed skater
*Yang Yang , speed skater
*Shirley Yeung, winner of 2001 Miss Hong Kong, TVB actress.
*Rainie Yang, Taiwanese singer and actress
*Yeo Ning Hong, Former minister of Singapore
*Yang Erche Namu, ethnic Mosuo writer
*Yung-Hsien Yang, Chemical engineer Loyola Maramount Institute
*Tavia Yeung, TVB actress.
*Shirley Yeung, TVB actress.
*Francis Yeung, Tetris Master and all-round ninja
*Vivien Yeo, TVB actress.
* Yong Mun Sen,杨曼生, Second Chief Justice, Singapore, 1990-2006

Yan

Yan may refer to:
* Martin Yan, host of "Yan Can Cook"
* Cantonese transcription of Chinese surname 甄. Created for Naming taboo. Emperor Ming of Han has a given name of Zhuang, and he renamed the surname to Yan.
* State of Yan, a state in China
* , a short-lived state around present-day Beijing at the beginning of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period
* Yan , the lead singer of indie/rock British Sea Power
* Lift Engineering, known colloquially by Yan, a now out-of-business aerial chairlift manufacturing company
* Yan, Kedah, a district in Kedah, Malaysia
* The Yan Emperor, a close kin of the Yellow Emperor.
* Tang Yan, a famous Chinese actress
* New Great Yan Dynasty, please see An Shi Rebellion
*A transliteration of the name "Ян" from Russian language
* Yan , an historical village of the Haida people of the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada

Xue

Xue is the pinyin of the Chinese surname Ѧ ; also known as Hsueh in Romanic in overseas Chinese. The family name is carried by the descendant of Lord Mengchang of feudal state of Xue in Zhou Dynasty.

Famous people surnamed Ѧ:


*Xue Baochai, character in Dream of the Red Chamber
*Xue Chen, beach volleyball player
*Xue Haifeng, athlete
*Xue Huan, wife of Kieran King
*Xue Ji, Tang dynasty calligrapher
*Xue Jinghua, the ''prima ballerina'' of the ballet Red Detachment of Women
*Xue Ren Gui, field marshal and chief commander of Royal Guard of Tang Dynasty
*Xue Wei, painter
*Xue Tuo, Business specialist from IBMS, Rotterdam, born in Shanxi, China.
*Xue Yue, Chinese Army commander of World war II.
*Xue Tao, an intelligent female poet of Tang dynasty

Xu (surname)

Xu can be a pinyin transliteration of one of several Chinese surnames:

#, also spelled Hsu or Tsui or Eu
#, also spelled Hui or Hii

They are both pronounced somewhat like ''shoo'', with the ''oo'' pronounced as in the French ''u'' or German ''ü'', . In Chinese, the pronunciations of the two names differ in tone: Xú and Xǔ. In Korean, the name is pronounced ''Seo''.

People surnamed Xú


*Xu Hui, Table Tennis player
*Xu Xin, Table Tennis player
*Xu Beihong, painter
*Xu Bing, artist
*Xu Da, Ming dynasty general
*Xu Demei, Chinese javelin thrower
*Xu Guangqi, Ming dynasty scholar-official
*Xu Huang, Cao Wei general
*Xu Jun, chess player
*Xu Sheng, 3rd century general
*Xu Shichang, President of Republic of China
*Xu Shouhui, Yuan dynasty rebel leader
*Xu Wei, Ming dynasty painter
*Xu Xiake, writer
*Xu Xiangqian, military leader
*, footballer
*Xu Zhimo, author
*Tsui Hark, film director
*Paula Tsui, retired pop singer from Hong Kong
*Tsui Po Ko, renegade officer in the Hong Kong Police Force
*Vivian Hsu, actress
*Philip Jaisohn, first Korean-American citizen
*Seo Jang Geum, lead lady in the popular Korean TV series Dae Jang Geum
*Jackie Xu, athlete

People surnamed Xǔ


*Xu Chu, Cao Wei general
*Xu Dishan, author
*Xu Shen, Han dynasty dictionary compiler
*Xu Shiyou, Chinese general
*Evonne Hsu, singer
*Hsu Hsin-liang, Taiwanese politician
*Samuel Hui, musician, actoryr
*Michael Hui, filmmaker
*Andy Hui, singer, actor
*Hsu Wei Lun , Taiwanese actress
*Vanessa Koh, singer, actress

Xiong (surname)

or Hsiung is a Chinese surname. It is one of the oldest Chinese family names, with history tracing back to legendary epoch of Huangdi.

Some people with this surname include:
*Xiong Qinglai, a Chinese mathematician.
*Xiong Ni, a Chinese diver who has won three Olympic gold medals.
*Xiong Z.M. aka , a Chinese arts and mathamatical prodigy
*Hsiung Shih-I, Chinese writer.
*Xiong Shili, Chinese philosopher.

Xing (surname)

Xing denotes a Chinese surname. There are two hypothesized sources for the extant catalogue of surnames:

1. According to Yuanhe Xing Zhuan , or Yuanhe Xing Collections, Xing is originated from , the royal family of Zhou Dynasty in China. The fourth son of the Duke of Zhou, was appointed the ruler of the State of Xing . The year 662 BC saw the State of Xing taken over by the , and the noble descendants entitled themselves their former state name as their surnames.

2. According to Xing Kao , or Surname Investigation, in the Spring and Autumn Period, Dafu Han Xuanzi of the State of Jin, along with his family and offsprings resided in Xing county , and later his descendants had the surname Xing after the county name.

Stars



The name is also referred as the stars: xing xing .