The Wang clan of Taiyuan (Chinese: 太原王氏; Wade–Giles: T'ai1 Yuan2 Wang2 Shi4) was a Chinese clan which achieved prominence between the Han and Tang dynasties, based in Taiyuan in modern-day Shanxi province.
The earliest prominent members of this clan can be traced back to two brothers, Wang Rou and Wang Ze, of the Eastern Han dynasty.[1]
History
editNorthern and Southern dynasties
editThe Wang clan generally did not move southwards after the Disaster of Yongjia and the fall of the Western Jin.
During the Northern Wei period, the Wang clan was considered one of the 'four surnames' – four powerful clans, alongside the Lu clan of Fanyang, the Cui clan of Qinghe and the Zheng clan of Xingyang.[2]
Prominent members
edit- Wang Chang (d. 259), Cao Wei official and commander
- Wang Hun (223–297), son of Wang Chang, Cao Wei and Jin minister
- Wang Chen (d. 266), Cao Wei and Jin minister and historian
- Wang Jun (252–314), son of Wang Chen, Jin commander and warlord
- Wang Tanzhi (330–375), Jin minister
- Wang Pu (d. 905), Tang dynasty chancellor
See also
edit- Wang clan of Langya, another prominent clan surnamed Wang
References
edit- ^ He Qingfeng (2009). "第一章 唐以前太原王氏溯源 一、姓氏来源". 《唐代太原王氏研究》 (Masters thesis) (in Simplified Chinese). Shanghai Normal University. pp. 13–14. Retrieved 2019-05-16.
- ^ Zhu, Linfang (2007). "太原王氏被列为北魏四姓的原因". Lanzhou Academic Journal. 2007 (4): 188–190.