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The Yongzheng Emperor died on 8 October 1735 and was succeeded by Hongli, who was enthroned as the Qianlong Emperor. In November or December 1736, the Qianlong Emperor granted Lady Fuca the posthumous title "Consort Zhe". In May 1745, she was posthumously elevated to "Imperial Noble Consort Zhemin" by virtue of her son being the emperor's first ...
His mother Imperial Noble Consort Zhemin died when he was very young. In 1748, while the Qianlong Emperor was on an inspection tour in southern China, his first empress consort, Empress Xiaoxianchun, died. Yonghuang, as the emperor's eldest son, was tasked with overseeing the empress's funeral.
Imperial Noble Consort Gong Imperial Noble Consort Chunhui. Imperial noble consort (Chinese: 皇貴妃, Vietnamese: hoàng quý phi, Korean: 황귀비) was the title of women who ranked second to the Empress in the imperial harem of China during most of the period spanning from 1457 to 1915.
Imperial Noble Consort Keshun, better known as Consort Zhen or popularly as the Pearl Consort, was an imperial consort of the Guangxu Emperor. The Qing dynasty system was one of the simplest systems in Chinese history. Officially, there were eight ranks: Empress (皇后; huánghòu) Imperial Noble Consort (皇貴妃; huángguìfēi)
Consort Consort Jin (d. 1823), the Qianlong Emperor's noble lady; Imperial Concubine Imperial Concubine Tian (1789–1845), the Daoguang Emperor's imperial concubine; Princess Consort Primary Consort Gundei (d. 1620), Nurhaci's second primary consort, the mother of Manggūltai (1587–1633), Mangguji (1590–1636) and Degelei (1597–1635)
Consort Yi: 1722–1725 Yongzheng: Imperial Noble Consort Dunsu: 1735–1766 Qianlong: Empress Nara [7] After cutting her hair during the southern tour of 1765, she was confined to this palace until her death 1763–1795 Consort Dun [8] She began supervising lower-ranked imperial consorts in 1775 1767–1774 Imperial Noble Consort Qinggong ...
Ruyi's elevation from noble consort to imperial noble consort to step-empress is made uneasy due to Consort Jia's curbing her favor with scathing rumors and an attempt to frame her for adultery. Furthermore, she rallies her maiden tribe and well-known noblewomen to convince the Emperor to name her eldest son as crown prince.
Imperial Noble Consort Zhemin This page was last edited on 23 January 2023, at 00:57 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...