Namwon Seung clan (Korean: 남원 승씨; Hanja: 南原 昇氏) was one of the Korean clans. Their Bon-gwan was in Namwon, North Jeolla Province. According to the research in 2000, the number of Namwon Seung clan was 613. Their founder was Ming Sheng who was the second emperor of the short-lived Ming Xia dynasty of China. Ming Sheng changed his surname from Ming clan to Seung clan after he exiled himself in Goryeo.[1]
The Chinese Ming Xia emperor Ming Yuzhen's son Ming Sheng was given the noble title Marquis of Guiyi by the Ming dynasty emperor Zhu Yuanzhang after his surrender. Ming Sheng was then exiled to Korea and Zhu Yuanzhang asked the Korean king to treat him as a foreign noble by giving his descendants and family corvée and taxation exemptions. These were granted by a patent from the Korean king which lasted until the invading soldiers in the Qing invasion of Joseon destroyed the Ming family's patents. The Korean official Yun Hui-chong's daughter would marry Ming Sheng in March 1373. Ming Sheng was 17 when he were sent to Korea in 1372 by the Ming dynasty.[2][3][4][5][6] The Chinese Ming family exists as the Korean clans, Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and Namwon Seung clan.[7][8]
^Academy of Korean Studies 남원승씨 南原昇氏. Academy of Korean Studies.
^Goodrich, Luther Carringto (1976). Dictionary of Ming Biography, 1368-1644, Volume 2 (illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 1072. ISBN 023103833X.
^Flow Cytometry and Cell Sorting (illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. 2000. p. 1072. ISBN 3540656308.
^Farmer, Edward L., ed. (1995). Zhu Yuanzhang and Early Ming Legislation: The Reordering of Chinese Society Following the Era of Mongol Rule. BRILL. p. 22. ISBN 9004103910.
^Serruys, Henry (1959). The Mongols in China During the Hung-wu Period (1368-1398). Impr. Sainte-Catherine. p. 31.
^Serruys, Henry (1967). Sino-Mongol Relations During the Ming, Volume 1. Institut belge des hautes études chinoises. p. 31.
^Academy of Korean Studies 서촉명씨 西蜀明氏. Academy of Korean Studies.
^Jin Guanglin [in Japanese] (2014). "A Comparison of the Korean and Japanese Approaches to Foreign Family Names" (PDF). Journal of Cultural Interaction in East Asia. 5: 20 – via Society for Cultural Interaction in East Asia.
NamwonSeungclan (Korean: 남원 승씨; Hanja: 南原 昇氏) was one of the Korean clans. Their Bon-gwan was in Namwon, North Jeolla Province. According to the research...
Korean clans, Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and NamwonSeungclan. Korean clan names of foreign origin Yeonan Myeong clanNamwonSeungclan Academy...
Korean clans, Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and NamwonSeungclan. Korean clans of foreign origin Seochok Myeong clanNamwonSeungclan Academy...
and then became the progenitor of the Korean NamwonSeungclan, Yeonan Myeong clan and Seochok Myeong clan. (in German) Die Xia-Dynastie in Sichuan (1362-1371)...
Ming Yuzhen is the founder of Korean clans, the Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and NamwonSeungclan. Adopted the era name of the Xu Song dynasty...
Chinese Ming family exists as the Korean clans, Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and NamwonSeungclan. Rulers of Korea Bone rank system Yangban...
Song clan Yeosan Song clan Eunjin Song clan Indong Jang clan Gwangsan No clan Yonggang Paeng clan Muncheon Gong clan Hongsan Sun clanNamwonSeungclan Pungsan...
Consort Won of the Pungsan Hong clan (원빈 홍씨; 27 May 1766 – 7 May 1779) Royal Noble Consort Hwa of the Namwon Yun clan (화빈 윤씨; 11 April 1765 – 14 January...
Chinese Ming family exists as the Korean clans, Yeonan Myeong clan, Seochok Myeong clan and NamwonSeungclan. Additionally, many Ming refugees fled to...
Lady Hwang of the Changwon Hwang clan (21 March 1898 – 7 February 1951). She married Yun Seol (윤설) of the Namwon Yun clan and had issue. Adopted son: Yi...
joined the army of some 40,000 people. After that, he was stationed in Namwon, where he collected more than 1,000 volunteer soldiers and was promoted...
the twenty-two Dutchmen still alive, five went to Suncheon, five went to Namwon, and twelve, including Hamel, went to the headquarters of the Left Provincial...