Southern central Henan Province, north of the Huaihe River in Anhui Province, and Xuchang City, Henan Province
"Ying" originated from
There are four sources of the surname Ying, 1 . Derived from the surname Ji, after Ji Fa, King Wu of Zhou Dynasty, it is a surname based on the name of a feudal town. 2. Originated from the official position, from the history of Yingle in the Western Zhou Dynasty, and is a surname based on the official title. 3. Originated from the official position. It comes from the history of Yingmen in the Western Zhou Dynasty. It is a surname based on the official title. 4. Derived from other ethnic minorities, it is a Chinese surname change. The surname should be pronounced yīng.
Distribution of the surname Ying
There are about 300,000 people with the contemporary surname Ying, making it the 247th most common surname, accounting for approximately 0.024% of the national population. In the 1000 years since the Song Dynasty, the population growth rate of Ying has been in an eight-shaped pattern. At present, the largest province with Ying surname is still Zhejiang, accounting for about half of the population with Ying surname in the country, followed by Anhui, Jiangxi, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Fujian and other places. The schematic diagram of the distribution frequency of the surname Ying in the population shows that in Zhejiang and Shanghai, most of Anhui, Jiangxi and Fujian, northern Taiwan, the eastern end of Hubei, and central Yunnan, the proportion of the local population with the surname Ying is approximately more than 0.08%, and it can reach more than 0.5% in central areas , the above areas cover approximately 6.8% of the country’s total area, and are home to approximately 67% of the people with the Ying surname. In most of Taiwan, southern Fujian, most of Guangdong, Hunan and Hubei, western Jiangxi, northern Anhui and Jiangsu, eastern Henan, most of Shandong, eastern and western parts of Guangxi, most of Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan and Chongqing, eastern Heilongjiang and Jilin, and most of Liaoning. The proportion of surnames in the local population is approximately between 0.02% and 0.08%. The area covered by the above areas accounts for approximately 20.9% of the country's total area, and is home to approximately 27% of the people with the same surname.
Ying Shao: [Alive around 178 AD] named Zhongyuan, (first Zhongyuan, also Zhongyuan) a native of Nandun, Runan, the son of Ying Feng. The year of birth and death is unknown, but he was alive around the first year of Emperor Guanghe's reign. Shao Duxue Expo. Emperor Ling worshiped Xiaolian for the first time. In the sixth year of Zhongping (184 AD), he paid homage to the prefect of Taishan. In the second year of Emperor Xian's reign (AD 191), 300,000 Yellow Turban soldiers were defeated and the county was restored to safety. The next year after Emperor Xian moved the capital to Xu (AD 196), he ordered Shao to serve as a lieutenant for Yuan Shao's army. He later died in Ye. Shaochang felt that the old chapters at that time were drowned out and few scribes remained, so he compiled what he had heard and wrote "Han Guan Yi" and "Etiquette Stories". He also wrote "Customs of Customs" to identify the names of things and explain the suspicions of current customs. The writing is unconventional but popular, which is worthy of its name. All his writings, including one hundred and thirty-six articles collected in "Jie Han Shu", have been handed down to the world.
Ying Jue: courtesy name Delian, a writer of the Three Kingdoms and Wei Dynasties, a native of Runan, the son of Ying Xun. Cao Cao conquered him as the prime minister, and later he was appointed as Wen Gianzhonglang general. Cao Pi said that he was talented and learned enough to write books, and he was one of the "Seven Sons of Jian'an". He is the author of Ying Delian Collection.