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Information
abounds about early people but where do you find it? Check out these
articles and newspaper clippings of yesterday to see how others
view their early predecessors.
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Xinhua News Agency Apr 19, 2003
Memorial
service held for primogenitor of Chinese people
TAIYUAN,
April 19 (Xinhua) -- A public memorial service was held Saturday
in Wanrong County in north China's Shanxi Province, to pay
tribute to the legendary primogenitor of the Chinese nation.
More than 200 representatives of the Chinese people from 13
countries and regions attended the service, which was held
on the mythological birthday of the Chinese people's earliest
ancestor Nuwa (in Chinese).
Legend has it that the first human beings were created by Nuwa,
who molded clay figures by hand. She is also believed to have
patched holes in the sky with stone blocks to protect human
beings.
Following the service, Wanrong County will stage a myriad of
other activities, including a seminar on the legends of Nuwa,
a calligraphy competition, an exhibition of local produce and
industrial products and a fair in which businessmen will be
invited to invest in various projects.
Eight Chinese emperors paid homage to the ancestral temple
of Nuwa, located in Miaoqian Village of Wanrong County during
the period from 206 BC to 1279 AD.
The existing temple was constructed in 1870 during China's
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
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About.com
Jia
Pu (Chinese Genealogical Record): An Introduction
A "Jia
Pu" usually begins with the primogenitor that first settled
or moved to a place and started his family there, and should
end with the contemporary generation that draws up the genealogy.
The intermediate ancestors are to be enumerated in between.
The primogenitor's sons and descendents compose the first six
generations and are tabulated on one form. The primogenitor's
first-borne son and subsequent first-borne grandsons are listed
vertically downwards on the right, while the brothers of the
first-borne are listed laterally on the left. Descriptions
of each generation are confined in relatively narrow, horizontal
divisions of the form. These spaces contain information such
as the ancestor's name and aliases, date of birth and death
and official rank. The proceeding generations are recorded
in a similar manner.
More . .
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