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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 Gongshun: Palace of Eternal Longevity (永寿宫; Yǒngshòu Gōng) She lived under supervision until 1805 1795–1811 Consort Zhuang: Palace of Earthly Honour (翊坤宫; Yìkūn Gōng) She supervised lower ranking imperial consorts since 1801 1801–1820 Concubine An She lived under supervision as first attendant 1804 ...
2 September 1750 19 August 1766 Yongyan, the Jiaqing Emperor: Empress Xiaoshurui of the Manchu Hitara clan: 2 October 1760 12 February 1796 5 March 1797 Empress Xiaoherui of the Manchu Niohuru clan: 20 November 1776 27 May 1801 2 September 1820 husband's death: 23 January 1850 Mianning, the Daoguang Emperor: Empress Xiaoshencheng of the Manchu ...
Imperial Noble Consort Zhuangjing (2 April 1837 – 26 December 1890), of the Tatara clan, was promoted to Imperial Noble Consort in 1861. [6] Imperial Noble Consort Duanke (3 December 1844 – 7 May 1910), of the Tunggiya clan, was promoted to Imperial Noble Consort in 1908. [7]
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.
The future Imperial Noble Consort Quehui was born in 1668. It is not known when lady Tunggiya entered the Forbidden City; historical records state that she was present in 1697 as a consort. [1] By that year, Empress Xiaoyiren, Noble Consort Wenxi and Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin had died, leaving imperial harem without de iure head.
Imperial Noble Consort Huixian's personal name was not recorded in history. She was a Han Chinese by birth and came from the Gao family, who were originally Han baoyi of the Imperial Household Department's Bordered Yellow Banner. It was Qing court protocol to put any non-Manchu consort and her close male relatives like brothers and cousins into ...
She was the only imperial noble consort in the history of the Qing dynasty to receive a title containing four characters ("Dunyi Rongqing"); imperial noble consorts normally had only two characters in their title. Lady Fuca died on 13 April 1904 and was granted the posthumous title "Imperial Noble Consort Shushen".