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Where do the Hakka people come from?

Where did the ancestors of the Hakka people come from, that is, at the foot of the Taihang Mountains, in Henan Province; Qinyang Prefecture, Huaiqing Prefecture, Qinyang City, Weihui Prefecture, Weihui City, Henan is all people from Henan who migrated to various areas in the south, except for the Hakka ethnic group, which is not named after the region. There are about 80 million Guangdong Hakkas, distributed in Jiangxi, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Sichuan, Hunan Province (about 50 million), Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan (about 5 million), Malaysia, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam in Thailand, Bolivia, Malaysia (about 15 million) and other countries around the world. More than 80 countries and regions.

Luo Xianglin was born in Xingning County, Guangdong in 1906. In 1926, he applied for the Department of Finance at Tsinghua University and later transferred to the Department of Chinese Language and Literature, where he studied under masters such as Wang Guowei, Zhu Xizu, Feng Youlan, and Qian Xuan. After graduating from university in 1930, he transferred to Tsinghua Research Institute and studied under teachers Chen Yinke and Gu Jiegang. In 1932, he went to the southern region to investigate Lingnan cultural and social groups. In October 1932, he served as secretary to the president's office of Sun Yat-sen University and editor of the Guangdong Provincial General History Museum. In 1933, he taught "Scientific Research on Local Records" in the Chinese Department of Guangdong Medical College.

In September 1934, he lectured on "my country's National History" in the Chinese Department of Central University, and also reviewed and approved matters for the Central Federation of Cultural Relics Depository. Regarding the ethnic migration caused by the Yongjia Rebellion in the Wei and Jin Dynasties, Mr. Tan Qixiang has already made an in-depth analysis. She emphasized in the original excerpt of "Ethnic Migration after the Rebellion of Jin Yongjia" that this immigration investment "is limited to the states in the Yangtze River region (referring to the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River)" and "very few people will go beyond the Jingyang states." For this (according to referring to Ning, Jiao and Guang) the states are combined" in terms of today's provinces.

Most of the victims of the Si and Henan disasters at that time moved to the southeastern corner of present-day Henan, most of Anhui, a small part of central and western Jiangsu, and a small part of northwestern Jiangsu. In subsequent dynasty changes, such as the Song Dynasty becoming the Song Dynasty and the Ming Dynasty becoming the Southern Ming Dynasty, a large number of Han people from the central region moved to the south. They were also called Guangdong Hakka by the locals.