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Is the ancestor of Little Japan our Huaxia?

N answers:

1. Research shows that the ancestors of the Japanese may have come from the Korean peninsula.

De Yongsheng, a professor of human genetics at the School of Medicine of the University of Tokyo in Japan, recently said: "Recently, based on genome research, we compared the HLA genes in chromosome 6 of many ethnic groups in East Asia, and concluded that the closest group to the Japanese is the residents of the Korean Peninsula and Koreans living in China." The results of this study show that the ancestors of Japanese living in Japan are foreigners who migrated here through the Korean Peninsula.

This research content will be included in the "Summary of Public Lectures" to be published by a publishing house in Tokyo in July. De Yongsheng said that according to HLA classification, Japanese, Korean, Han, Manchu, Korean, Mongolian and other 12 ethnic groups in East Asia were compared and analyzed, and the Japanese natives were closer to the residents living on the Korean peninsula and the Korean residents in China than Okinawa or Ainu in Hokkaido.

This research strongly proves the popular saying that ancestors who migrated from the Korean peninsula accounted for the largest proportion in the Japanese population composition during the Yayoi period.

This study uses relics or human bones to study blood group distribution. It has always been considered to have considerable limitations, so this study using recent genome research results was evaluated as the final version of the "origin theory".

2. In fact, when the Yamato people came into being and where their ancestors came from have long been impossible to verify in obscure epics and legends. What is certain now is that as early as a certain time in BC, a continuous and growing migration to Japan began. Most of the immigrants are Huangpi 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 and Korean nationalities. 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.

1979, Kenzaburo Birishi, emeritus professor of anthropology in osaka kyoiku university, Japan, first published a new theory that "the birthplace of Japanese is in Yunnan Province, China".

1984 On February 23rd, Professor Niaoyuexian, who devoted himself to the study of social human culture, announced: "A field trip was made to the ethnic minorities in mountainous areas of Thailand (northern Thailand), which were thought to come from Yunnan, and it was found that all babies had birthmarks on their buttocks". Professor Bird Yuexian also emphasized this discovery: "The birthmark in Japanese constitution is from Yunnan, which is circumstantial evidence that this area is the birthplace of Japanese."

1988 In September, the Japanese TV Workers' Union arrived in Yunnan with the task of filming the origin of the Japanese.

Since then, the inference of Japanese scholars has changed from "the Japanese originated in Yunnan" to "the ancestors of Japanese are Yunnan ethnic minorities", and its scope and core are basically defined as Yi, Hani and Dai.

The reason why we hold the theory of "Yi" is because experts such as Shinichi Kenzaburo, Sasaki Takashi and Watanabe found that the Torch Festival of Sani people (Yi branch) in Shilin and other places is similar to the Dream Blue Festival in Japan, that is, the Torch Festival was also held on the same day in Mu Yi Peninsula, Japan, but in Kobe, Kyoto and Osaka in Mu Yi Peninsula in southern Japan.

The reason why we hold the Hani theory is that some Japanese people are surprised to find that the Hani people in Yunnan, China and the Yamato people in Japan have similar beliefs about animism, especially among the gods, the most authoritative "luminous god" of the Japanese people and the "Api Meiyan" of the Hani people are women and sun gods; Japan worships the "Valley God" and regards cherry blossoms as the national flower. Hani people also worship the "Valley God" and regard cherry trees and cherry blossoms as gods. ...

The viewpoint of "Dai Lun" still comes from scholars such as Bird Yue Xian, Sasaki and Watanabe. For the ethnic minorities who are considered to be from the mountainous areas of Thailand in southern Yunnan, they conducted a field trip. The results showed that all babies had birthmarks on their buttocks, and birthmarks were also found among the Dai people in Xishuangbanna. The so-called "tire 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. Japanese people have the similarity of this kind of fetal spot. Many people in Kyushu and Honshu, western Japan, have type A blood type, which is the same as that in Yunnan and Thailand. ...

3. Now researchers attribute the origin of the Japanese nation to the following versions: (1) the riding nation from Tonggu Temple in northeast China; (2) From Jiangnan, China, where rice culture is developed; ③ From Arab civilization; (4) From Yunnan, China, because both ethnic groups have the custom of "black pool" in history; In addition, there are sayings about Southeast Asia and the Mongolian Plateau. According to Tang Chongnan, the ancestors of the Japanese really should have China ancestry, but they eventually formed a multi-ethnic mixed Japanese nation. . .

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