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[Image]
In China,
clans or kinship ties
are based patrilineal groups of related people with a common surname sharing a
common ancestor. In southern China, these ties were often strengthened by a
common ancestral village or home, where clans had common property and a common
spoken patois that was unintelligible to outsiders. Following Confucian
tradition, each family maintained a registry, called a Zupu
族譜 in Mandarin, that contained
the clan's origin stories and its male lineage.
The background image for this website is a composite of three pages from the
Hong and Chin family registries. The left and center pages were hand copied by
my paternal grandfather,
Hong Hock How, from our ancestral village registry in Dong On
東安, China (Taishan County,
Guangdong). Hock How used a booklet made of thin, translucent paper with a
hand-stitched, stab binding. The page on the right is from the introduction to my mother's Chin family
registry for our ancestral village Chazhou 槎州 (Taishan County, Guangdong). My copy appears to have been photocopied several times. It also had a
hand-stitched, stab binding, which I removed in order to digitize the book,
then re-stitched myself. It was given to us by my grandmother, but its author
is unknown.
In Chinese tradition, the eldest person in the clan was giving the very
important task of maintaining the clan's registry. When families settled in a
new area, they would take a copy of the registry from their old village to use
as the starting registry for their new branch of the family. As a result,
family lineages in China can be traced back dozens of generations and
thousands of years, at a minimum going back a clan's first ancestor to settle
in a county or province, and often going all the way back to a China's
mythical past.
Hock How was following in this tradition when he made a copy of of the Zeng
Family Registry prior to his voyage to the United States in 1915. During the
Chinese Cultural Revolution, many family registries were destroyed as relics
of China's feudal past. Since China opened up in the 1980's, there has been a
renewed interest in family genealogies as both local and overseas Chinese try
to reconnect with their past. In some cases, family registries have been
recreated from copies secretly hidden by village elders or preserved by the
Chinese diaspora.
The individual entries in both the Hong and Chin registries have a fairly
standard format listing the generation number, given name, aliases, the last
names of wives, and the names of sons. Some entries also have the dates of
birth and death using the Chinese calendar. Other entries will note where the
person is buried.
Significant ancestors, including the ones who established new branches of the
family, will have short biographical notes. All sections are written in
Classical Chinese, which makes the commentaries, morale lessons, or historical
notes hard to read and translate for people who only know vernacular Chinese
(ie. modern spoken and written Chinese).
According to Wikipedia
Classical Chinese:
"...appears extremely concise and compact to modern Chinese speakers, and to
some extent [may] use of different
lexical items
(vocabulary). An essay in Classical Chinese, for example, might use half as
many
Chinese characters
as in vernacular Chinese to relate the same content.
"In terms of conciseness and compactness, Classical Chinese rarely uses words
composed of two Chinese characters; nearly all words are of one syllable
only....polysyllabic words [having] evolved in [vernacular] Chinese to
disambiguate homophones that result from sound changes."
Classical Chinese also frequently drops subjects and objects that are
understood and uses literary and cultural allusions that further contribution
to its brevity and opacity to modern readers.
Title Page of 1915 Zeng Family Registry
武城曾氏 - Wucheng Zeng
Family [Wu Cheng is a city in Shandong, where our family founder, Zeng
Shen, was born. Shen was disciple of Confucius and revered as one of
the four Sages of Confucianism. He was also know as Zeng Zi.]
中華民國肆年歲次乙邓仲秋穀旦
- Autumn of the Fourth year of the Republic of China [1915]
自記家譜 - Self-recorded
Family Registry
曉傳立 - Written by Xiao
Chuan [Hong Hock How's married name]
[Image]
[Image]
Introduction to 1915 Zeng Family Genealogy
武城曾氏重修族譜 - Revised
Wu Cheng Zeng Clan Registry
图像所以追祖貌而勵後進也祖考形骸甫。。。
[Thoughts on trying to capture images of the past.]
Translation tbd...
Introduction to the Chen Family Registry
潁川源記畧 - Brief Record
of Ying Chuan Clan's Origin. Ying Chuan is the name of a city in Henan
where one of the largest and most prominent branches of the Chen
family was founded in the 2nd Century CE.
陳氏舜後也舜居媯汭為媯氏又居姚墟以姚為姓禹受禪封舜子[ ]
[This introduction recounts the Ying Chuan Clan's origin story. The
Chen family is descended from Shun Di, the last of the mythical five
emperors, Their original surname was Gui
媯. In 1150 BCE, 32
generations later, Gui Man
媯滿, was granted the title
of Marquis of the State of Chen by the Emperor Wu Wang
武王 from the Zhou Dynasty.
Later known as Chen Hu Gong
陳胡公, he is the founder
of the Chen clan.]
Translation tbd...
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