The area around Xianyang and Huxian in Shaanxi Province, and the area around Puyang and Huaxian in Henan Province
The origin of "Xuan" comes from
< /p>
1. It comes from the surname Ji, with the posthumous name as the surname. According to "Customs of Customs", Jing, the son of King Zhou Li, reigned as king for forty-six years after succeeding to the throne. After his death, his posthumous title was "Xuan" and he was called King Xuan of Zhou. Some of his descendants take "Xuan" as their surname. 2. Comes from the surname Zi. Take his posthumous name as his surname. During the Spring and Autumn Period, the monarch of the Song Dynasty was famous and powerful. He reigned for sixteen years. His posthumous title was "Xuan" after his death. There were also Xuan clans after him. 3. According to "Tongzhi? Clan Briefing? Posthumous as Clan", he was the descendant of his uncle Sun Qiaoru, a senior official in the State of Lu during the Spring and Autumn Period. For example, the overseas Chinese were given the posthumous title "Xuan Bo", and their descendants took the posthumous title as their surname.
Migration distribution
The Xuan family comes from the posthumous title of ancient kings and nobles. "Xuan" was a common posthumous title for emperors and princes in ancient times, such as King Xuan of Zhou and Duke Xuan of Song. Their descendants all took the posthumous names of their ancestors as their surnames. One of the more famous ones is the descendant of King Xuan of Zhou, who took Xuan as his surname, which is the earliest origin of the Xuan family. During the Spring and Autumn Period, the fifth generation grandson of Duke Huan of Lu, Sun Qiaoru, a senior official of the State of Lu, also had the posthumous name "Xuan" after his death. His descendants used the posthumous name as their surname, and were also called the Xuan family. The Xuan family mainly lived in Henan, Shaanxi, Shandong and other places in the early days. After the Han Dynasty, they formed a prominent family in Dongjunzhi (Puyang, Henan, China) and Shipingjun (Xingping, Shaanxi, China). Due to wars and migrations, it gradually spread in the southeastern coastal areas, and is distributed in Ningbo, Jiaxing, Zhuji, Zhejiang, Tianchang, Anhui, Jiangyin, Jiangsu and other places.
Xuan Zhenzhi: the number one scholar in the Tang Dynasty, the first generation ancestor of the Xuan family in Yiwu and Yangshanxi, Zhejiang, and the head of the eight great families in the Tang and Song Dynasties. Han Yu was the number one scholar in the Zhenyuan period of the Tang Dynasty. Xuan Zhenzhi wrote an article praising him as a person. Many members of the Xuan family were officials in the Tang and Song dynasties, including Liu Zongyuan, Zeng Gong, Ouyang Xiu, Wang Anshi, Su Shi, and Wen Tianxiang. They all wrote biographies of our ancestors.
Xuan Xiafu: formerly known as Yao Huo, also known as Jianhun, from Zhuji, Zhejiang. In the ninth year of the Republic of China (1920), after graduating from Zhejiang Provincial Category A Fisheries School in Taizhou, he went to Japan to study and studied fisheries at Hokkaido Imperial University. He wrote "The Northwest Expedition" and "Before and After Enlistment in the Army".