Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - What are the major population movements in the history of China, what are the reasons for the migration, and more?

What are the major population movements in the history of China, what are the reasons for the migration, and more?

First, the Yongjia Rebellion, the Jinshi moved south, and the Han people in the Central Plains went south to Jiangnan, Hunan and Hubei. At the end of the Western Jin Dynasty, there was a rebellion of eight kings, and the strength of the rulers was greatly reduced. Northern minorities took the opportunity to go south and invaded Luoyang, the hinterland of the Central Plains. This is the famous five chaos in history.

Second, the Anshi rebellion, the Central Plains smeared charcoal, and Han residents in Henan, Hebei and Shaanxi went south to Jianghuai and west to Sichuan.

Third, the shame of Jingkang, the son of heaven was covered with dust, the nomads from the south, the emperor from the south, and the residents of the Central Plains moved south on a large scale.

4. The migration of Sophora japonica in Hongdong in the early Ming Dynasty was a large-scale official migration from southern Shanxi to Henan, Hebei, Shandong, Anhui, Jiangsu and other central plains regions.

During the five or thirty years of war in the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty, Sichuan suffered the most. The reason why Sichuan has to "fill in" is because the population is extremely sparse and needs to be enriched.

Six, Guangdong, Fujian and other lower coastal residents in South Asia. The geographical concept of Nanyang mainly refers to the vast area including today's 10 ASEAN countries.

Seven, Shanxi businessmen and residents of northern Shaanxi traveled westward, forming the Han population in the central and western Inner Mongolia today.

8. Shandong, Hebei and Henan constitute the majority of residents in Northeast China today.

9. During the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression period, Henan people migrated to the northwest along the Longhai Railway.

Ten, the founding of New China and the migration route for more than half a century.