Jun's surname
Jun [Jun, pronounced jùn, cannot be pronounced jūn.
1. Origin of the surname:
The first origin: originated from the surname Ji, which came from the chief in charge of the town in the early Western Zhou Dynasty. It was a surname based on the official title.
Gongyi is a county or county directly under the king of the Western Zhou Dynasty during the Spring and Autumn Period, and all the land produced in it belongs to the king of Zhou.
According to the historical record "Gongyang Chunqiu": "The public city is also the king's city. The private city is also the minister's city." The officials in charge of the king's city were directly appointed by the king of Zhou, and most of them were members of the Zhou royal family. , first called the Jun Ling, and then the County Ling. The historical book "Chun Qiu Fan Lu" states: "The king is the one who is in charge of the order." Here, the pronunciation of "Jun" is jùn (ㄐㄩㄣˋ). Later, some powerful princes and kings also established public towns, which were subordinate to the king's royal family.
In the Spring and Autumn Period, the county was still the general name of "Junyi", which governed several counties. At that time, the two characters "jun" and "jun" were interchangeable. However, the nature of a county is no longer limited to being directly subordinate to the king, but may serve as a fief for ministers and nobles. However, as a county directly under the monarch, it still has all the functions of a first-level local government, but among all functions, its military management function is more prominent.
Jun Ling (Jun Ling), whose descendants have the surname based on the official title of their ancestors, are called Jun surname or Jun surname.
The second origin: it originated from the title, which came from the kings of the Chinese princes during the Warring States Period. They were called surnames based on their title.
The Jun family is one of the titles from the Warring States Period, and is found in all princes and countries.
"Jun" title, this kind of title is given to princes. In rare cases, it is also given to high-ranking officials with different surnames who have special achievements, and is accompanied by a certain amount of land and subjects. Its fiefdom ranged from several counties to more than a dozen counties. However, the land granted to the "king" is managed by officials sent by the monarch. The recipient of the title has no actual administrative power and only collects the rent of the fief, but a part of the rent collected must be turned over to the state. taxes paid.
Many of the descendants of "Jun" do not have the right to inherit the country, so some people who take their ancestor's title as their surname are called Jun.
The third origin: it originated from the title, which came from the princes of the barbarian countries during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. They were called surnames based on their titles.
During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, the chiefs of some ethnic minority tribes in the Southwest and Northwest regions of my country and the Western Regions were elected as leaders by their tribesmen and were called "kings". The ruler is in charge of all administrative affairs of the tribe and is responsible for leading troops in battle.
After the Qin and Han dynasties, those with a large number of people and power among these ethnic minority tribes were renamed "kings", while those with a small number of people and power were still called "kings". With the conquests and annexations between tribes and ethnic groups, there are also leaders of various tribes under the "king" who are called "kings".
In the process of the evolution of Chinese history, the strengthening and immersion of Han culture has caused some ethnic minorities to have people with official titles and titles as their surnames. Therefore, there are families with hereditary monarchs who use Chinese titles as their surnames. Those who are called Jun's family.
Two historical celebrities:
Jun Xu: (1942 AD to present day), nicknamed Tianbai; a native of Zouping, Shandong. Famous sociologist and calligrapher.
Graduated from the Russian Language and Literature Department of Peking University in 1967. He is currently a researcher in aesthetics at the Institute of Philosophy, Ningxia Academy of Social Sciences, a member of the Chinese Calligraphy Association, a member of the Chinese Aesthetics Society, the vice chairman of the Ningxia Calligraphers Association, and a member of the Ningxia Writers Association.
The art of calligraphy is mainly composed of running and cursive scripts, which are free and easy, vigorous and flowing, and unique in style. He has participated in many large-scale book fairs at home and abroad, and has been widely collected and included in his portfolio.
He has published books such as "The Beauty of Calligraphy" and "The Discovery of the Beauty of Calligraphy Lines" and published more than one million words of papers. Papers were selected for the first to fourth national calligraphy symposiums. His writings and works have won dozens of awards.
The biography has been included in dozens of dictionaries and books including "Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Calligraphers", "Who's Who in Contemporary China", "Biographies of Chinese Literary Artists", "Dictionary of Chinese Social Scientists" (English version), etc. Biography.
Jun Ming: (1965-present), Mongolian; native of Beipiao, Liaoning. Famous local medical workers.
Section Chief, Taipusi Banner Economic and Trade Bureau, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Assistant Economist.
From June 1983 to June 1991, he was engaged in laboratory work at Banner Health Station. During this period, he studied at Ningcheng University in Inner Mongolia from 1985 to 1987 and served as a study committee member. In 1989, he served as a study committee member at Shagou Township Health Center. Vice President.
From June 1991 to July 1993, he worked in the Economic and Trade Co-organizer of Taipusi Banner, engaged in secretarial work. From July 1993 to present, he worked in Taipusi Banner Economic and Trade Bureau, serving as the chief of the Enterprise Management Section and the Science and Technology Section, and concurrently as the chief of Taipusi Banner. Director of the Equipment Office, during which he served as assistant manager at Taipusi Banner Flour Mill from May 1996 to May 1998. In 1998, he was sent to the Shagou Township Health Center as the deputy director by the superior authorities. Because Shagou Township is an extremely poor township, and the health center was almost paralyzed due to chaotic management and poor operation. After he went there, he first touched Clean up the family, understand the internal situation, fully analyze environmental factors, help top leaders make suggestions, and personally draft various systems and five-year planning goals of the health center, which strengthens the internal management of the health center, improves economic benefits, and completes decentralized control job training tasks.
After the bankruptcy of the tungsten mine in 1994, in order to arrange the living problems of the unemployed workers, the unit leaders assigned him to be responsible for the preparatory work for production self-rescue. He took the lead, devoted himself to the agricultural development and planting industry, and hired professional and technical personnel. The training for employees enabled them to master planting technology, make full use of the original more than 100 acres of cultivated land, and solve the basic living problems of some extremely poor and unemployed employees. They were praised by them and praised by the leaders of the unit.
Jun Yan: (1967~present), a native of Ruicheng, Shanxi. Famous collector.
Graduated from Hebei University of Literature and Art in July 1991, majoring in literature, as an assistant lecturer, and worked at the Ruicheng County Party School. He is a member of the All-China Philatelic Federation, a member of the China Collectors Association, a member of the Shangcheng County Collection Association, and a member of the County Philatelic Association.
It mainly collects stamp products from various periods in China, focusing on early actual mail seals and letter sales stamps. The stamp products of New China are basically complete, including some wrong edition stamps; it also collects ancient coins, calligraphy and paintings, porcelain, jade, ancient books and folklore cultural relics. Focus on exploring the essence of philatelic phenomena and hot issues from different angles, exploring, displaying and re-creating the cultural value of philatelic products, making breakthroughs in philatelic theory and philatelic concepts, and "On the limitations of the concept of "philatelic culture" ", "The Significance of Issuing "Chinese Festival" Popular Tickets" and other series of papers were published in newspapers and periodicals.
In November 1994, he founded the Ruicheng Aotu Post Office and served as the editor-in-chief of the company's magazine "Aotu Post Magazine". He created his own method of exchange and expropriation of different grades of tickets at different prices, and listed all letter sales tickets one by one. price.