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*possibly, arguably, [[King Taejo]], founder of the [[Joseon Dynasty]] of Korea<ref>Though said to be definitively of Korean ancestry, King Taejo was the son of Korean officials who served the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan Dynasty]], and grew up in or around what is today the border region between North Korea and Manchuria, an environment at that time settled by a vibrant mix of who we might today consider to have been ethnic [[Jurchens]], Mongols, Chinese, and Koreans.</ref>
 
*possibly, arguably, [[King Taejo]], founder of the [[Joseon Dynasty]] of Korea<ref>Though said to be definitively of Korean ancestry, King Taejo was the son of Korean officials who served the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan Dynasty]], and grew up in or around what is today the border region between North Korea and Manchuria, an environment at that time settled by a vibrant mix of who we might today consider to have been ethnic [[Jurchens]], Mongols, Chinese, and Koreans.</ref>
 
*The [[Tong of Fushun]], including [[Tong Bunian]], Ming official in Liaodong during the initial rise of the Jurchen [[Qing Dynasty|Later Jin]].
 
*The [[Tong of Fushun]], including [[Tong Bunian]], Ming official in Liaodong during the initial rise of the Jurchen [[Qing Dynasty|Later Jin]].
*[[Wu Sangui]], Ming general who allowed the Manchus into China in 1644, and later rose up in [[Revolt of the Three Feudatories|revolt against the Manchus]].
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*[[Wu Sangui]], Ming general who allowed the Manchus into China in 1644, and later rose up in [[Revolt of the Three Feudatories|revolt against the Manchus]].<ref>Crossley, 260.</ref>
    
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