Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Japan also has Xufu Temple. Are the three thousand boys and girls he brought with him the ancestors of the Japanese? Unable to confirm

Japan also has Xufu Temple. Are the three thousand boys and girls he brought with him the ancestors of the Japanese? Unable to confirm

To answer this question, we must first make it clear that the Japanese are a combination of literati and yayoi, and the two are integrated into today's race. According to historical records, they lived in Japan from 16000 BC to 3000 BC and were called Japanese aborigines. Rope literati are relatively short, and the adult rope literati are less than 1.6 meters tall, and the female is less than 1.5 meters tall. Their culture was relatively backward, and was gradually conquered and integrated by the later Yayoi people.

Some rope writers retired to Hokkaido and were later despised by the Japanese as Xiayi people. Yayoi people came to Japan from many places from the 10 century BC to the 3rd century AD, some from the Korean peninsula, and some from southern China or coastal areas. According to relevant research in Japan, the Yayoi people in Fukuoka and Yamaguchi counties are closest to the Han people in Linzi, Shandong and Jiangsu in the Western Han Dynasty. Yayoi people were tall and strong, with advanced culture, and later became the rulers of Japan. However, apart from the height, there is not much difference between the Yayoi people and the rope literati. At that time, they continued to merge and eventually formed the Yamato nation.

Xu Fu, a native of Qi, was an alchemist and a Taoist celebrity in Qin Dynasty, and a physician in Ying Zheng. Xu Fu wrote to Qin Shihuang that there are three immortals in the sea, Penglai, the abbot and Yingzhou, where the immortals live. If you come here by boat, you may get the elixir of life. In 2 19 BC, Qin Shihuang began his first east tour in the third year after he ascended the throne.

For the first time, from Xianyang to Shandong, climb Mount Tai, break the Bohai Sea, climb Zhifu Island, go to Langxie in the south, go to Pengcheng, cross the Huaihe River in the southwest, cross Dongting in the south, and return to Xianyang from Wuguan Road. The most important thing about this trip to the east is to find the elixir of life. So, he specially arranged to go to sea and look for a panacea in Langya. After receiving the order, Cui Fu led a large group of people to the sea by boat.

I have looked everywhere in Penglai, abbot, Yingzhou and other fairy mountains, and I have never seen the shadow of the fairy mountain. I went to sea many times and returned empty-handed every time, spending a lot of time and money. Ten years later, Qin Shihuang's health was not as good as before, and he fell ill from time to time. He is more and more eager to get the elixir of life, so that he can prolong his life and defend his country.

Under such circumstances, Qin Shihuang began his last trip to the East with illness. This time the route is to bypass the southeast and then go to Langya. Chuifu knew he couldn't find the elixir of life. At present, the only way to save himself is to appease Qin Shihuang, temporarily buffer and find an opportunity to escape. Fortunately, Chuifu is eloquent and good at deceiving people. He told Qin Shihuang that he hoped to give him another chance to take the fleet to sea and promised to find the elixir of life. Sure enough, Qin Shihuang agreed.

Chui fook knew that he would never come back this time, so he fabricated various reasons to deceive Qin Shihuang's trust again and obtained food, farm tools, seeds and things needed for life. At the same time, he got a lot of people. He also asked Qin Shihuang for three thousand people, all boys and girls. Then he broke down by boat and sailed eastward into the vast sea. Later, he found a desert island at sea, and Xu Fu led these people to the island.

He also told these people that if they didn't want to be killed by Qin Shihuang, they would live a good life on this island. They are also willing to listen to the arrangement of chui fook. Under the guidance of Xu Fu, these people settled down on the island, ploughing in spring and harvesting in autumn, and turned a desert island into fertile land. After they got enough food and clothes, they began to build houses. Both boys and girls are old enough to talk about marriage, and Chuifu agreed to their marriage. From then on, men plowed and women wove and lived here like the Qin Dynasty.

It is no exaggeration to say that Xu Fu was indeed the first overseas immigrant in the history of China, and now there are many relics in Japan, such as Xu Fu Temple, Xu Fu Tomb and Xu Fujing. As for whether Japan is really the offspring of these boys and girls, this cannot be confirmed.