Why is the surname "Wu" among the hundreds of surnames divided into Yanling Hall and Bohai Hall?

Category: Social/Cultural

Problem description:

In my family's "Wu" ancestral hall, Bohai Hall is sacrificed, not Yanling Hall. However, there is no record of the origin of "Wu's Bohai Hall", so it is puzzling. I hope relevant people can help me answer, thank you!

Analysis:

Wang Jun Tang Hao

Harno. Yanling Hall: Ji Zha, the fourth son of Wu Wang, was famous for his virtue. Shoumeng asked him to inherit the throne, but he refused to accept his resignation, so Shoumeng had to seal him in Yanling. His three brothers were kings of the State of Wu, and they all wanted to give them to him when they died, but he still refused. Therefore, he was honored as "the third person of the highest virtue" by later generations, and was called "the son of Yanling" because his fief was in Yanling.

County Wang Yanling County: Qua County was established in the Western Jin Dynasty. Puyang County: Dong County was changed in the Jin Dynasty, and the county was changed in the late Western Jin Dynasty. The ancestor of the Wu family is Sun, a descendant of Guangping Hou Wuhan. Chen: The county was founded in the Western Han Dynasty. This branch of the Wu family is a descendant of Ji Za and belongs to Wu Huijia in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Changsha county: established in Qin dynasty. After that, the ancestor of this Wu family was the King of Changsha in the Western Han Dynasty.

Bohai Hall is the second largest county of Wu, and today most descendants of Wu in Fujian are Bohai Hall. A very complete Wu family tree has been preserved in Xuanhe Peitian Village, Liancheng, Fujian. This genealogy not only records the evolution of the family, but also records many local customs and poems.