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Are Manchu descendants of Jin people?

Most of the Jinhong people in Minjiang River are Jurchen people, and now they are descendants of the clan.

Jurchen of the State of Jin, whose ancestral home is Heishui, Heilongjiang. Jurchen who followed the Jin Dynasty into the customs lived in the Han Dynasty for generations. After being wiped out by the Mongols, the Yuan Dynasty counted these jurchens who grew up in Shanhaiguan as Han Chinese. Today, the descendant of Hong Yan who truly sticks to the family blood may be Hongyan Village, Jingchuan County, Pingliang City, Gansu Province.

There are more than 5,000 villagers in this village, most of whom are surnamed Wan Yan. They are descendants of Wan Yan Zongbi, the fourth prince of Jin State in the Southern Song Dynasty. There is also a name that we are familiar with, that is, Jin Wushu.

As for the Jurchen people who founded the Qing Dynasty, it is said that they originated at the foot of Bukuli Mountain in the northeast of Changbai Mountain, and some of them were divided into Wanjiazhai such as Woduoli and Huligai. In the early Ming Dynasty, Timur, the leader of Woduo Wan Hu Prefecture, surrendered to the Ming Dynasty and followed Judy to attack Mongolia. Later, Mong Timur's tribe was fenced off around Jianzhou, and they became Jianzhou Nuzhen. Nurhachi is from this tribe.

Today's Northeast people have nothing to do with Jin people.

In fact, most of the Northeasters living in the three northeastern provinces today are descendants of immigrants who "ventured to the East". During the Qing Dynasty and the Republic of China, people from Shandong, Hebei and other places migrated to the northeast to reclaim land and thrive.

On the eve of 1949, nearly 40 million people "went east". It can be said that most of today's Northeast people have nothing to do with the "Golden People" in history.