Táng (surname) explained

Tang
Language:Chinese
Language origin:China
Meaning:Tang dynasty

Tang (;[1] Chinese: 唐, mandarin Pinyin: Táng; Japanese: 唐/とう/から; Korean: 당/唐; Cantonese : Tong; Wade–Giles: T’ang), is a Chinese surname. The three languages also have the surname with the same character but different pronunciation/romanization.[2] In Korean, it is usually romanized also as Dang. In Japanese, the surname is often romanized as To. In Vietnamese, it is commonly written as Đưng (the anglicized variation is Duong, not be confused with Vietnamese surname ơng which is also anglicized as Duong). It is pronounced dhɑng[3] in Middle Chinese, and lhāŋ in Old Chinese. It is the 64th name on the Hundred Family Surnames poem.[4]

The surname 唐 is also romanized as Tong when transliterated from Cantonese, and this spelling is common in Hong Kong and Macau. In Chinese, 湯 (Pinyin: Tāng), is also romanized as Tang in English (and also Tong in Cantonese), although it is less common as a surname.

Distribution

Tang is a very common surname in southern China. Of the top 30 cities in China, 唐 ranked 10th most common surname in the city of Chongqing.[5]

History

People with this surname mainly have three originations:[6]

Chinese Muslims

Unlike some other Hui people who claim foreign ancestry, Hui in Gansu with the surname "Tang" 唐, are descended from Han Chinese who converted to Islam and married Muslim Hui or Dongxiang people, switching their ethnicity and joining the Hui and Dongxiang ethnic groups, both of which are Muslim.

A town called Tangwangchuan (唐汪川) in Gansu had a multi ethnic populace, the Tang 唐 and Wang (surname) 汪 families being the two major families. The Tang and Wang families were originally of non Muslim Han Chinese extraction, but by the 1910s some branches of the families became Muslim by "intermarriage or conversion" while other branches of the families remained non Muslim.[8]

Notable people

Fictional characters

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tang. Collins English Dictionary.
  2. [:zh:唐姓]
  3. Karlgren, Grammata serica recensa, 1996.
  4. K. S. Tom. [1989] (1989). Echoes from Old China: Life, Legends and Lore of the Middle Kingdom. University of Hawaii Press. .
  5. "https://www.douban.com/group/topic/23803598/"(Chinese)
  6. http://www.hakkazg.com/xingshiguli/tangxing.htm 唐姓
  7. Classic Chinese from the Records of the Grand Historian - 《史记·晋世家》:“成王与叔虞戏,削桐叶为珪以与叔虞,曰:‘以此封若。’史佚因请择日立叔虞。成王曰:‘吾与之戏耳。’史佚曰:‘天子无戏言’。言则史书之,礼成之,乐歌之。于是遂封叔虞于唐。”
  8. Book: Remapping China: fissures in historical terrain. 1996. Gail Hershatter. Gail Hershatter. Stanford University Press. illustrated. 0-8047-2509-8. 102. 17 July 2011.