Wang (surname): Difference between revisions
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'''Wang''' is the [[pinyin]] [[romanization of Chinese|romanization]] of the [[Chinese surname]]s '''{{linktext|王}}''' (''Wáng'') and '''{{linktext|汪}}''' (''Wāng''). |
'''Wang''' is the [[pinyin]] [[romanization of Chinese|romanization]] of the [[Chinese surname]]s '''{{linktext|王}}''' (''Wáng'') and '''{{linktext|汪}}''' (''Wāng''). |
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'''Wáng''' was listed 8th on the famous [[Song Dynasty]] list of the ''[[Hundred Family Surnames]]''; it is the [[list of common Chinese surnames|most common surname]] in mainland China. |
'''Wáng (王)''' was listed 8th on the famous [[Song Dynasty]] list of the ''[[Hundred Family Surnames]]''; it is the [[list of common Chinese surnames|most common surname]] in mainland China. |
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'''Wāng''' was 104th of the ''[[Hundred Family Surnames]]''; it is the [[list of common Chinese surnames|58th-most-common surname]] in mainland China. |
'''Wāng (汪)''' was 104th of the ''[[Hundred Family Surnames]]''; it is the [[list of common Chinese surnames|58th-most-common surname]] in mainland China. |
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==Romanizations== |
==Romanizations== |
Revision as of 23:44, 6 October 2013
Template:Contains Chinese text
Pronunciation | Wáng ([wɔŋ]) (Mandarin) Wong (Cantonese, Hakka) Ong, Bong (Hokkien) Heng (Teochew) Uōng (Gan) Vang, Vaj, Vaaj (Hmong) Vương, Vong (Vietnamese) Wang (Korean) |
---|---|
Language(s) | Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Old Chinese |
Meaning | "king"[1] |
Other names | |
Derivative(s) | Vuong |
Pronunciation | Wāng (Mandarin) Wong (Cantonese) Ong, Ang (Hokkien) Wang (Korean) Uông (Vietnamese) |
---|---|
Language(s) | Chinese, Vietnamese |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Chinese |
Meaning | vast, pool[2] |
Wang is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese surnames 王 (Wáng) and 汪 (Wāng).
Wáng (王) was listed 8th on the famous Song Dynasty list of the Hundred Family Surnames; it is the most common surname in mainland China.
Wāng (汪) was 104th of the Hundred Family Surnames; it is the 58th-most-common surname in mainland China.
Romanizations
王 is also romanized as Wong in Cantonese and Hakka; Ong or Bong in Hokkien; Heng in Teochew; Uōng in Gan; Vang, Vaj, or Vaaj in Hmong; Vương or Vong in Vietnamese; Wang (왕) in Korean; and Ō or Oh in Japanese.
汪 is typically romanized identically, despite its distinct tone. It is also Wong in Cantonese, Ong or Ang in Hokkien, Wang (왕) in Korean, and Ō or Oh in Japanese. However, in Vietnamese, it is written Uông.
Distribution
Wáng is one of the most common surnames in the world and was listed by the People's Republic of China's National Citizen ID Information System as the most common surname in mainland China in April 2007, with 92.88 million bearers and comprising 7.25% of the general population.[3][4] It was the 6th most common surname on Taiwan in 2005, comprising 4.12% of the general population.[5]
Wāng was listed by the NCIIS survey as the 58th most common surname in mainland China[3] and by Yang Xuxian as the 76th most common surname on Taiwan.[6]
Ong is the 5th-most-common surname among Chinese Singaporeans and Wong the 6th.[7]
There were 88,000 Wongs during the year 2000 US Census, making it the 7th-most-common surname among Asians and Pacific Islanders and the 279th most common surname overall. The 63,800 Wangs ranked 10th and 440th, respectively.[8]
Wang (Hangul: 왕) is a fairly rare surname in South Korea. The year 2000 South Korean Census listed only 23,447 Wangs.[9]
Origins of Wáng
王 is the Chinese word for "king". William Baxter and Laurent Sagart reconstructed the Old Chinese form of Wáng as *ɢʷaŋ and the Middle Chinese as hjwang.[1]
The modern bearers of the name Wáng come from many different backgrounds, but the principal origins of the modern surname were four: the Zi, the Ji, the Gui, and the adoption of the name from ethnic groups outside the Han Chinese.[10]
Zi house
The most ancient family name of Wáng was originated from the surname Zi. The Chinese legend mentions that near the end of Shang Dynasty, King Zhou of Shang's uncle Bi Gan, Qi Zi, and Wei Zi were called "The Three Kindhearted Men of Shang". King Zhou was violent in his rule, and Bi Gan repeatedly remonstrated to the king regarding his behavior. The king shunned his comments and killed Bi Gan instead. Bi's descendants used Wáng as their surname as they are descendants of a prince and were known as "The Bi clan of the Wáng family".[11] The Zi clan has existed for about 3100 years through Qin Dynasty to Tang Dynasty and exists today. The Zi clan of Wáng lived predominantly in Henan during these times and developed into the famous Wáng family of Ji prefecture.[12]
House of Ji
More Wáng were originated from the royal family of Zhou Dynasty. The original surname of the royal family of Zhou Dynasty was Ji. However, many of them have separated out of the family due to the loss of power and land. Because they once belonged to the royal family, they used Wáng as their surname. This family of Wáng traced its ancestry to Wang Ziqiao[13]
According to the classical records, after King Wu of Zhou defeated the Shang Dynasty, he chose the capital at the city of Gao. This was known in history as the Western Zhou Dynasty. During the reign of the 21st king, King Ling of Zhou (571 - 545 BCE), the capital was in Chen Zhou, which is the present day Luoyang, Henan. The son of King Ling, crown prince Jin or Prince Qiao, was reduced to civilian status due to his remonstration to the king. His son Zong Jin remained as a Situ in the palace, and because of the people at the time recognized him as the descendant of the royal family, they called his family the "Wáng family".[14] When the 8th generation Wang Cuo became a general in the State of Wei, the clan finally regained its status. In the early period of Qin Dynasty, this clan was active in areas of Luoyang in Henan. Between the end of Qin Dynasty and the beginning of Han Dynasty, Wang Yuan and Wang Wei, sons of the Marquis of Wuchen Wang Li, moved to Langye in Shandong and Taiyuan in Shanxi. Since then, they have developed into the famous Wáng families of Langye and Taiyuan, the largest group among this surname. The Ji clan of Wang existed around 2600 years. In China, 90% of the Wáng family originated from the Ji clan of Wang.[citation needed]
House of Gui
In Qi, the descendants of Tian An (田安) received the surname Wáng.[clarification needed]
Origins of Wāng
汪 is the Chinese onomatopoeia for the sound of a barking dog. Baxter and Sagart reconstructed it as *qʷˤaŋ and 'wang, respectively.[2]
Chinese Muslims
Most Hui people are of Arab or Persian ancestry through their male line,[citation needed] but Hui in Gansu with the surname Wāng are descended from Han Chinese who converted to Islam and married Hui or Dongxiang people.
A town called Tangwangchuan in Gansu had a multi-ethnic populace, the Tang (唐) and Wāng families predominating. The Tang and Wang families were originally of non-Muslim Han extraction, but by the Twentieth Century some branches of the families had become Muslim by intermarriage or conversion.[15]
The surname in other countries/ethnic groups
Hmong
The Vang constitute one of the largest of the eighteen clans of the Hmong.[citation needed]
Korea
Wang | |
Hangul | 왕 |
---|---|
Revised Romanization | Wang |
McCune–Reischauer | Wang |
In Korea, the Wangs are said to have originated from the Silla kingdom. One of the kingdom's noble families originally had the surname Jak (작). However, when Wang Geon – the future founder of the Goryeo kingdom – met a Buddhist monk at an early age with his father, the Buddhist monk foresaw that he would one day become king and therefore his father changed their last name to "Wang". Wang was then the Goryeo dynastic name for the duration of the kingdom, although it has since fallen into disuse. It is said that when Goryeo fell, people changed their surname to avoid severe persecution from the succeeding Joseon Dynasty. The Kaesong Wang lineage traces its ancestry to the Goryeo rulers.
Japan
Ō is a rare Japanese name, mostly held by those of Chinese descent.[citation needed]
Indonesia
In Indonesia, the surname is often romanized as "Heng", "Bong" or "Ong" for people of Hokkien descent,[citation needed] and more commonly as Ong by Chinese Peranakan.
Scandinavia
Wang is also a completely unrelated surname in Sweden and Norway. It is a variant form of the name Vang which is derived from the Old Norse word "vangr," meaning field or meadow.
Germany/Netherlands
Wang is also a surname in the German and Dutch languages. The name is derived from Middle German wang/ Middle Dutch waenge, which is literally "cheek". However, in southern German, its meaning, "grassy slope" or "field of grass", is similar to the Scandinavian surname.
Notable people surnamed Wang
China
- Charles Wang, computer entrepreneur
- David Wang, former Chinese gangster
- Ed Wang, American football player
- Garrett Wang, Chinese American actor
- Paul Wang, American film producer
- Vera Wang, fashion designer
- Alexander Wang, fashion designer
- Wang An, computer scientist who founded Wang Laboratories
- Wang Anshi, Song Dynasty politician
- Wang Bao, Han Dynasty poet and author
- Wang Bi, Three Kingdoms Taoist philosopher
- Wang Bingbing, Chinese ski mountaineer
- Wang Can, Han Dynasty scholar
- Wang Chong, Chinese philosopher during Han Dynasty
- Wang Chongyang, a Song Dynasty Taoist and founder of Quanzhen School
- Wang Chuzhi, a regional military governor for Dingzhou during the 5 Dynasties and 10 Kingdoms era
- Wang Cuo, a general from Wei Kingdom
- Wang Daiyu, Chinese Muslim scholor
- Wang Dan, student leader - Tiananmen Square dissident
- Wang Dao, Jin Dynasty statesman and advisor
- Wang Daohan, former president of the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS)
- Wang Dongxing, Mao Zedong's principal bodyguard during the Cultural Revolution
- Wang Dun, Jin Dynasty a rebellious Jin general later warlord
- Wang Fangqing, real name Wang Lin, served during the Tang Dynasty and Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty as a chancellor
- Wang Fanxi, Trotskyist
- Wang Feifei (王霏霏), Fei is a Chinese singer member part of South Korean girl group Miss A.
- Wang Fu, a philosopher from Gansu in the Later Han Dynasty
- Wang Fu, a Shu Han general serving under Liu Bei
- Wang Fu, an influential eunuch in Han Dynasty
- Wang Fu, a painter from Ming Dynasty
- Wang Fuzhi, Chinese philosopher and historian
- The Empress Wang, an empress of the Chinese dynasty Tang Dynasty.
- Wang Gen, Wang Yangming's disciple
- Wang Guangmei, wife of Liu Shaoqi
- Wang Guangya, UN ambassador
- Wang Guowei, late Qing Dynasty and early Republican scholar
- Wang Hao, Chinese-American logician, philosopher and mathematician
- Wang Hongwen, Chinese politician which is the youngest member of the Gang of Four.
- Wang Jian, a general from Qin Dynasty
- Wang Jian, Liu Song and Southern Qi official
- Wang Jian, founding emperor of Former Shu, posthumously known as Gaozu
- Wang Jian, a painter from Ming Dynasty
- Wang Jinghong, Chinese Muslim admiral
- Wang Jipeng, son of Wang Yanjun, fourth king of the Min Kingdom ruled from 926-935
- Wang Jishan, served during the Tang Dynasty and Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty as a chancellor
- Wang Ju, an inventor during Tang Dynasty
- Wang Jun, Imperial Protector of Yizhou known as the Prancing Dragon General served in the Jin Dynasty
- Wang Jun, a chancellor during Tang Dynasty
- Wang Jun, son of Wang Zhen, is a famous Chinese businessman chairman of CITIC and Poly Technologies, China
- Wang Jun, a PRC politician
- Wang Ju-Rong, Chinese Muslim martial artist
- Wang Juzheng, a Northern Song painter
- Wang Kui or Wang Jinkui, second ruler of the Wuping independent regime during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period
- Wang Lang, a Wei politician during the end of the Han Dynasty and Three Kingdoms
- Wang Ling, historian of Chinese science
- Wang Liqin, table tennis player
- Wang Mang, founder of the Xin Dynasty
- Wang Meng, known as Marquess Wu of Qinghe is a prime minister for Former Qin
- Wang Ming, a senior leader of the early Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Mastermind of 28 Bolsheviks group
- Wang Nan, table tennis player
- Wang Rong, known as the 3rd East General, he served during the Jin Dynasty
- Wang Rong, a PRC politician
- Wang Shenzhi, founder of the Min Kingdom in Fujian
- Wang Shichong, a general serving under the Sui Dynasty
- Wang Shiwei, a Chinese journalist and literary writer
- Wang Shiyan, Chinese painter
- Wang Shizhen, Yuan Shikai's Beiyang subordinate
- Wang Su, son of Wang Lang, adviser to Sima Shi
- Wang Tao, reformer, political essayist, newspaper publisher, fiction writer
- Wayne Wang, film director
- Wang Wei, Tang Dynasty poet
- Wang Weilin, Tank Man, from the iconic photograph of the June 4, 1989 Tianenmen Square Massacre in Beijjing, China
- Wang Xizhi, Jin Dynasty calligrapher known as the Sage Calligrapher lived in Jin Dynasty
- Wang Xianzhi, calligrapher
- Wang Xianzhi, Tang Dynasty agrarian rebel
- Wang Xiaobo, modern writer
- Wang Xiaojie, a general served during Tang Dynasty and Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty
- Wang Xuan, an official of Wu Zetian's Zhou Dynasty, briefly serving as chancellor
- Wang Xuan, an innovator of the Chinese printing industry
- Wang Xuance, a diplomat to India and guard that served during the Tang Dynasty
- Wang Yan, son of Wang Jian, second ruler of the Qian Kingdom (Former Shu)
- Wang Yangming, Ming Dynasty Neo-Confucian
- Wang Yanhan, son of Wang Shenzhi, second king of the Min Kingdom ruled from 925-926
- Wang Yanjun, son of Wang Yanhan, third king of the Min Kingdom ruled from 926-935
- Wang Yanxi, son of Wang Jipeng, fifth king of the Min Kingdom ruled from 939-944
- Wang Yanzheng, son of Wang Yanxi, the last king of the Min Kingdom (943-945) before being absorbed by Southern Tang
- Wang Yaowu, high-ranking KMT general who fought the Imperial Japanese army and Chinese Communists from 1924-1948
- Wang Yeping, wife of Jiang Zemin, former president of People's Republic of China
- Wang Yizhan, see Garrett Wang
- Wang Yuegu, China-born Singaporean Olympic table tennis player
- Wang Yun, Minister over the Masses under Emperor Xian during the late Eastern Han Dynasty
- Wang Yuja, classical pianist
- Wang Zhaoguo, a Fujian Chinese politician who came to prominence during the era of Deng Xiaoping
- Wang Zhaojun, one of the Four Beauties of ancient China
- Wang Zhen, an official and an inventor for Yuan Dynasty known for the first wooden movable type printing
- Wang Zhen, a Chinese political figure and one of the Eight Immortals of the Communist Party of China.
- Wang Zhen, powerful eunuch during the Ming Dynasty
- Wang Zhen, well-known painter of the "Shanghai school" in the Qing Dynasty
- Wang Zhen, Chinese gymnast
- Wang Zhengjun, Han Dynasty empress
- Wang Zhengwei, Chairman of Ningxia
- Wang Zhi, a eunuch in Ming Dynasty
- Wang Zhizhi, former NBA player
- Wang Zi-Ping, Chinese Muslim martial artist
Malaysia
- Wang Lanyin, a Malaysian singer-composer
Singapore
- Wang Yuegu, China-born Singaporean Olympic table tennis player
Taiwan
- Wang Chien-Ming, pitcher for the New York Yankees and Washington Nationals
- Wang Chien-shien, ROC politician
- Cyndi Wang, Taiwanese Mandopop singer
- Joanna Wang, Taiwanese singer-songwriter
- Leehom Wang, Taiwanese-American singer-songwriter, actor and commercial model
- Ong Iok-tek (Wang Yude), Taiwan nationalist
Korea
- The royal family of the Goryeo Dynasty, founded by Wang Geon
- Wang Feifei (王霏霏), Fei is a Chinese singer member part of South Korean girl group Miss A.
- Wang Ki-Chun, judo world champion
- Wang Bit Na, actress and model
- Wang Ji-hyun, popularly known as Jun Ji-hyun
Fictional people
- Lo Wang, Shadow Warrior character
- Nina Wáng, My-Otome character
- Wang Jinrei, Tekken character
- Wang Liu Mei, Mobile Suit Gundam 00 character
- Wang Lung, The Good Earth character
- Wang Shizhen, Hikaru no Go character
- Wang Yao, Axis Powers Hetalia character
See also
References
- ^ a b Baxter, Wm. H. & Sagart, Laurent. Template:PDFlink, p. 48. 2011. Accessed 11 October 2011.
- ^ a b Baxter, Wm. H. & Sagart, Laurent. Template:PDFlink, p. 9. 2011. Accessed 11 October 2011.
- ^ a b Xinhua Net. 公安部统计分析显示:王姓成为我国第一大姓. Template:Zh icon
- ^ People's Daily. "Chinese surname shortage sparks rethink".
- ^ Taiwanese Ministry of the Interior, Department of Population. Feb 2005. Op. cit. 中华百家姓-千字文-国学经典-文化经典. "中国台湾姓氏排行 [Taiwan (China) Surname Ranking]". 8 Jun 2010. Accessed 1 Apr 2012. Template:Zh icon
- ^ Yang Xuxian. 《台湾百大姓氏》 [Taiwan's Hundred 'Big Families']. Op. cit. 中华百家姓-千字文-国学经典-文化经典. "中国台湾姓氏排行 [Taiwan (China) Surname Ranking]". 8 Jun 2010. Accessed 1 Apr 2012. Template:Zh icon
- ^ Statistics Singapore. "Popular Chinese Surnames in Singapore".
- ^ United States Census Bureau. "Genealogy Data: Frequently Occurring Surnames from Census 2000". 27 Sept 2011. Accessed 29 Mar 2012.
- ^ [1].
- ^ Origin of the surname Wang, Wong, Ong, Heng.
- ^ greatchinese.com - Hundred Family's Surnames: Wang entry (under paragraph 3 says Wang is the descendants of Prince Bi Gan)
- ^ Tracing of the Ancestry: under paragraph 1
- ^ Wang Ziqiao
- ^ Chinese surname history: Wang, under paragraph 2
- ^ Gail Hershatter (1996). Gail Hershatter (ed.). Remapping China: fissures in historical terrain (illustrated ed.). Stanford University Press. p. 102. ISBN 0-8047-2509-8. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
- Yuan (袁), Yida (義達) (2002). Chinese Surnames, Group Heredity and Spread of Population (中国姓氏·群体遗传和人口分布). Huadong Training College Publishing Group (華東師範大學出版社). ISBN 7-5617-2769-0/C.081.
{{cite book}}
: Check|isbn=
value: invalid character (help) - Zhang (臧), Lihe (勵和) (1998). The Great Dictionary of Chinese Names (中國人名大辭典), updated by Xu Shitian (許師慎). The Commercial Press (商務印書館). ISBN 7-100-02555-9.