Ke - Celebrities with the surname Ke - Naming with the surname Ke - The origin and genealogy of the surname Ke

Lankao County, Henan Province, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province, Linzi, Shandong Province

The origin of "Ke"

1. Comes from the surname Ji. Named as surname. According to "Guangyun", in the Spring and Autumn Period, there was a son named Ke Lu in the state of Wu, and later there was a Ke family. 2. In ancient times, both the Qiang and Xianbei ethnic minorities in the north had the Ke family. According to "Book of Wei Official Records", during the Southern and Northern Dynasties, the Northern Wei Dynasty had a compound surname of Ke Ba. After entering the Central Plains, it was changed to the Han surname of Ke.

Hall name

Yi Que Tang: Yi Que means strange little bird. During the Song Dynasty, Ke Shu served successively as the magistrate of Huaizhou, and after being tired of his official duties, he became an official. He once served as an assistant official in Zhangzhou. During the famine years in Zhangzhou, he tried every means to help the victims and lived in the disaster area himself. At this time, two strange birds made a nest on his roof beam. When he returned to the guest house, the two birds followed him. When he completed his mission and returned to Zhangzhou City, the bird flew after him for dozens of miles, chirping and unable to bear to leave.

Ke Weiqi: Historian of the Ming Dynasty. Concentrate on studying the history of the Song Dynasty. Combining "History of the Song Dynasty", "History of the Liao Dynasty" and "History of the Jin Dynasty" into one book, taking the Song Dynasty as the orthodox one, appended with the Liao and Jin Dynasties, it took 20 years of effort to compile the "New Edition of the History of the Song Dynasty". There are many corrections to the errors and omissions in the history of the Song Dynasty compiled by the Yuan people.

Ke Qin: a medical scientist in the Qing Dynasty. His works include four volumes of "Annotations on Febrile Diseases", two volumes of "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" and two volumes of "Fei Yi". This book criticizes the fallacies of other schools and understands Zhongjing's purpose. It can be regarded as the best work of commentaries on "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" in the past dynasties. A notable feature of Ke Qin's annotation of "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" is that, except for referring to some articles of the "Nei Jing", he almost did not cite previous comments and opinions.