,
Guangdong ,
Hubei.
Chinese lineage associations, also
kinship or
ancestral associations ( or ), are a type of
social relationship institutions found in
Han Chinese ethnic groups and the fundamental unit of
Chinese ancestral religion. They gather people who share the same
surname belonging to the same kin, who often have the same geographical origin (
ancestral home), and therefore the same patron
deities. They are not seen as distinct from the Chinese kin itself, but rather as its corporate form. These institutions and their corporeal manifestations are also known as
lineage churches or
kinship churches (), or, mostly on the scholarly level, as
Confucian churches, although this term has principally other different meanings. Chinese kinship associations provide
guanxi (social network) to members and they build and manage
ancestral shrines or temples dedicated to the worship of the
progenitors of the kins as their congregational centers, where they perform
rites of unity. A lineage is a
corporation, in the sense that members feel to belong to the same body, are highly conscious of their group identity, and derive benefits from jointly owned property and shared resources. Benefit derives from the surplus income of ancestral shrines and homes, which is reinvested by the managers or shared out in yearly dividends. Benefit of belonging to a lineage can also be measured in terms of protection and patronage. Different lineages may develop through the opposite processes of fusion and segmentation. They can also be dispersed and fragmented into "multi-lineage areas" or concentrated in one place, or "single-lineage area". ==Ancestral shrine==