"Tan" originated from
1. It came from the southwest minority in ancient times. According to the textual research of "Wan Xing Tong Pu", the six surnames in Banan (now Yunnan and Guizhou) were Tan's, claiming to be the descendants of Pangu, and looking out for Hongnong, who was Tan's in Yunnan and Guizhou. 2. Tan's family changed his surname to Tan's, and according to the genealogy of Wan's surname, Tan's family avoided hatred and said that it was next to Qin, and now Lingnan (referring to the south of Wuling, roughly equivalent to most parts of Guangxi today). )
Migration distribution
Tan's surname ranks 65th in China today. During the Zhou Dynasty, there was Tan Guo (now the west of Zhangqiu County, Shandong Province), which was said to be the fief of the descendants of Bo Yi (Bo Yi was the ancestor of Won's family). Later, this place was the land of Qi, but the descendants of Tan Guo residents or nobles took the country name as their surname, called Tan's. Zhuan Xu, a descendant of the Yellow Emperor, won the surname, so Tan's ancestors can be traced back to the Yellow Emperor. In the pre-Qin period, Tan lived in Shandong and Henan. After Qin, Han, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, Tan's surname has spread to various places. In the Tang Dynasty, Tan was a famous surname in Hunan, and its main body moved from the north to South China. During the Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties, several great immigrants and ethnic integration, the southern Tan surname was constantly enriched and developed, forming a typical southern surname. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, the migration from Shandong to the northeast and the acceleration of the localization of Manchu Eight Banners in Qing Dynasty formed the Tan surname group in Jiaodong and Liaodong peninsulas. Finally, it created the situation of the distribution of Tan surnames in the north and south of contemporary China. During the Song Dynasty, there were about 23, people named Tan, accounting for .3% of the national population, ranking 67th. The largest province with Tan surname is Hunan, accounting for about 59% of the population of Tan surname in China. The distribution in the whole country is mainly concentrated in Hunan and Guangdong, which account for about 75% of the total population of Tan. Secondly, it is distributed in Jiangxi, Sichuan, Shandong, Hebei and Hubei, and the Tan surname in these five provinces is concentrated by 22%. A large gathering area of Hunan, Guangdong, Jiangxi, Sichuan and Tan has been formed in China. During the Ming Dynasty, there were about 26, people surnamed Tan, accounting for .28% of the national population, ranking 78th. The net population growth rate of Song Yuanming in 6 years was 2%, and the population growth of Tan was lower than that of the whole country. During the Ming Dynasty, Hunan was still the largest province with Tan surname, accounting for about 25% of the total population of Tan surname in China. The distribution in China is mainly concentrated in Hunan, Guangdong, Sichuan and Jiangxi. The Tan surname in these four provinces accounts for about 75% of the total population of Tan, followed by Hubei and Jiangsu, and the Tan surname in these two provinces is concentrated by 14%. During the Song, Yuan and Ming Dynasties, the general distribution pattern of Tan surname changed little, and its population mainly migrated to the southeast and west. Hunan is still the center of the country, forming a large gathering area of Hunan, Guangdong, Sichuan, Jiangxi and Tan.
The population of Tan, a contemporary Han nationality, has reached 8.7 million, ranking 67th in China, accounting for about .3% of the national population. In the 6 years since the Ming Dynasty, the population of Tan has increased from 26, to nearly 3.7 million, an increase of more than 14 times, and the growth rate of Tan's population is higher than that of the whole country. In the 1 years since the Song Dynasty, the growth rate of Tan's population has been on the rise. At present, the distribution of Tan surname in China is mainly concentrated in Hunan, Guangdong and Sichuan provinces, accounting for about 49% of the total population of Tan surname in China, followed by Chongqing, Guangxi, Hubei, Shandong, Liaoning and Anhui, and the Tan surname in six provinces and cities is concentrated by 29%. Hunan is the largest province with Tan surname, accounting for about 22% of the total population of Tan surname in China. The whole country has re-formed two large gathering areas of Tan surname, namely, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Sichuan, Chongqing and Hubei. In the past 6 years, the degree and direction of Tan's population movement are quite different from those in Song, Yuan and Ming Dynasties, especially the migration direction from the east to Central China, North China and Sichuan has been greater than that from the north to the southeast. At the same time, the migration to the northeast has become an important direction. The schematic diagram of the distribution frequency of Tan surname in the crowd shows that Tan surname is one of the most commonly found surnames in the central and western regions and the southern regions. In Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi and Chongqing, most of Guizhou, eastern Sichuan, eastern Yunnan, most of Hubei and Jiangxi, northeast corner of Inner Mongolia and northwest corner of Heipeng River, the proportion of Tan's surname is above .54%, and the central area is as high as 1.8%. The above areas cover about 14.2% of the country's total area, and about 59% of Tan's people live there. In most parts of Yunchuan, western Guizhou, Hainan, Fujian, northeastern Jiangxi, northern Hubei, southern Anhui, southern Henan, southern Shaanxi and Gansu, Ningxia, southeastern Qinghai, eastern Shandong, most of Liaoning, Jilin, western Heilongjiang and eastern Inner Mongolia, the proportion of Tan's surname is between .18% and .54%, and its coverage area accounts for about 27% of the total area of the country.
hall number
? Good judgment hall? In Tang Xianzong, Tan Zhong was Yan's general and was sent to Wei by Yan. Just then, the imperial court sent an army across Wei to attack Zhao. Wei Mutian Ji 'an wanted to raise troops, and Tan Zhong said:? No way! If you raise a soldier, it is against the imperial court, and Wei's sin will be great. ? Ji' an adopted his words and stayed put. Tan Zhong persuaded Yan Mu Liu Ji to send troops to help the imperial court cut down Zhao, and even Zhao Cheng Raoyang and Shu Lu. Both Wei and Yan were commended by the court, and everyone admired Tan Zhongshan's judgment. What else? Jinan? 、? Hongnong? Wait for the hall number.