Ku Family History
Ku Surname Meaning
Chinese: Mandarin form of the surname 庫 meaning ‘warehouse’ in Chinese: (i) said to be borne by the descendants of those officials in charge of warehouses in the state of Zheng during the Spring and Autumn period (770–476
Chinese: Teochew Hokkien and Taiwanese form of the surnames 邱 and 丘 see Qiu. Korean: there are three Chinese characters for the surname Ku. The most common of the three claims 32 clans but only two can be documented. The other two Ku surnames each have one clan, with its own Chinese character. All four of the Ku clans immigrated from China.
The clans that use the more common character came in two waves: the first settled in the Nŭngsŏng sometime before 945, and the second, which settled in Ch’angwŏn, arrived in 122. The name of the immigrant who founded the first of these two clans has been lost; but the name of the second is Ku Chon-yu. Members of these two clans can be found throughout the Korean peninsula, but 45 percent of them live in Kyŏngsang South province, while 20 percent of them live in Seoul and Kyŏnggi province.
The founder of the clan that uses the other Ku character was named Ku T’ae-rim. He was an emissary for Tang China on his way to Japan when a storm blew his ship onto the shores of Koguryŏ Korea in 66. He settled in Koguryŏ territory and subsequently held a post in that government. Koguryŏ was a Korean kingdom which existed in the northern part of the Korean peninsula from 37
Most of the modern-day members of this clan live in Ch’ungch’ŏng province. Very little is known of the origins of the clan which uses the third Ku character. There are only a few families which still use this character in Korea; they live in Kyŏngsang province and Kangwŏn province. Compare Goo 3 and Koo 6. Southeast Asian (Hmong): variant of Kue. Amerindian (Mexico): Mayan name from ku or k'u meaning ‘god’ and ‘nest’. Compare Cu.
Source: Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
