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Jiang can be a pinyin transliteration of one of several Chinese surnames:
Pronunciation | Jiāng (Pinyin) Kang ( Pe̍h-ōe-jī) |
---|---|
Language(s) | Chinese |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Chinese |
Word/name | name of an autonomous Chinese kingdom |
Derivation | Jiangguo (江国 |
Meaning | great river |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Jiang, Chiang (Mandarin) Kong, Gong (Cantonese, Hakka) Kang ( Hokkien) |
Cognate(s) | Yíng (Chinese surname) |
Derivative(s) | Kang (Korean name) |
See also | Boyi (伯益) |
Jiang ( Chinese: 江; Jyutping: Gong1; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kang, also romanized Chiang, Kong, Kang) is a Chinese surname, accounting for 0.26% of the Han Chinese population. It is the 52nd most common Chinese surname and is the 141st surname listed in the Hundred Family Surnames poem. It is the 74th most common surname in China (2007), [1] and the 25th most common surname in Taiwan (2010). [2]
After Boyi helped Yu the Great bring flood control to the early Chinese, Yu's son and successor Qi of Xia offered Boyi's son, Xuanzhong, the position of Lord of Jiangdi ( Chinese: 江地 - modern Jiangling County in Hubei Province). [3] Boyi's descendants ruled the area as kings of an autonomous "River Kingdom" ( Chinese: 江国; pinyin: Jiāng Guó) during the Shang Dynasty and Western Zhou Dynasty, with its capital city near today's Zhengyang County, Henan Province. [4]
During the Spring and Autumn Period, the kingdom was often under attack from the neighboring states of Chu, Song, and Qi, each of which was larger than the "River Kingdom". While defending from neighbors' attacks, the Jiang state also had to deal with the Huai River's frequent flooding, which often inundated the kingdom's central areas. These difficulties prevented Jiang from developing significant economic or military power. It survived until 623 BC when it was destroyed by Chu.
At the time of the kingdom's destruction, many of its surviving inhabitants fled to what is now Henan Province and took the kingdom's name, "Jiang", as their clan name.
Jiang, Chiang (蒋) is a Chinese surname, formerly Jeung. It first appeared -
Jiang has three significant characters: 1) It is unique and pure origin. 2) The surname is from North but popular in South later. 3) Numerous famous people from the Jiang family. "蒋伯龄”(Jiang Boling) is the first ancestor of Jiang family. [5]
Variants of the surname Jiangs include Zhang, [6] Lü, [7] Qiu, [8] Shen., [9] These originated -
Jiang, Qiang, Chiang, (彊/强) is a Chinese surname. It originated during the 26th century BC. It derived from the deity [Yujiang] who was revered as the god of Water in [Ancient] China. [Yujiang]'s descendants were given the surname Jiang (疆). During the Zhou Dynasty, in the Lu (state), those with the surname Ji (姬) or of the family Gongsun Jiang (公孙强) took the surname Jiang (疆). It was also used as a given name.
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This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Jiang can be a pinyin transliteration of one of several Chinese surnames:
Pronunciation | Jiāng (Pinyin) Kang ( Pe̍h-ōe-jī) |
---|---|
Language(s) | Chinese |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Chinese |
Word/name | name of an autonomous Chinese kingdom |
Derivation | Jiangguo (江国 |
Meaning | great river |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Jiang, Chiang (Mandarin) Kong, Gong (Cantonese, Hakka) Kang ( Hokkien) |
Cognate(s) | Yíng (Chinese surname) |
Derivative(s) | Kang (Korean name) |
See also | Boyi (伯益) |
Jiang ( Chinese: 江; Jyutping: Gong1; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kang, also romanized Chiang, Kong, Kang) is a Chinese surname, accounting for 0.26% of the Han Chinese population. It is the 52nd most common Chinese surname and is the 141st surname listed in the Hundred Family Surnames poem. It is the 74th most common surname in China (2007), [1] and the 25th most common surname in Taiwan (2010). [2]
After Boyi helped Yu the Great bring flood control to the early Chinese, Yu's son and successor Qi of Xia offered Boyi's son, Xuanzhong, the position of Lord of Jiangdi ( Chinese: 江地 - modern Jiangling County in Hubei Province). [3] Boyi's descendants ruled the area as kings of an autonomous "River Kingdom" ( Chinese: 江国; pinyin: Jiāng Guó) during the Shang Dynasty and Western Zhou Dynasty, with its capital city near today's Zhengyang County, Henan Province. [4]
During the Spring and Autumn Period, the kingdom was often under attack from the neighboring states of Chu, Song, and Qi, each of which was larger than the "River Kingdom". While defending from neighbors' attacks, the Jiang state also had to deal with the Huai River's frequent flooding, which often inundated the kingdom's central areas. These difficulties prevented Jiang from developing significant economic or military power. It survived until 623 BC when it was destroyed by Chu.
At the time of the kingdom's destruction, many of its surviving inhabitants fled to what is now Henan Province and took the kingdom's name, "Jiang", as their clan name.
Jiang, Chiang (蒋) is a Chinese surname, formerly Jeung. It first appeared -
Jiang has three significant characters: 1) It is unique and pure origin. 2) The surname is from North but popular in South later. 3) Numerous famous people from the Jiang family. "蒋伯龄”(Jiang Boling) is the first ancestor of Jiang family. [5]
Variants of the surname Jiangs include Zhang, [6] Lü, [7] Qiu, [8] Shen., [9] These originated -
Jiang, Qiang, Chiang, (彊/强) is a Chinese surname. It originated during the 26th century BC. It derived from the deity [Yujiang] who was revered as the god of Water in [Ancient] China. [Yujiang]'s descendants were given the surname Jiang (疆). During the Zhou Dynasty, in the Lu (state), those with the surname Ji (姬) or of the family Gongsun Jiang (公孙强) took the surname Jiang (疆). It was also used as a given name.
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cite web}}
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