Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Food recipes - Looking for a calligrapher: Yan Jia’s personal introduction
Looking for a calligrapher: Yan Jia’s personal introduction

Since Yan Zhen founded Qingjiao, his descendants have prospered and spread all over Fujian, Guangdong, Taiwan, and at home and abroad.

By the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, Qingjiao had multiplied to 4,000 people.

Today, more than 4,000 people in Qingjiao Village are sent by Yan Jiamo, the thirteenth generation grandson of Yan Zhen.

The remaining tribes moved to Dushi in Beijing, Ruian in Zhejiang, and Pu'an in Guizhou; Puning, Xingning, Chaozhou, Chaoyang, Haifeng, and Lianping in Guangdong; Fuzhou, Yingqian, Fuqing, Changle, Anxi, Lianjiang, and Fujian in Fujian.

Xianyou, Longyan, Gutian, Tongan Gangtou, Liuwudian; Zhangpu, Maping, Yunxiao, Nanjing, Yancuo, Xiqiao, Fengtang, Dongshan, Pinghe, Zhihou, Qianzhai, Tiedian in Zhangzhou territory

, Yingdian and Jianshan and other places.

At the end of the Ming Dynasty and the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, they successively traveled eastward to Taipei and Penghu, and were distributed in Tainan, Kaohsiung, Changhua, Taichung, Keelung and Taipei... There are many descendants of the Yan family in Taiwan today.

At the end of the Qing Dynasty and the beginning of the Republic of China, people spread far and wide across Southeast Asia, and the places where the most concentrated ethnic groups lived were Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and other countries.

Follow-up question: I don’t understand.

.

.