Senin, 07 Januari 2013

Profile of Yap Families





Pronunciation Ye, Yeh (Mandarin)
Yee, Ee; Yip, Ip, Jip (Cantonese)
Iap, Yap, Yeap (Hakka, Hokkien)

 
Ye is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese surname written in traditional characters or in simplified ones. It was listed 257th among the Song-era Hundred Family Surnames and is the 43rd-most-common surname in China

Romanizations

Ye is also romanized Yeh in Wade-Giles and Yee or Ee idiosyncratically; Yip, Ip, and Jip in Cantonese; Iap, Yap, and Yeap in Hakka and Minnan; and Yeh or Diệp in Vietnamese.
In Ancient Chinese, Ye (葉) was probably pronounced Sjep (IPA: [ɕiɛp]).[1] As late as the 11th-century Guangyun Dictionary, the character was a homophone for others pronounced sip in modern Cantonese and shè in modern Mandarin.
Note that "Yee" and "Ee" are normally employed for romanizing the Cantonese pronunciation of the unrelated Chinese surname (Yu).

Distribution

Ye was the 43rd-most-common surname in mainland China in 2007 and the 22nd-most-common surname on Taiwan in 2005.
Although Chinese make up the largest part of America's Asian and Pacific Islander population,[2] none of the romanizations of 葉 or 叶 appeared among the 1000 most common surnames during the AD 2000 US census.

Origin

Ye means "leaf" in modern Chinese, but the name arose as a clan name referring to the city of Ye in the State of Chu during the Spring and Autumn Period of ancient China. The city gave its name to the present-day Ye County in Henan Province.
According to Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, Yuxiong, a descendant of the Yellow Emperor and his grandson Zhuanxu, was the teacher of King Wen of Zhou. After the Zhou overthrew the Shang Dynasty, King Cheng of Zhou (reigned 1042-1021 BC) awarded Yuxiong's great-grandson Xiong Yi the fiefdom of Chu, which over the ensuing centuries developed into a major kingdom. King Zhuang of Chu (reigned 613-591 BC) was one of the Five Hegemons, the most powerful monarchs during the Spring and Autumn Period.
In 506 BC the State of Wu invaded Chu with an army commanded by King Helü, Wu Zixu and Sun Tzu. Shen Yin Shu, a great-grandson of King Zhuang and the Chu field marshal, was killed in the aftermath of the Battle of Boju.
After the war King Zhao of Chu enfeoffed Shen Yin Shu's son Shen Zhuliang with the key frontier city of Ye, in gratitude for his father's sacrifice. Shen Zhuliang subsequently put down the rebellion of Sheng, Duke of Bai, in 478 BC and restored King Hui as ruler of Chu. King Hui then granted him the titles of prime minister, marshal, and Duke of Ye (葉公).
In Zhou Dynasty China, noble families usually had two surnames: ancestral name (姓) and clan name (氏). Shen Zhuliang, from a cadet branch of the ruling house of Chu, shared the ancestral name of Mi (芈) of the Chu kings. He also inherited the clan name of Shen from his father, but his fame led some of his descendants to adopt Ye as their clan name. Later the distinction between the ancestral and clan names was abolished, and Ye became the surname of Shen Zhuliang's descendants. Shen Zhuliang, now better known as Duke of Ye, is considered the founding ancestor of the Ye surname.

List of persons with the surname

Ye

Historic
Modern

Yeh

Yip

Ip

Yap

Yapp

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