2 16 pine (s not s not ng)
Trace the source
There are three sources of the Song surname. First, it originated in the Qin Dynasty and took the event symbol as its surname. Qin Shihuang traveled east to Mount Tai and sheltered from the rain under the pine tree, so he named the pine tree "Five Doctors". At that time, some officials who went up the mountain with Qin Shihuang were exposed to the light of pine trees before they won the title of emperor, and they also took Song as their surname and passed it down from generation to generation. From then on, people living in Mount Tai took the word "Song" of "Doctor Wu Song" as their surname and called it Song. Second, Manchu changed his surname. After the Qing soldiers entered the customs, some banners changed their Han surname to Song. For example, Song Jun, a college student in Wuyingdian, is from Zhenglanqi, Mongolia, and is malic acid. Third, the public surname was changed to Song surname. Because it is inconvenient to address the public surname, someone changed the public surname to the Song surname.
Transition distribution
This surname is mainly found in the ancient Han nationality, distributed in Shandong, with Dongguan County (now Juxian County, Shandong Province) as the county name and Taishan Hall as the hall number. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Manchu and Mongolian occasionally saw pine trees as their names. Today's distribution is unknown.
Celebrity huiju
Song Mian: an honest official in the Ming Dynasty. My brother Song Sheng died early and was widowed. The official position is Luchang Salt Officer, who is in charge of salt affairs. This official position has always been considered fat, but loose and honest, with the right to political discourse.
Song Jun: Minister of Qing Dynasty. Official to the University of Wuyingdian, once served as Minister of Military Aircraft, Minister of War and Minister of Ritual. Honest and straightforward, ignoring grammar, not pitching at any time, stumbling repeatedly. He lived a life full of hatred and never gave in to Shenyang, so he was detained in a remote area for a long time and "stayed in Tibet for five years". He believes in Buddhism, especially worshipping it. Every time he entered the temple, he always kept some calligraphy, and wrote books such as Excerpts of Goods, A Brief Introduction to Sui Fu, and A Brief Introduction to President Ili.
Song Shou: Minister of the late Qing Dynasty. He has served as Shandong provincial judge, Jiangning secretariat, Jiangxi governor, right assistant minister of Ministry of Industry, minister of war, commander-in-chief of Chahar, and governor of Fujian and Zhejiang. Being an official for 20 years, he never pursued fame, but was self-disciplined, honest and generous, which was beautiful at that time.