The royal family of the Ming Dynasty is indeed a "periodic table of elements." Let me first list the names of a few princes of the Ming Dynasty, and everyone will understand.
There are many, many more. Look at the last character of someone’s name. Does it sound familiar?
Why is this happening? This must start with Zhu Yuanzhang.
We know that Zhu Yuanzhang was born in poverty, so he naturally had to appear educated when he became emperor. So, he asked the descendants of the royal family to be named according to the "five elements". Let’s first take a look at the names of the emperors of the Ming Dynasty:
Starting from Zhu Di and looking back, the last character of the name: wood produces fire, fire produces earth, earth produces gold, metal produces water, water produces wood...
p>What a strict naming method!
Not only that, Zhu Yuanzhang also stipulated that the names of his descendants should be based on their seniority. In other words, the surname cannot be changed, and the second character of the name must also be changed according to seniority. The only third character that can be used freely has to be determined according to the interaction of the five elements...
If this is an ordinary family, it will be okay. They can't have many children, and the characters with "gold, wood, water, fire and earth" in the radical are enough. . But in the Ming Dynasty, there were many people in the royal family, and they gave birth to many children. As children were born, they found that there were not enough words.
What to do? Look for rare words, what should I do if there are not enough? Make a word.
As a result, the rare characters matching "metal, wood, water, fire, and earth" appeared in the names of the Ming Dynasty royal family.
So why does the periodic table of elements also use these words?
The periodic table of elements was introduced from Russia by Xu Shou in 1896. However, the Russian version of the element name has no corresponding Chinese characters. Then it needs to be translated, Xu Shou thought, first of all, it must be a homophone, and then, it is best to have a radical that can represent the normality of this element.
So, he thought of the names of the Ming Dynasty royal families, turned it over and saw, oh, it just works. Therefore, part of the translation of the periodic table of elements was based on the royal family tree of the Ming Dynasty.
This is thanks to two people, one is Comrade Zhu Yuanzhang, the "chemist" who founded the Ming Dynasty; the other is Mr. Xu Shou, the translator of the periodic table of elements
Let’s talk about Comrade Zhu Yuanzhang first
Zhu Yuanzhang was originally a cowherd and did not know a few Chinese characters. After becoming the emperor, he struggled to get rid of " With the hat of "hillbilly", he set a generation table for each of his 26 sons
He also left an ancestral precept that starting from his grandchildren, the first character of each name must use the generation table. The character in, and the second character must be the radical of the five elements, and must be named in the order of fire, earth, metal, water, and wood. If you don’t believe it, look at Zhu Yuanzhang’s 26 sons
They are all next to the character wood
But there is a problem, that is, the radicals of the Five Elements are limited, and by the Wanli period, there were tens of thousands of descendants of the Zhu family, so naming was a troublesome matter, so these emperors and princes could use their own With his ingenuity, he invented his own characters
So, look at the third characters of these princes
Many characters that did not originally exist were created in this way
Why! Does it sound familiar? Because if you look closely, you will see that these third characters are all elements in the periodic table. At this time, the second person will appear
The second person: Mr. Xu Shou
It was this old gentleman. After Mendeleev invented the periodic table of elements, Mr. Xu Shou introduced the periodic table of elements, but he did not know how to use Chinese characters to express these elements. Unusual elements
By chance, he accidentally discovered a Zhu family tree, which contained many rare characters with gold letters, and some even sounded almost the same as the elements in the periodic table.
Overjoyed, Xu Shousui directly borrowed appropriate Chinese characters from the family tree, and at the same time created some Chinese characters, which eventually allowed the Chinese people to gradually understand the periodic table of elements
So it seems that Comrade Zhu Yuanzhang was not only an excellent politician, military He is also an excellent "chemist"!
I can only say that this is a beautiful coincidence, but it is also human factors that caused such a result.
There are two people who have made the greatest contributions:
Zhu Yuanzhang, 1328-1398, the founder of the Ming Dynasty and the first member of the Ming Dynasty royal family.
Xu Shou, 1818-1884, was a famous scientist in the late Qing Dynasty, the enlightener of modern Chinese chemistry, and the first person in China to create the periodic table of elements.
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Zhu Yuanzhang set a twenty-year seniority for each son, such as the eldest son Zhu Biao: "Yunwen follows the instructions of the ancestors, and the Qinwu king wins. It is good luck to go along the way. "Shi Liang made good use of Sheng"; and the fourth son Zhu Di later became the ancestor of the Ming Dynasty: "Gao Zhan Qi Jianyou, Hou Zai Yi Chang You, Ci He Yi Bo Zhong, Jian Jing Di Xian You"
Lao Zhu is a workaholic, and the names of his children and grandchildren are given according to the radicals of the Five Elements "wood, fire, earth, metal, water". For example, his sons are named after the radical "木", Zhu Biao and Zhu Di; They are next to the word "fire", Zhu Yunzhen and Zhu Gaochi. According to Lao Zhu's idea, the cycle continues endlessly.
But Zhu Chongba is probably not as good at mathematics as his name suggests. At the beginning, the names of the son he created and the grandson created by his son were easily chosen. However, the number of children and grandchildren was endless. By the end of the Ming Dynasty, Lao Zhu's family had multiplied to 1 million people.
There are so many people, let alone the issue of eating, there are not enough Chinese characters to name them. When choosing a name for future generations, we must avoid mentioning our predecessors. There is no other way. What should we do? This is not a problem for Lao Zhu's family. If there are no difficulties, they will create difficulties by themselves. If there are no Chinese characters, they will create characters by themselves. So, Lao Zhu's family started the character creation movement.
Of course , the Zhu family did not know anything about the periodic table, but it was introduced to China by Xu Shou in the 17th century. In order to match the Chinese characters with the Russian version of potassium, calcium, sodium, magnesium, aluminum, zinc, iron, etc., Mr. Xu read a lot of history books and tried to be honest and elegant. My scalp was almost scratched, so I picked up the Zhu family tree and flipped through it unconsciously, huh? Periodic table of elements?
Please see:
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Of course, compared with today’s periodic table of elements translated by Xu Shou, many elements had not been discovered at that time, so many The names of elements were discovered by later generations, imported and then translated in China, and his naming methods were followed. For example, one method is to take the first syllable of the element name, such as Na, K, Ca, and Ni corresponding to sodium, potassium, calcium, and nickel.
Of course, there are also some attachments here. The periodic table of elements does have a lot of overlapping characters with the names of Ming Dynasty clans, but most of them It existed before the Ming Dynasty, and was not just a name taken from the Ming Dynasty clan. Therefore, Xu Shou should have translated more than just the Zhu family tree.
However, given that the last character of the name of the Ming Dynasty royal family highly overlaps with the periodic table of elements, some people have stated that the royal family of the Ming Dynasty is a " Periodic Table of Elements".
First of all, it is inappropriate to explain that the name of the royal family is a "periodic table of elements". Because the periodic table of elements was introduced to China in the 1800s, and the Ming Dynasty perished as early as the 1600s, the answer should be: Why do the names of the elements on the periodic table belong to the nobles of the Ming Dynasty? name.
After Zhu Yuanzhang became the emperor, he could be said to be doing everything for his children. He punished meritorious officials. One Hu Weiyong case could kill tens of thousands of people. National policies, down to their names, are stipulated for them. The names of his princes and grandsons are all regular. The second character of the name is also different depending on the seniority, and the third character is named according to the five elements. . For example, the names of Zhu Yuanzhang's sons are Zhu Di, Zhu Biao, etc. They are all wood, and wood makes fire, so Zhu Yuanzhang's grandson is named Zhu Yunwen. But there were too many descendants of the royal family, and there was not enough metal, wood, water, fire, and earth, so many characters were created.
In 1896, Xu Shou quoted the periodic table of elements from Russia, but many of the contents on the periodic table did not have corresponding Chinese characters, so Xu Shou translated them using the names of the Chongming Dynasty royal family. For example, tin chromium, etc.
After Zhu Yuanzhang established the Ming Dynasty and established the Ming Dynasty, he had to worry a lot in order to keep the old Zhu family's power stable for a long time. He had even arranged the naming of future generations in advance.
In ancient times, large families would have a seniority chart, and the names of people of the same generation would all use the corresponding character "someone". If passed down in this way, even if the tribe disperses and migrates in the future, it will make it easier for the tribe to find their roots, and it will also help everyone adopt seniority titles.
Zhu Yuanzhang's large royal family did not adopt a set of generational layouts. Instead, he drew up a layout for each son's branch bloodline.
For example, in the family of Prince Zhu Biao: Yunwen follows the instructions of his ancestors, the powerful emperor wins, the road is good, and the teacher is good and makes good use of it.
From the family of Zhu Di, King of Yan: Gao Zhan Qi Jianyou, Houzai Yi Changyou, Cihe Yi Bozhong, Jian Jingdi Xianyou.
These seniority characters all appear in the second character of the name, not counting the third character in the name, which also has requirements:
That is, it must be in accordance with the "Book of Changes" The order in which the five elements produce each other determines the radical of the third character.
For example, the order of the five elements is: wood produces fire, fire produces earth, earth produces gold, metal produces water, water produces wood
So Zhu Di’s Di is the character for wood, and wood makes fire. Zhu Di's son will use the character for fire, that is, Renzong Zhu Gaochi; Zhu Gaochi's son's name is the character for earth, that is, Xuanzong Zhu Zhanji; and so on, Yingzong Zhu Qizhen, Xianzong Zhu Jianshen , Xiaozong Zhu Youtang, Wuzong Zhu Houzhao, etc.
Wait a minute, don’t think that Zhu Houzhao’s character for “zhao” is next to the character for “水”. In Chinese characters, 灬 is a deformation of “fire” and has two pronunciations.
灬 pronunciation (huǒ) "Shi" is the same as "fire" in ancient times. Another pronunciation is (biāo), which means fierce fire. It has nothing to do with water.
Zhu Yuanzhang hoped to use the five elements to produce each other, which means that father begets sons, sons beget grandchildren, and descendants will be endless. At the same time, it also avoids the order in which the five elements are in conflict with each other, and there will be no situation where sons restrain their fathers.
However, after a few generations, the problem came. Although Chinese characters are rich, they cannot cope with the large number of descendants of the old Zhu family. The radicals of wood, water, fire and earth are easy to find, and you can find them by looking for rare characters. . There are fewer words next to the gold letter, which is simply not enough.
There is no way to break the rules set by Zhu Yuanzhang, so I can only make up my own words, with the same pronunciation but different words. So the names appeared:
Zhu Gongxi, Zhu Shenlei, Zhu Tongchromium, Zhu Tongniobium, Zhu Zaina, Zhu Juntie, Zhu Chengco, Zhu Chengpalladium, Zhu Entong, Zhu Enpotassium, and Zhu Shuaizin.
See if the third character of these names looks familiar. It is a metal element commonly used in chemistry.
This is of course not a coincidence. With modern scientific research, as of 2019, 118 chemical elements have been discovered. Scientists divide these elements into two categories: metallic elements and non-metallic elements based on the number of electrons in their outermost shells.
Later, a periodic table of elements was made based on the characteristics of the elements. In 1896, Xu Shou introduced the periodic table from Russia, but encountered difficulties in translating it into Chinese characters.
The radicals of Chinese characters are ideographic. Metallic elements are the most abundant in nature, so Xu Shou also encountered the same problem as the royal family of the Ming Dynasty. There were too few characters next to the gold characters.
Until one day, when Xu Shou happened to look through the family tree of the Zhu family of the Ming Dynasty, he felt like he had found a treasure. There were a large number of rare Chinese characters next to the gold characters in the family tree. This solved Xu Shou's big problem, so the Chinese character version of the periodic table of elements was born with the help of Zhu's family tree.
So some people say that the royal family of the Ming Dynasty was a "periodic table of elements." It's just that Zhu Yuanzhang's naming rules accidentally contributed to this incident.
The Ming Dynasty royal family is not a "periodic table of elements"! The reason why there is such a statement is completely taken out of context by good people. Although the names of the Ming Dynasty royal family overlap with the names of elements in the "Periodic Table of Elements", the two actually have nothing to do with each other.
There are roughly three steps for the generation of rumors. Zhu Yuanzhang was named
Zhu Yuanzhang was the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty. He was born in poverty and lived a hard life. In order to let his descendants live a better life, he set extremely generous treatment conditions for them, which made the Ming Dynasty The imperial clan became one of the best-paid clans in history. As for the royal family's expenses becoming a huge burden on the Ming Dynasty's finances, this was not something Zhu Yuanzhang could have foreseen. After all, the clan had a very small population when he was in power.
Zhu Yuanzhang was so worried about his descendants that he even decided on a name. The name of the clan in the Ming Dynasty only had three characters. The first character Zhu meant death, and the second character Zhu Yuanzhang was determined to die. The first word was also clearly arranged by Zhu Yuanzhang, and the third word was half decided by Zhu Yuanzhang.
When Zhu Yuanzhang was still alive, he set a generational table for each son and his only living nephew. For example, the family of the prince (Zhu Biao) was: Yunwen followed the ancestral precepts, Qinwu Dajun won, and Shundao If everything is auspicious, a good teacher will make good use of it. The family of King Yan (Zhu Di) is: Gao Zhan Qi Jianyou, Hou Zaiyi Changyou, Cihe Yi Bozhong, Jian Jingdi Xianyou.
Seniority is the second character. Each generation chooses from the characters set by Zhu Yuanzhang. The third character is free to use, but the radical must be based on Zhu Yuanzhang’s rules, that is, from the second generation ( The generation of Zhu Biao and Zhu Di) began to determine the radical of the third character in the order of "wood, fire, earth, metal, water", which means the five elements are interdependent.
There are many characters with five elements radicals, and after more than two hundred years of multiplication, the Ming Dynasty clan had tens of thousands by the end of the Ming Dynasty. Common characters have been used by them for a long time, so what? manage? It can only be made bluntly, put a five-element radical next to it, put it on the other side as you like, and decide the pronunciation as you like. This is a new character.
Since these words have a single purpose, there is no need to worry about causing confusion in the use of Chinese characters in society. Generally, the word will disappear once the clan that owns it dies. We still encounter these strange characters today mainly because a certain clan with a rare name was recorded in history books for something. The probability of such a thing is actually quite low. Translated by Xu Shou
Xu Shou was a famous scientist in the late Qing Dynasty and an enlightener of modern chemistry in my country. He did a lot of work in systematically introducing the basic knowledge of modern chemistry and translated a large number of Western chemistry works, such as " "Chemical Identification", "Chemical Identification Continuation", "Chemical Identification Supplement", etc., have made important contributions to the development of chemistry in my country.
In the era when Xu Shou lived, our country not only did not have foreign language dictionaries, but also did not use Arabic numerals. It was very difficult to express Western scientific terms in Chinese, especially the meaning of translation. It's reasonable, but it's even more difficult. Western alphabets are fundamentally different from Chinese characters.
Xu Shou spent a lot of effort in the translation process. He mainly adopted three methods. One was to use elements that people are familiar with, such as gold, silver, copper, iron, and tin. , sulfur, carbon, etc.; the second is to name them according to the properties of the elements, such as nourishing gas (today's translation is oxygen), light gas (today's translation is hydrogen), green gas (today's translation is chlorine), light gas (today's translation is nitrogen), etc.; the third is to take the first syllable of the Western language And create new words, such as sodium (Na), potassium (K), calcium (Ca), nickel (Ni), etc.
At that time, there were only a few elements in the periodic table of elements, and Xu Shou’s translation accounted for a small proportion of today’s periodic table of elements. However, the naming method he adopted was later accepted by the Chinese chemical community and has been used ever since. .
There are rumors on the Internet that Xu Shou got Zhu Yuanzhang's family tree when translating, and then he had an idea and used it as the name of the element. Let's not talk about the nonsense that Xu Shou got Zhu Yuanzhang's family tree ( Can the royal genealogy of the previous dynasty be easily obtained? ), if Xu Shou really needs the Chinese characters next to the gold characters, wouldn't it be faster to look at the dictionary? "Kangxi Dictionary" contains a lot of characters.
For example, radium was not discovered as an element until 1898 by Mr. and Mrs. Curie. As a Chinese character, it has been in "Guangyun" for nearly a thousand years.
As Pingsha said above, the characters that were forcibly created by the Ming Dynasty clan, such as Mu Yi, cannot even be typed using the input method. After the death of King Zhu Mu Yi of Yili, , this word is basically obsolete, let alone what appears in the periodic table of elements.
In addition, the uses of these rare characters are very narrow. Xu Shou may not know it, and we cannot predict whether if Xu Shou creates a character by himself, will it have the same glyph as those dead characters? It is very likely to happen in the history of the evolution of Chinese characters.
The periodic table of elements once became my nightmare when I was in high school. Although it is not difficult to memorize it, there are quite a few questions based on each element. The only thing I remember is that it was the Russian chemist Mendeleev who invented the periodic table of elements. The rest is just chemical knowledge.
But some time ago, when I was learning about the history of the Ming Dynasty. I saw that many of the names of Ming Dynasty emperors were hard to pronounce, but they seemed familiar when I looked at them. I didn’t think much about it at the time, but when I saw this topic today, I suddenly realized that the emperor of the Ming Dynasty was just like a walking periodic table of elements.
Although Zhu Yuanzhang was a reckless emperor, like Qin Shihuang, he had an eternal heart. In the past, it was okay to be a monk or a beggar without any education, but once you become an emperor, it is no longer okay to do so. Moreover, people in ancient times had a common tendency, that is, they were superstitious and believed in the imperial power and divine right.
And people like Zhu Yuanzhang, who became serfs and sang songs, believe this statement even more. Therefore, compared with other emperors, they respected the Five Elements and Bagua more. In fact, when he first changed his name, he had a code word. The Five Elements Bagua was not involved at this time, after all, it was an afterthought after becoming the emperor.
Zhu Yuanzhang's original name was Zhu Chongba, and he was the eighth eldest child in his family. His father didn't think much about it when he named him. The family just worked for the landlord. Because he is the eighth child, I gave him a random name. Chongba Chongba means the eighth child is repeated. But later, Zhu Yuanzhang felt that the name was too rustic, just like a dog Dan'er in the countryside.
After the uprising gained some momentum, he found someone to rename himself. The three words Zhu Yuanzhang contain many meanings. Zhu Tongzhu means to kill, Yuan naturally refers to the Yuan Dynasty, and Zhang is actually a sharp tool. This means that Zhu Chongba used sharp knives to overthrow the Yuan Dynasty, and the consequences were unintended.
After Zhu Yuanzhang became emperor, he also took a lot of trouble in naming his sons. Based on the principle of the five elements mutually reinforcing each other, he invented a set of naming standards for his descendants. It is required that the second character of the royal family's descendants should be their designated seniority, and the third character should be named according to the radicals of metal, wood, water, fire and earth.
Zhu Yunwen stills
Zhu Yuanzhang’s idea is good , but he ignored the speed of population growth, which later almost became a "J"-shaped growth. In previous generations, names such as Zhu Di and Zhu Biao were fine. These common characters could solve the problem. After the seventh or eighth generation, in order to avoid the same characters as our ancestors, we had to look for uncommon characters. There are no more rare characters, so we have to make up our own characters.
Later, the Qing Dynasty invaded the country in large numbers and the Ming Dynasty perished. However, the names of these royal family members remained forever. When Kangxi compiled the dictionary, he included these contents in the "Kangxi Dictionary". But these have nothing to do with the periodic table of elements, so it depends on another scholar-Xu Shou.
As the enlightener of modern Chinese chemistry, Xu Shou greatly promoted the development of Chinese chemistry. Since its invention in 1869, the periodic table of elements has been recognized by countries around the world.
In order to better enable the people to use it, Xu Shou took on the important task of translating the periodic table of elements.
He had no clue at first. After all, translation work has always been very challenging. While searching for suitable translation content, I accidentally came across the list of the royal family of the Yuan Dynasty. Inspired by this, I translated the periodic table of elements using the names inside. Not much to say, I have a name to prove it.
Metal:
Organic:
Speaking of the Ming Dynasty royal family as a "periodic table of elements", it is actually because of Zhu Yuanzhang According to this rule, the descendants had no characters to use in their names, so they created their own Chinese characters. The Chinese characters they created happened to be used in the translation of the periodic table of elements, which led to the Ming Dynasty royal family. The name corresponds to the words in the "Periodic Table of Elements".
Fire generates earth, earth generates metal, metal generates water, water generates wood, that is, according to wood, fire, earth, metal, and water, the last character of the name of that generation must contain the radical specified by the generation.
Xu Shou introduced the periodic table of elements
The periodic table of elements was introduced in 1869 Invented by the Russian chemist Mendeleev, Xu Shou, a modern Chinese scientist and chemical enlightener, introduced the periodic table of elements to China.
I am a loose-headed potato, interpreting historical events and presenting historical stories for you. These are just my humble opinions. If you have a correct answer, please leave a message, thank you!
"Glory History" will answer your questions carefully.
The royal family of the Ming Dynasty is indeed a "periodic table of elements". Not only that, they are also masters of word creation. The "initiator" of all this is Ming Taizu Zhu Yuanzhang, a patient with severe obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Zhu Yuanzhang said: The royal family must have royal rules, and names cannot be chosen randomly. As for how to choose names, I have already stipulated them for you!
Next, let’s talk about the naming rules of the Ming Dynasty royal family.
1. Except for Zhu Yuanzhang’s son’s generation, the names of other descendants of the Zhu family all have three characters, such as Zhu Gaochi, Zhu Zhanji, Zhu Houzhao, etc.
2. The second character of the name is named after Zhu Yuanzhang! Do you think Zhu Yuanzhang could still name his descendants after his death? That's right, during his lifetime, he stipulated the middle character in the names of his descendants for the next 20 generations.
After Zhu Yuanzhang became emperor, he generously awarded vassal kings, including 25 of his sons and 1 grandnephew.
He stipulated the naming requirements for the descendants of these 26 vassal kings and Prince Zhu Biao. For example:
The middle character in the name of the descendants of Zhu Biao's lineage For:
Yunwen obeys the instructions of his ancestors, the powerful king wins, it is good to follow the road, and he is a good teacher and makes good use of it.
Zhu Biao’s sons Zhu Yunwen, Zhu Yunxi, Zhu Yunxi, Zhu Yunxi, and Zhu Yunwen’s sons Zhu Wenkui and Zhu Wengui all followed this rule.
Everyone is more familiar with Zhu Di's lineage. The characters in the middle of their names are:
Gao Zhan Qi Jianyou, Hou Zai Yi Chang You, Ci He Yi Bo Zhong, Jian Jing Di Xianyou .
Zhu Di passed to Zhu Gaochi, Zhu Gaochi passed to Zhu Zhanji, Zhu Zhanji passed to Zhu Qizhen, Zhu Qizhen passed to Zhu Jianshen, Zhu Jianshen passed to Zhu Youtang, Zhu Youtang passed to Zhu Houzhao, Zhu Houzhao The throne was passed to Zhu Houcong (two cousins), Zhu Houcong was passed to Zhu Zaijing, Zhu Zaijing was passed to Zhu Yijun, Zhu Yijun was passed to Zhu Changluo, Zhu Changluo was passed to Zhu Youxiao, Zhu Youjian was passed to Zhu Youjian, Zhu Youjian is Emperor Chongzhen.
3. This third naming rule made the Ming Dynasty emperors suffer. They were forced to create a lot of names that no one knew. word.
Zhu Yuanzhang required that the naming of future generations should comply with the principle of the mutual support and restraint of the five elements. Wood generates fire, fire generates earth, earth generates metal, metal generates water, and water generates wood. This is the cycle of reincarnation. Therefore, the third character in the names of the descendants of the Zhu family must be opposite to the five elements.
The names of Zhu Yuanzhang’s sons are all radicals of the character wood, such as Zhu Biao and Zhu Di;
The names of the third generation are all radicals of the character fire, such as Zhu Gaochi, Zhu Yunwen, Zhu Gaoxu, below the character "煦" Four points are also fire;
The fourth generation all have earth radicals, such as Zhu Zhanji, Zhu Wenkui, etc.;
The fifth generation all have gold radicals, such as Zhu Qizhen, Zhu Qiyu and others;
The sixth generation is all water radicals, such as Zhu Jianshen, the rebel Zhu Chenhao, etc.;
The seventh generation is reincarnated again, all are wood radicals, such as Zhu Youtang.
There were many descendants of the royal family, especially after Zhu Di, all the vassal princes from all over the country became Prince Taiping. The greatest pleasure was to have children. When there were more offspring, the characters with radicals were not enough. After the common characters were used up, Just use uncommon characters. After using up the uncommon characters, we simply make up our own characters. As a result, there are many characters that we don’t recognize, some of which can only be seen in the element cycle.
For example, among Zhu Yuanzhang’s sons, the second son is Qin King Zhu Xi (shǎng), the third son is Jin King Zhu Fan (gāng), the fifth son is Zhou King Zhu Xi (sù), etc.;
Ming Dynasty Among the sons of Renzong Zhu Gaochi, the second son Zhu Zhanyi (jùn), the fifth son Zhu Zhanyi (shàn), the sixth son Zhu Zhanyi (ào), the ninth son Zhu Zhanyi (jì), etc.;
Ming Yingzong Among Zhu Qizhen's sons, his son Zhu Jianlin (lín), his fifth son Zhu Jianshu (shù) and so on.
This is just a large sect in Zhu Di's lineage. How many descendants of the surname Zhu are there in the small sects of Zhu Di's lineage and the entire royal family! ?
As for the words of the periodic table of elements, the following are used:
Zhu Shenlei, Zhu Tongchromium, Zhu Tongniobium, Zhu Anmercury, Zhu Zaina, Zhu Chengcobalt, Zhu Chengpalladium, Zhu En potassium, Zhu Shuai zinc, etc. These words were created by the descendants of the Zhu family. They have no special meaning. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, the periodic table of elements was introduced to China. Mr. Xu Shou, the Chinese chemistry enlightener, simply filled them in with the elements. The periodic table is what we see now.
Objection.
These characters used by Lao Zhu's family were mentioned in "Shuowen Jiezi" of the Han Dynasty and later "Guangyun". They are just rare characters and were not created by Lao Zhu's family.
Where is the word creation that was agreed upon by Lao Zhu’s family? Why are there documents from the Song Dynasty and the Han Dynasty?