Chinese : one of the oldest Chinese surnames, already
being the name of the Zhou dynasty (1122–221 bc), when many
current Chinese surnames first came into use. According to legend,
Jiang Yuan, a concubine of the legendary emperor Ku in the 25th
century bc, accidentally stepped in the imprint of a god’s
big toe, which impregnated her. Not wanting such a child, she
abandoned the newborn baby, Hou Ji, in the wilderness. The infant was
protected from the elements by the wings of eagles and was suckled on
the milk of cows and sheep. He learned how to grow grain, and became
the minister of agriculture under the legendary emperor Yao. His clan
eventually settled in a city named Zhouyuan, in present-day Shaanxi
province in western China. Under the influence of the name of the
city, they came to be known as the Zhou, even though their surname was
originally Ji. This situation lasted for over a millennium until a
descendant, the famed virtuous Duke Wu Wang, changed his surname to
Zhou, and his son established the Zhou dynasty. Zhou Enlai, premier of
China from 1949 to 1976, belonged to this clan.
Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4
4,193
Historical Documents & Family Trees with Zhou
Find out where people with the family name Zhou lived before coming to
the United States. Using Ancestry, you can search through
passenger arrival records, naturalization records, border crossings, emigration
records, passport applications, and even convict transportation records.
Click on a circle in the chart to view Zhou birth and death records
An unusually short lifespan might indicate that your ancestors lived in harsh conditions.
A short lifespan might also indicate health problems that were once prevalent in
your family.
The SSDI is a searchable database of more than 70 million names. You can find birthdates,
death dates, addresses and more.
Census records can tell you a lot of little known facts about your Zhou
ancestors, such as occupation. Occupation can tell you about your ancestors social
and economic status.
Did the Zhous fight for the North or the South? Or not at all? Military
records can tell you a lot about your ancestors including birthplace, occupation,
and even physical descriptions.