Cui Shi originated from Qi in the Western Zhou Dynasty. Once a famous family in Shandong, it was a national surname for a long time, ranking 74th among China surnames in population order. Qi was one of the important vassal states in the early Western Zhou Dynasty, with Linzi as the capital and Lushang as the founding monarch. Lu Shang was born Jiang, because his ancestors were sealed in Lu (now Nanyang West, Henan Province), so he was given a surname. Ding, son of Lu merchants, was the second generation monarch of Qi. His eldest son, Kiko, should have succeeded to the throne, but he gave way to his younger brother, Uncle B, who lived in the northwest of Zhangqiu County, Shandong Province, and later took the city as his surname, namely Cui Shi.
Their descendants have always been great doctors of Qi, and their ninth grandson, Cui Xun, is Qi Zhengqing. Cui Yao once established Zhuang Gong and Gong Jing, and served as the right photograph. 17 His grandson, Cui, was a doctor in the Qin Dynasty. He was named in the East and had two sons: Ji Bo and Zhong Mou. Since then, he began to expand his business and achieved success. From the Han Dynasty to the Song Dynasty, there were many bureaucrats. From the Wei and Jin Dynasties to the early Tang Dynasty, Cui Shi was listed as a first-class surname according to the surname of the gentry, or "Cui, Lu, Wang and Xie" or "Cui, Lu, Li and Zheng". In Song Dynasty, Guang Yun said that Cui Shi was "looking at the Qinghe River and seeing the Bo Ling". Qinghe Cui Shi was a famous northern clan from Han Dynasty to Sui and Tang Dynasties in China. In the Northern Wei Dynasty, it was once called the four major families with Lu, Xingyang Zheng and Taiyuan Wang. Most Cui Shi celebrities in the Northern and Southern Dynasties came from Wucheng (now the west of Wucheng) in the east of Qing Dynasty, such as Shangshu, Baimagong Cui Hong, Situ Ho Choi, scholar Cui Lingen, historian Cui Hong and calligrapher Cui Yue. In the Tang Dynasty, there were poets Cui, Cui Hu, and there were as many as 27 people surnamed Cui, who were once prominent. Eight, Xingyang Zheng.
The Zheng family in Xingyang originated from the ancient State of Zheng. At the end of the Spring and Autumn Period, the state of Zheng perished, and the descendants of Zheng moved to other places, but they all put the country name before the name. This method is called "taking the country as the surname" and forms the surname of Zheng. Later, the Zheng family developed into a noble family in Xingyang. At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Zheng Hun, Zheng Tai and others of the Zheng family began to develop into famous families. During the Southern and Northern Dynasties, the middle and senior officials of the Zheng family in Xingyang continued from generation to generation. Xingyang Zheng, Qinghe Cui, Fan and Taiyuan Wang are four famous families in China. After the Tang Dynasty, the Zheng family in Xingyang successively produced nine prime ministers, as well as many other ministers, assistant ministers and our ministers. His fame reached its peak, and his sages worked diligently in the imperial court, educated in counties and counties, or made contributions to the social economy and culture. Later, due to the implementation of the imperial examination system, its influence gradually declined, but it was still the most prominent Zheng family in the world.