One of the most striking things you realize after spending time in China is how certain last names are very, very common. When I taught high-school English in Jiangsu Province in 2004, I remember there being at least eight—out of a class of about 30—students surnamed Wang, and two of those shared a first name. Fortunately, all of my students adopted English nicknames, making it easier for me to remember who was who.
For a country of 1.3 billion people, there is a remarkably small number of common last names in China. An estimated 87% of the population shares one of 100 surnames, and more than one in five Chinese citizens is surnamed Li, Wang, or Zhang: more than 275 million people in all. (By contrast, 90% of the United States population encompasses over 150,000 different last names).
Less known, however, is that the most common Chinese names have a geographic “base” within the country. These fascinating maps, put together by China-focused writer Andrew Stokols using data from this site, tell us where Chinese names are most heavily concentrated in the country. Li, Wang, and Zhang, which comprise over 20% of the population, are most commonly found in China’s northeast, where the ethnic Han majority is most predominant. Here is a map, for example, of the surname Li:
And here’s Wang:
And, finally, Zhang:
Not all highly-common names are common in the Northeast, however. Take Chen, for example, which dominates China’s southeastern provinces.
And here’s Ma (which literally means “horse”); due to the name’s historic association with China’s Muslim Hui minority, people surnamed Ma are common in the northwest of the country, where much of China’s Islamic population is based.
Of course, that certain last names have geographic bases within a country is hardly unusual; Americans with Scandinavian surnames, for example, are very common in states like Minnesota and the Dakotas. But what will be interesting is revisiting these maps in 20 or 30 years. Internal migration—a force that affects at least a tenth of China’s population, and probably much higher—has only been a major force in the country over the last two decades, and its effects on the country’s demographics are only partly understood. In the end, China’s distribution of family names seems poised to scatter.