Where is Jurchen now?

Jurchen is full now. Most of them live in Liaoning, and the rest are scattered in Heilongjiang, Inner Mongolia and Jilin. Jurchen in the early Ming Dynasty is divided into three parts: Jianzhou Jurchen, Haixi Jurchen and barbarian Jurchen. After that, it is divided into four parts: Jianzhou, Changbai, Donghai and Hulun. After the Qing Dynasty, some jurchen merged with other ethnic groups and were called Manchus, later Manchu.

Jurchen

Commonly known as Zhu Lizhen, Ligustrum lucidum and Nvzhi, today's Manchu originated from Sushen more than 3,000 years ago. From Han Dynasty to Jin Dynasty, it was called Kulou, from Southern and Northern Dynasties to Buji, from Sui and Tang Dynasties to Heishui, and from Liao Dynasty, it was called Jurchen and Nvzhi. The basic state form was formed in the Tang Dynasty. "Jurchen" was first seen in the early Tang Dynasty. As the old saying goes, "Jurchen soldiers are invincible if they are full of thousands." Jurchen in Liao Dynasty can be divided into two types: jurchen and mature jurchen. 1 15, Akuta, Jin Taizu, unified the ministries of Jurchen and established the Jin Dynasty in Huining County (Acheng, Harbin). After the Jin Dynasty destroyed Liao and Northern Song Dynasties and occupied the Central Plains, in the first year of Zhenyuan (1 153), it moved its capital to Yanjing and implemented the policy of "moving south and returning north". Jurchen first moved to Yanshan Mountains. Later, they settled in North China, and the Han nationality gradually moved northward. Under the influence of the Han nationality and the surrounding environment, the Nuzhen who settled in the Central Plains gradually merged with the Han nationality.