Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Why do so many people say that China people are the ancestors of the Japanese?

Why do so many people say that China people are the ancestors of the Japanese?

In fact, when the Yamato people came into being and where their ancestors came from have long been unknown in vague epics and legends. What is certain now is that as early as some time in BC, they began a continuous and growing migration to Japan. Immigrants are mostly yellow-skinned Mongolians, mainly from Tunguska people in Siberia and northeast China, Malays in Nanyang Islands, Indosinians in Indochina Peninsula and Wuyue people in the lower reaches of the Yangtze River. They went south along the Korean Peninsula, crossed the Strait and boarded the volcanic islands at the end of East Asia, where the first light rose forever.

1979, Saburo Xinyi, emeritus professor of anthropology in osaka kyoiku university, Japan, first published a new theory-"The birthplace of Japanese is in Yunnan, China".

1984 On February 23rd, Professor Bird Yuexian, who devoted himself to the study of social human culture, announced: "A field survey was conducted on the ethnic minorities in mountainous areas of Thailand (northern Thailand) who are considered to be descendants of Yunnan, and it was found that all babies had fetal spots on their buttocks." Professor Bird Yuexian also emphasized this discovery: "The birthmark in Japanese constitution is from Yunnan, which is circumstantial evidence to confirm this area.

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 view of "Dai Shuo" still comes from scholars such as Bird, Sasaki and Watanabe. For the ethnic minorities who are considered to be from the mountainous areas of Thailand in the south of Yunnan, they have done a field survey and found that all babies have birthmarks on their buttocks, and they have also found birthmarks in Xishuangbanna Dai people. The so-called "birthmark" refers to the blue markings on the baby's buttocks, waist, back and shoulders. The reason is skin dermis. Gradually disappear with age. Japanese people have the similarity of this kind of fetal spot, and many people in Kyushu and Honshu in western Japan have type A blood, just like those in Yunnan and Thailand ...

Starting from 1996, some scholars from China and Japan formed a "-Japan investigation team", and conducted a three-year comparative study of human bones unearthed in Jiangsu Province of China from the Spring and Autumn Period to the Western Han Dynasty (that is, from the 6th century BC to the AD 1 century) and those unearthed in Kitakyushu and Yamaguchi Prefecture of Japan from the rope pattern to the yayoi period. After DNA analysis, the two bones are arranged.

China and Japan are not only a species, but also a family. (Japan's Sankei Shimbun 1999.03. 19)

According to folklore, after Qin Shihuang unified China, in order to seek the elixir of life, Xu Fu was sent to lead 3,000 boys and girls across Japan in a huge fleet of 50 ships to find the elixir of life. As a result, Chuifu wanted to go home, and one of his men reminded him that you didn't finish the task given by the emperor, and you would only die if you went back. You might as well stay, and Chuifu and his party will stay.

At this time, Japan was still in the Stone Age. Most Japanese people have long hair, tied to their heads with ropes and tied to their foreheads with white cloth. To this day, the Japanese still like to tie a white cloth on their foreheads during festivals. Most of them are fishermen with tattoos on their faces. Fishermen go fishing and think tattoos are a good way to lure fish. The clothes a woman wears are just a piece of cloth with a hole in her neck, just like a Mexican cloak. Practice polygamy. Generally, a man can marry four or five wives. Japanese people like to drink and grab food with their hands like Malays and Indians. At that time, they didn't eat meat. They usually ate fish, vegetables and rice. It is said that Xu Fu found that Japanese people lived to be 80 to 90 years old, and some even lived to be 100 years old. He also found that in addition to growing rice and fishing, they were particularly good at witchcraft.