Zhuang (
Chinese:
莊;
Pinyin: Zhuāng;
Wade-Giles: Chuang) is a Chinese surname. It ranked 73rd by population in a 1990 study of 174,900 samples but dropped out of the top 100 in a 2006 study, which included 296 million samples .
According to the
Manuscript of the Words and Deeds of Virtuous Clans, people with the surname Zhuang are descendants of King Zhuang of the
State of Chu in the
Spring and Autumn period. The descendants adopted the posthumous title of King Zhuang as their surname. Another group of people with the surname Zhuang came from the
State of Song. King Dai of Song was named Zhuang, and his offspring later took Zhuang as their family name.
From the
Warring States period to the
Qin and
Han Dynasties, the surname Zhuang experienced two big changes. First,
Zhuang Qiao, descendant of King Zhuang of Chu, went to attack Bashu State under orders, but he was blocked by Qin troops on his way home. He had no alternative but to proclaim himself king in
Dian. Second, Emperor Ming of the
Eastern Han Dynasty was named Zhuang, therefore many people whose surname was Zhuang changed their surname so as to avoid the taboo on the personal name of Emperor Ming. In the period of
Sixteen States, the Zhuang surname spread from
Hubei and
Hunan to other regions in the country, such as
Gansu,
Zhejiang,
Fujian, and
Shandong.
There is no lack of celebrities in the Zhuang family circle: for instance, Zhuang Jia, a senior official with the State of Qi in the Spring and Autumn period; Zhuang...
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