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'''Zou''' ({{zh|t=鄒|s=邹}}), originally '''Zhu''' (邾) or '''Zhulou''' (邾婁), was a minor [[State (Ancient China)|state]] that existed during the [[Zhou Dynasty]] of ancient China.<ref name="LXQ">{{Cite book |author=[[Li Xueqin]] |title=''Eastern Zhou and Qin Civilizations |others=Trans. [[Kwang-Chih Chang]] |publisher=Yale University Press|year=1985|isbn=0-300-03286-2}} p. 144</ref>
'''Zou''' ({{zh|t=鄒|s=邹}}), originally '''Zhu''' (邾) or '''Zhulou''' (邾婁), was a minor [[State (Ancient China)|state]] that existed during the [[Zhou Dynasty]] of ancient China.<ref name="LXQ">{{Cite book |author=[[Li Xueqin]] |title=''Eastern Zhou and Qin Civilizations |others=Trans. [[Kwang-Chih Chang]] |publisher=Yale University Press|year=1985|isbn=0-300-03286-2}} p. 144</ref>



Revision as of 23:10, 14 March 2017

Zou (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ), originally Zhu (邾) or Zhulou (邾婁), was a minor state that existed during the Zhou Dynasty of ancient China.[1]

History

King Wu of Zhou granted Cao Xie (曹挾), an alleged descendant of the Yellow Emperor through his grandson, the legendary emperor Zhuanxu, control of the small state of Zhu as a vassal ruler under the State of Lu with the feudal title Viscount (子), but later holding the title Duke of Zhu (邾公).[2][3][4] The ancestral surname of the ruling family was Cao (曹).[1]

Zhu subsequently changed its name to Zou.[5] The state of Zou was located in the southwest of modern-day Shandong Province.[5] Its territory is now the county-level city of Zoucheng.

Demise

Zou was conquered and annexed by the state of Chu during the reign of King Xuan of Chu (r. 369–340 BC).[5] The ruling family and its descendants adopted the Zhu (朱) surname in memory of their former state of Zhu (邾).[3][5]

Legacy

Zhu is one of the most common surnames of modern-day China.

The noted Neo-Confucian Zhu Xi descends from the ruling house. The small state of Zou, however, is most famous as the birthplace of the Chinese philosopher Mencius. As the overlord State of Lu was the home state of Confucius and many of his disciples, this means that Confucianism's founder, and most of its minor sages and wise men hailed from or had ancestral roots in these two ancient states of China.

References

  1. ^ a b Li Xueqin (1985). Eastern Zhou and Qin Civilizations. Trans. Kwang-Chih Chang. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03286-2. p. 144
  2. ^ Li, Chi (1967). The Formation of the Chinese People. Russell & Russell. p. 138
  3. ^ a b Tan, Thomas Tsu-Wee (1986). Your Chinese Roots. Times Books International. ISBN 0-89346-285-3. p. 239
  4. ^ Wu, Kuo-Cheng (1982). The Chinese Heritage. Crown Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0-517-54475-X. p. 306
  5. ^ a b c d Chao, Sheau-Yueh (2000). In Search of Your Asian Roots: Genealogical Research on Chinese Surnames. Clearfield. ISBN 0-8063-4946-8. p. 43