The reason why the Manchus want to change Aisin Gioro to those particularly strange surnames is mainly because the Manchus did not have their own language at the beginning, because they could only make their own based on Mongolian. Manchu is a language and culture that does not have a profound historical background, and this language and culture is destined to be unable to withstand social changes.
Therefore, after Shunzhi entered the customs, some Manchu people felt that it was too troublesome to call them in Manchu, so they quietly changed them to simple Chinese surnames. The rulers of the Qing Dynasty were very disgusted with the behavior of private people changing their surnames. Since the status of the Han people was far inferior to that of the Manchus at that time, this behavior did not become a large-scale behavior.
However, in modern history, after the Revolution of 1911, the status of the Manchus declined rapidly. Those Manchu bannermen changed their surnames to Han surnames one after another because they were afraid of being embarrassed. At that time, some Manchu people changed their surnames to save trouble, and directly used the first character of their previous surname as the Han surname. There were also people who changed other surnames according to the Chinese meaning, and some even threw away the original surname. Some surnames use the first name directly as the surname.
For example, the famous calligrapher Mr. Qigong, as a descendant of Emperor Yongzheng, was named Aixinjueluo. However, because he did not want to bear the infamy for the Manchu royal family, he directly named it after his own name. Name as name.
The typical representatives of those who changed their surnames from Lao to Han are Fucha to Fu and Nala to Na. There is actually nothing particular about Manchu people changing their names. After all, no matter how noble the Manchu surnames are after the fall of the Qing Dynasty, there is no benefit. Sometimes these surnames even become a burden.