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Fan (surname)

Fàn (Chinese: ; pinyin: Fàn) is a Chinese family name. It is also one of the most common surnames in Vietnam, where it is written as Pham (范 - Phạm), and occurs in Korea as Beom (范, 범). It is the 46th name on the Hundred Family Surnames poem in Chinese.

Fàn (范)

History

The House of Fàn (Fàn Family or Fàn Clan) is a Chinese noble family that traces its origins to the model Emperor Yao, a legendary Chinese ruler who lived from 2358 – 2258 BCE. Emperor Yao is a 5th generation descendant of Emperor Huang (or Yellow Emperor), and the second son of Emperor Ku.

Until the Zhou dynasty (1122–256 BCE), the Fàns are associated with the Du Clan.[1][2]

It is said that Duke of Tangdu (Du Bo), a direct descendant of Emperor Yao, was murdered by the penultimate king of the Western Zhou dynasty, King Xuan (周宣王, 827–781 BCE). The Duke's son, Xian Shu (隰叔, also called Du Xian or "Uncle Xian") fled to the state of Jin and was eventually appointed Minister of Justice (shishi 士師).[1]

Xian Shu's son Shi Wei (士蒍) is the first person to use Shi (士, literally, judge) as a family name.[1]

Du Bo's great-grandson, Shi Hui (士会, posthumously called Fàn Wuzi (范武子)), distinguishes himself by defeating the neighboring tribes as Commander in Chief of the Jin army and is ennobled as Duke of Sui and Duke of Fàn. He gains the title Fàn Hui (范会), and is rewarded with lands southeast of Fàn (now Fan County Fànxian 范縣 in Henan) and the city of Jiexiu in south-central Shanxi province. His descendants adopted the place name, Fàn, as their kin's name and surname and more rarely assumed the name of Sui or Shi.[3][4][1][2]

Shi Hui's son takes the name of Fàn Quan (or Fàn Ziwen) and greatly expands the influence of the Fàn family as a powerful aristocratic force within the ancient state of Jin during the beginning of the Spring and Autumn period (771 to 476 BCE).[5] Fàn Quan institutes the civil system for Jin, making it the earliest kingdom during the Spring and Autumn period to do so.

For some time, the Fàn family is the most powerful aristocratic family within the state of Jin, and along with the Zhao, Han, Wei, Zhonghang and Zhi families comprised the six dominating clans of the state. Nevertheless, the Fàn family remained vassals to the Dukes of Jin until the later split of the Jin State. See Fàn Zhongyan

In 490 BCE, the Fàn and Zhonghang clans are decisively defeated by the combined Zhao, Han, Wei, and Zhi forces. Subsequently, Fàn Jishe and Zhonghang Yin led their people to the State of Qi. See Duke Ding of Jin.

Around 473 BCE, the line of Fàn Li moves to the new capital of Yue in Wu (in what is now Suzhou province). Shortly after, Fàn Li resigned from the chancellorship of Yue and married Xi Shi, one of the renowned Four Beauties of ancient China.

284-260 B.C. marks the period of the Zhao state, which reached its climax in 269 B.C. when its forces decisively defeated two Qin armies. This paved the path for Fan Sui (also known as Fan Ju [zh]), a former Wei statesman, to ascend to the position of chief minister to King Zhao. From this position, he halted the rise of the warlords who had accumulated large fortunes, assembled armies, and crowned themselves monarchs during the Warring States period. His death, occurring in tandem with the death of Qin chief general Bai Qi, marked the end of a notable period of Warring States history and the inevitability of Qin dominance in the following decades.[6][page needed]

In 689, Fàn Lübing, a descendant of Fàn Li, becomes de facto chancellor of the Tang dynasty. His grandson, Fàn Sui, would become the 5th generation ancestor of the famous Song dynasty chancellor Fàn Zhongyan.

In 960 after serving under 11 other emperors and 5 dynasties including a decade-long chancellorship for the Later Zhou dynasty, Fàn Zhi (范質) becomes the first Chancellor of the new Song dynasty to Zhao Kuangyin, Emperor Taizu of Song.[7]

During the Song dynasty (960–1279) the Fàn family is one of several key families able to successfully transition from the Tang military aristocracy to a new elite gentry class of scholar bureaucrats. During this period, the family flourishes and cultivates substantial political and economic wealth, helping to govern the Middle Kingdom at the helm of the chancellorship for the longest period of any family. Prominent political figures during this era include Fàn Zhi (范質), Fan Zhongyan, Fàn Chunren (范純仁), Fàn Chunli (范純禮) and Fàn Chengda(范成大).[7]

Modern-day Fàn County (范县) is located in the Puyang prefecture of north east Henan province. According to Baidu, the area's population is estimated at 504,000.[citation needed] Members of the Fàn family continue to thrive across a variety of different domains. The family's hometown is considered to be 40 miles northwest of Jingxian in Shandong province.

Some families of this name are derived from the (芈) surname.

Notable people with the surname Fàn (范)

Historical figures

  • See House of Fàn, Fàn family or Fàn Clan
  • Shi Hui, Sui Hui or Fàn Hui (范会), also known as Fàn Wu Zi, Duke of Fàn, Duke of Sui, progenitor of the aristocratic Fàn family and Commander in Chief of the Jin army [2]
  • Fàn Li (范蠡), advisor to the king of Yue state, chancellor of Qi and ancestor of Fàn Lübing (ancestor of Fàn Zhongyan)
  • Fàn Lishe, leader of the military-aristocratic Fan Clan who fought during the War of the Clans. See Duke Ding of Jin
  • Fàn Ju, chancellor of the Qin dynasty
  • Fàn Kuan, considered among the great master Song artists of the tenth and eleventh centuries
  • Chen Fan (陳蕃), Grand Commandant during the reign of Emperor Huan and Grand Tutor during the reign of Emperor Ling of the Eastern Han dynasty
  • Fàn Jian (樊建), official of the state of Shu Han and Jin dynasty
  • Fàn Yun (范雲), poet, friend and de facto chancellor of the Southern Qi dynasty during the reign of Emperor Wu of Liang
  • Fàn Tai (范泰), military general of the Eastern Jin dynasty, father of Fàn Ye
  • Fàn Ye (范曄), historian and politician of the Liu Song dynasty, son of Fàn Tai
  • Fàn Zhen (范縝), philosopher and court official of the Southern Qi dynasty
  • Fàn Lübing (范履冰), chancellor of the Tang dynasty during the first reign of Emperor Ruizong, ancestor of Fàn Zhongyan
  • Fàn Dongfen (范冬芬), ancestor of "the Fans of Huizhou", state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty, son of Fàn Lübing
  • Fàn Dongqian (范冬倩), state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty, son of Fàn Lübing
  • Fàn Dongchang (范冬昌), state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty, son of Fàn Lübing
  • Fàn Sui (范隋), 6th generation grandson of Fan Lübing and 5th generation ancestor of Fàn Zhongyan, county magistrate of Lishui during the reign of Emperor Yizong of Tang
  • Fàn Shouyu (范守遇), staff supervisor (判官) serving the Later Liang dynasty, father of Fàn Zhi,
  • Fàn Zhi (范質), first chancellor of the Song dynasty, Duke of Lu [7]
  • Fàn Mengli (范夢齡), Fàn Zhongyan's great-grandfather, conferred as Duke of Xu (徐國公) posthumously
  • Fàn Zanshi (范贊時), Fàn Zhongyan's grandfather, conferred as Duke of Cao (曹國公) and Duke of Tang (唐國公) posthumously
  • Fàn Yong (范墉), Fàn Zhongyan's father, conferred as Duke of Su (蘇國公) and Duke of Zhou (周國公) posthumously
  • Fàn Zhongyan (范仲淹), chancellor of the Song dynasty, Duke of Wenzheng, Duke of Chu
  • Fàn Chunyou (范純佑) (1024—1063), son of Fàn Zhongyan
  • Fàn Chunren (范純仁) (1027—1101), chancellor of the Song dynasty, prominent member of the conservative faction during the Wang Anshi Reforms, ratified as the Duke of Zhongxuan 忠宣公 posthumously, son of Fàn Zhongyan
  • Fàn Chunli (范純禮)(1031一1106), chancellor of the Song dynasty, ratified as the Duke of Gongxian 恭獻公 posthumously, son of Fàn Zhongyan
  • Fàn Chuncui (范純粹) (1046—1117), son of Fàn Zhongyan
  • Fàn Chengda (范成大), Song dynasty poet, geographer, and court official
  • Laurent-Joseph-Marius Imbert (范世亨), French-born missionary Bishop in Asia

Modern people

See also

Equivalents in other cultures

Names from other cultures meaning 'bee', just as Fan, are, among others:[8]

  • Deborah (Hebrew)
  • Madhukar (Sanskrit)
  • Melissa (Greek)

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d "The House of Fan 范 (www.chinaknowledge.de)". www.chinaknowledge.de. 2012-10-26. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  2. ^ a b c "Origin of the surname Fan, Fang". 裕 都 軒- Yutopian Chinese Culture Page (中國文化網頁). Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  3. ^ "Fan Name Meaning & Fan Family History at Ancestry.com". Ancestry®. 2016-12-25. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
  4. ^ Sk, L.; Chunjiang, F. (2013). Origins of Chinese Names:. ASIAPAC BOOKS PTE LTD. p. 37. ISBN 978-981-317-033-9. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  5. ^ hanks, Patrick (2003). Dictionary of American Family Names: 3-Volume Set. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 549. ISBN 0-19-508137-4.
  6. ^ The Cambridge History of Ancient China-Loewe and Shaughnessy
  7. ^ a b c Dull, p. 310.
  8. ^ "Getting Closer to Nature: The Power of Animal Names". NamepediA Blog.

Bibliography

External links

  • 洛阳千家姓之——范姓

surname, confused, with, fán, surname, fàn, chinese, pinyin, fàn, chinese, family, name, also, most, common, surnames, vietnam, where, written, pham, phạm, occurs, korea, beom, 46th, name, hundred, family, surnames, poem, chinese, contents, fàn, history, notab. Not to be confused with Fan 樊 surname Fan Chinese 范 pinyin Fan is a Chinese family name It is also one of the most common surnames in Vietnam where it is written as Pham 范 Phạm and occurs in Korea as Beom 范 범 It is the 46th name on the Hundred Family Surnames poem in Chinese Contents 1 Fan 范 1 1 History 1 2 Notable people with the surname Fan 范 1 2 1 Historical figures 1 2 2 Modern people 2 See also 3 Equivalents in other cultures 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksFan 范 EditHistory Edit See also Fan Clan The House of Fan Fan Family or Fan Clan is a Chinese noble family that traces its origins to the model Emperor Yao a legendary Chinese ruler who lived from 2358 2258 BCE Emperor Yao is a 5th generation descendant of Emperor Huang or Yellow Emperor and the second son of Emperor Ku Until the Zhou dynasty 1122 256 BCE the Fans are associated with the Du Clan 1 2 It is said that Duke of Tangdu Du Bo a direct descendant of Emperor Yao was murdered by the penultimate king of the Western Zhou dynasty King Xuan 周宣王 827 781 BCE The Duke s son Xian Shu 隰叔 also called Du Xian or Uncle Xian fled to the state of Jin and was eventually appointed Minister of Justice shishi 士師 1 Xian Shu s son Shi Wei 士蒍 is the first person to use Shi 士 literally judge as a family name 1 Du Bo s great grandson Shi Hui 士会 posthumously called Fan Wuzi 范武子 distinguishes himself by defeating the neighboring tribes as Commander in Chief of the Jin army and is ennobled as Duke of Sui and Duke of Fan He gains the title Fan Hui 范会 and is rewarded with lands southeast of Fan now Fan County Fanxian 范縣 in Henan and the city of Jiexiu in south central Shanxi province His descendants adopted the place name Fan as their kin s name and surname and more rarely assumed the name of Sui or Shi 3 4 1 2 Shi Hui s son takes the name of Fan Quan or Fan Ziwen and greatly expands the influence of the Fan family as a powerful aristocratic force within the ancient state of Jin during the beginning of the Spring and Autumn period 771 to 476 BCE 5 Fan Quan institutes the civil system for Jin making it the earliest kingdom during the Spring and Autumn period to do so For some time the Fan family is the most powerful aristocratic family within the state of Jin and along with the Zhao Han Wei Zhonghang and Zhi families comprised the six dominating clans of the state Nevertheless the Fan family remained vassals to the Dukes of Jin until the later split of the Jin State See Fan ZhongyanIn 490 BCE the Fan and Zhonghang clans are decisively defeated by the combined Zhao Han Wei and Zhi forces Subsequently Fan Jishe and Zhonghang Yin led their people to the State of Qi See Duke Ding of Jin Around 473 BCE the line of Fan Li moves to the new capital of Yue in Wu in what is now Suzhou province Shortly after Fan Li resigned from the chancellorship of Yue and married Xi Shi one of the renowned Four Beauties of ancient China 284 260 B C marks the period of the Zhao state which reached its climax in 269 B C when its forces decisively defeated two Qin armies This paved the path for Fan Sui also known as Fan Ju zh a former Wei statesman to ascend to the position of chief minister to King Zhao From this position he halted the rise of the warlords who had accumulated large fortunes assembled armies and crowned themselves monarchs during the Warring States period His death occurring in tandem with the death of Qin chief general Bai Qi marked the end of a notable period of Warring States history and the inevitability of Qin dominance in the following decades 6 page needed In 689 Fan Lubing a descendant of Fan Li becomes de facto chancellor of the Tang dynasty His grandson Fan Sui would become the 5th generation ancestor of the famous Song dynasty chancellor Fan Zhongyan In 960 after serving under 11 other emperors and 5 dynasties including a decade long chancellorship for the Later Zhou dynasty Fan Zhi 范質 becomes the first Chancellor of the new Song dynasty to Zhao Kuangyin Emperor Taizu of Song 7 During the Song dynasty 960 1279 the Fan family is one of several key families able to successfully transition from the Tang military aristocracy to a new elite gentry class of scholar bureaucrats During this period the family flourishes and cultivates substantial political and economic wealth helping to govern the Middle Kingdom at the helm of the chancellorship for the longest period of any family Prominent political figures during this era include Fan Zhi 范質 Fan Zhongyan Fan Chunren 范純仁 Fan Chunli 范純禮 and Fan Chengda 范成大 7 Modern day Fan County 范县 is located in the Puyang prefecture of north east Henan province According to Baidu the area s population is estimated at 504 000 citation needed Members of the Fan family continue to thrive across a variety of different domains The family s hometown is considered to be 40 miles northwest of Jingxian in Shandong province Some families of this name are derived from the Mǐ 芈 surname From Jurchen 孛鲁术氏 From Manchu The corresponding Vietnamese version is Phạm From some ancient people in Champa Linyi 林邑 Vietnam Notable people with the surname Fan 范 Edit Historical figures Edit See House of Fan Fan family or Fan Clan Shi Hui Sui Hui or Fan Hui 范会 also known as Fan Wu Zi Duke of Fan Duke of Sui progenitor of the aristocratic Fan family and Commander in Chief of the Jin army 2 Fan Li 范蠡 advisor to the king of Yue state chancellor of Qi and ancestor of Fan Lubing ancestor of Fan Zhongyan Fan Lishe leader of the military aristocratic Fan Clan who fought during the War of the Clans See Duke Ding of Jin Fan Ju chancellor of the Qin dynasty Fan Kuan considered among the great master Song artists of the tenth and eleventh centuries Chen Fan 陳蕃 Grand Commandant during the reign of Emperor Huan and Grand Tutor during the reign of Emperor Ling of the Eastern Han dynasty Fan Jian 樊建 official of the state of Shu Han and Jin dynasty Fan Yun 范雲 poet friend and de facto chancellor of the Southern Qi dynasty during the reign of Emperor Wu of Liang Fan Tai 范泰 military general of the Eastern Jin dynasty father of Fan Ye Fan Ye 范曄 historian and politician of the Liu Song dynasty son of Fan Tai Fan Zhen 范縝 philosopher and court official of the Southern Qi dynasty Fan Lubing 范履冰 chancellor of the Tang dynasty during the first reign of Emperor Ruizong ancestor of Fan Zhongyan Fan Dongfen 范冬芬 ancestor of the Fans of Huizhou state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty son of Fan Lubing Fan Dongqian 范冬倩 state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty son of Fan Lubing Fan Dongchang 范冬昌 state bureaucrat of the Tang dynasty son of Fan Lubing Fan Sui 范隋 6th generation grandson of Fan Lubing and 5th generation ancestor of Fan Zhongyan county magistrate of Lishui during the reign of Emperor Yizong of Tang Fan Shouyu 范守遇 staff supervisor 判官 serving the Later Liang dynasty father of Fan Zhi Fan Zhi 范質 first chancellor of the Song dynasty Duke of Lu 7 Fan Mengli 范夢齡 Fan Zhongyan s great grandfather conferred as Duke of Xu 徐國公 posthumously Fan Zanshi 范贊時 Fan Zhongyan s grandfather conferred as Duke of Cao 曹國公 and Duke of Tang 唐國公 posthumously Fan Yong 范墉 Fan Zhongyan s father conferred as Duke of Su 蘇國公 and Duke of Zhou 周國公 posthumously Fan Zhongyan 范仲淹 chancellor of the Song dynasty Duke of Wenzheng Duke of Chu Fan Chunyou 范純佑 1024 1063 son of Fan Zhongyan Fan Chunren 范純仁 1027 1101 chancellor of the Song dynasty prominent member of the conservative faction during the Wang Anshi Reforms ratified as the Duke of Zhongxuan 忠宣公 posthumously son of Fan Zhongyan Fan Chunli 范純禮 1031一1106 chancellor of the Song dynasty ratified as the Duke of Gongxian 恭獻公 posthumously son of Fan Zhongyan Fan Chuncui 范純粹 1046 1117 son of Fan Zhongyan Fan Chengda 范成大 Song dynasty poet geographer and court official Laurent Joseph Marius Imbert 范世亨 French born missionary Bishop in AsiaModern people Edit Fan Hanjie 范漢傑 Chinese military general who served during the Second Sino Japanese War and Chinese Civil War Fan Bingbing 范冰冰 Chinese actress older sister of Fan ChengCheng Fan Changjiang 范长江 Chinese journalist Fan Changlong 范长龙 Vice Chairman of the China Central Military Commission Fan Chengcheng 范丞丞 Chinese singer and rapper younger brother of Fan Bingbing Former member of Nine Percent and member of NEXT Fan Chun Yip 范俊業 Hong Kong footballer Christine Fan 范瑋琪 Taiwanese singer Fan Lei 范磊 Chinese born American musician Lingling Fan Chinese and American power engineer Mavis Fan 范曉萱 Taiwanese singer Rita Fan 范徐麗泰 former president of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong Fan Jie 范洁 Chinese badminton Olympian Fan Wei 范偉 Chinese film actor Fan Ruijuan 范瑞娟 Chinese opera singer Fann Wong 范文芳 Singaporean film actress Zhang Fan disambiguation several people Fan Zhiyi 范志毅 Chinese footballerSee also EditFen name Equivalents in other cultures EditNames from other cultures meaning bee just as Fan are among others 8 Deborah Hebrew Madhukar Sanskrit Melissa Greek References EditCitations Edit a b c d The House of Fan 范 www chinaknowledge de www chinaknowledge de 2012 10 26 Retrieved 2017 06 26 a b c Origin of the surname Fan Fang 裕 都 軒 Yutopian Chinese Culture Page 中國文化網頁 Retrieved 2017 06 26 Fan Name Meaning amp Fan Family History at Ancestry com Ancestry 2016 12 25 Retrieved 2017 06 25 Sk L Chunjiang F 2013 Origins of Chinese Names ASIAPAC BOOKS PTE LTD p 37 ISBN 978 981 317 033 9 Retrieved 2017 06 26 hanks Patrick 2003 Dictionary of American Family Names 3 Volume Set Oxford Oxford University Press p 549 ISBN 0 19 508137 4 The Cambridge History of Ancient China Loewe and Shaughnessy a b c Dull p 310 Getting Closer to Nature The Power of Animal Names NamepediA Blog Bibliography Edit Dull Jack L 1976 Fan Chih In Franke Herbert ed Sung Biographies Wiesbaden Franz Steiner Verlag pp 310 321 ISBN 3 515 02412 3 Fan Li the man who laid a honey trap with Xi Shi http www shanghaidaily com sunday now and then Fan Li the man who laid a honeytrap with Xi Shi shdaily shtmlExternal links Edit洛阳千家姓之 范姓 This page lists people with the surname Fan If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page you may wish to change that link by adding the person s given name s to the link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fan surname amp oldid 1149912231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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