Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Is China a Japanese past life?

Is China a Japanese past life?

exactly when the Yamato nation came into being and where its ancestors came from have long been untraceable in vague epics and various legends. What is certain now is that as early as a certain time in BC, the continuous and growing migration to Japan began. Immigrants are mostly yellow-skinned Mongolians, mainly composed of Tunguses from Siberia and northeast China, Malays from Nanyang Islands, Indosinians from Indochina Peninsula, Wuyue people from the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, and Han Chinese and Koreans. They descended along the Korean peninsula, crossed the strait and boarded this volcanic archipelago at the end of East Asia, where the first light always rises.

In p>1979, Kenzaburo Toyoshi, an emeritus professor of anthropology in osaka kyoiku university, Japan, first published a new statement that "the birthplace of Japanese people is in Yunnan Province, China".

On February 23rd, 1984, Professor Niao Yue-xian, who devoted himself to the study of social human culture, announced that "a field trip was conducted to the ethnic minorities in the mountainous area of Thailand (northern Thailand) which was thought to be south of Yunnan, and it was found that all the babies had fetal spots on their buttocks". Professor Niao Yue-xian also stressed on this discovery: "The origin of fetal spots in Japanese constitution is Yunnan, which is circumstantial evidence that this area is the birthplace of Japanese."

In September, 1988, the Japan Television Workers Union arrived in Yunnan, and its task was to shoot The Origin of the Japanese.

Since then, Japanese scholars have deduced from "Japanese people originated in Yunnan" to "Japanese ancestors were ethnic minorities in Yunnan", and its scope and core are basically defined as Yi, Hani and Dai.

The reason for holding the "Yi people's theory" is that experts such as Kenzaburo Toyoshi, Takashi Sasaki and Tadashi Watanabe visited Yunnan and found that the "Torch Festival" of Sani people (Yi branch) in Shilin and other places is similar to the "Menglanben Festival" in Japan, that is, the "Torch Festival" was also held on the same day in Kiyi Peninsula in Japan, but in Kobe and Kiyi Peninsula in southern Japan. It is the place where China's traditional culture is most concentrated in Japan ...

The reason for holding the "Hani theory" is that some Japanese people are surprised to find that the Hani nationality in Yunnan, China and the Yamato nationality in Japan have similar ideas of "animism", especially among the gods, the most authoritative "God of Heaven" in Japan and "Apimei Smoke" in Hani nationality are both women and the sun. Japan worships the "Valley God" and regards cherry blossoms as the national flower, and the Hani people also worship the "Valley God" and regard cherry trees and cherry flowers as god flowers ...

The view of "Dai people's theory" still comes from scholars such as Niaoshi, Sasaki and Watanabe. For the ethnic minorities who are considered to be from the mountainous area of Thailand south of Yunnan, they have made a field trip, and the results show that all babies have fetal spots on their buttocks, and at the same time, they have also found fetal spots among the Dai people in Xishuangbanna. The so-called "fetal spot" refers to the blue markings on the baby's buttocks, waist, back and shoulders. The reason is that there are melanocytes in the dermis of the skin, which gradually disappear with age. The Japanese just have the similarity of this kind of fetal spot, and many people in Kyushu and Honshu, western Japan, have type A blood type, which is the same as that in Yunnan and the mainland of Thailand ... (Yunnan Daily Daguan Weekly reported on November 15, 2)

Since p>1996, some scholars from China and Japan have formed a "investigation team of Jiangnan people's bones in China and Japan". After DNA, inspection and analysis, the arrangement order of the two is consistent in some parts, which proves that they originated from the same ancestor. That is to say, the ancestors of the Japanese are more determined to be China people far beyond the border of southern Xinjiang.

China and Japan are not only of the same species, but also of the same clan. (Japan's Sankei Shimbun reported on March 19th, 1999)

According to folklore, after Qin Shihuang unified China, he sent Xu Fu and 3 boys and girls to Japan in a huge fleet of 5 ships to find the elixir. The result was not found. Chui Fu wanted to go home. One of his men reminded him that you didn't finish the job assigned by the emperor, and you would only die if you went back. Why don't you just stay? Chui Fu and his party stayed.

At this time, Japan was still in the Stone Age. Most Japanese people had long hair, tied it on their heads with ropes and tied it on their foreheads with a white cloth. To this day, the Japanese still like to tie white cloth strips on their foreheads during festivals. Most of them are fishermen with tattooed faces. Fishermen think that tattooing is a good way to lure fish when they go fishing in the sea. The clothes women wear are just a piece of cloth with a hole in the neck, just like a Mexican cloak. People are peaceful and won't be jealous. Polygamy is practiced. Generally, a man can marry four or five wives. Japanese people like to drink and grab food with their hands like Malays and Indians. At that time, they had no meat to eat. They usually ate fish, vegetables and rice. It is said that at that time, Xu Fu discovered that Japanese people lived to be 8 to 9 years old and some even lived to be 1 years old. He also found that in addition to planting rice and fishing, they were particularly good at witchcraft, prophecy, astrology and divination with mud.