Fortune Telling Collection - Zodiac Guide - Introduction of Zhenfei (1876~ 1900) _ Introduction

Introduction of Zhenfei (1876~ 1900) _ Introduction

Zhen Fei's surname information: tatara was born in Guangxu (1876) on February 27th. Zodiac: Rat father: Chang Xu husband: Emperor Guangxu Zai Tian's children: no sister: Jin Fei entered the palace: Guangxu 15th year (1889). January 25th: Guangxu 15th year (6549). (1894)1resumed the title of princess on October 29th,1October 1st: the 21st year of Guangxu (1895)1October15th, the most proud: loved by her husband, year of death.

Burial:19131213.

Mausoleum: Princess chongling Garden.

Posthumous title: After her death, she was made a princess. After Xuan Tong ascended the throne, she was made a princess Queshun.

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The favorite concubine of Emperor Guangxu in Qing Dynasty, Princess Keshun (1876—1900), introduced Princess Tara briefly. Manchuria is decorated with red flags, and people usually call her the princess who was once sealed. The side princess of Emperor Guangxu in Qing Dynasty was also the most favored concubine. She was born on the third day of February in the second year of Guangxu, and is the daughter of Chang Xu, the left assistant minister of Libu. In the 14th year of Guangxu (1888), Empress Dowager Cixi chose her brother and deputy commander Ye He Na Lashi, the daughter of Gui Xiang, as Emperor Guangxu, and at the same time made Princess Zhen and her younger sister Jin Fei his concubines, at that time, Jin Fei was 15 years old and Zhen Fei was 13 years old. In the twentieth year of Guangxu, both of them were promoted to concubines. Zhenfei's grandfather is Yutai, governor of Shaanxi and Gansu, his father Chang Xu is the right assistant minister of the Ministry of Finance, and his uncle Chang Shan is the general of Guangzhou. Zhenfei and his sister Jin Fei grew up together with Changshan. Introduction of Zhen Fei 10 years old. Changshan retired as a general in Guangzhou, and she and her sister followed her back to Beijing. 1889, two sisters, Zhen Fei, were elected to the palace. 13 years old was made a noble princess, 15 years old was made a golden princess, ranking sixth in the sequence of nine ladies-in-waiting, until the 20th year of Guangxu (1894) Wu Jiachun. In the twenty-sixth year of Guangxu (1900), at the beginning of August, Eight-Nation Alliance gathered forces to attack Beijing, and Empress Dowager Cixi took Guangxu [the emperor] and fled in a hurry. Before he left, the eunuch received an order to call out the princess Zhen, who was in Beisanshou pharmacy, and pushed her into the Zhenshunmen well behind Cining Palace to drown. At that time, Zhen Fei was only 24 years old.

By the time Princess Zhen entered the palace, photography technology had been introduced to China. But at that time, the camera was considered as a dirty thing, which would take away people's souls and lead to people's loss of life. Zhen Fei, on the other hand, was able to accept photography and became the earliest concubine in the Qing Dynasty. However, judging from the large number of photos and negatives collected by the Palace Museum and the First Historical Archives of China, the largest number is Empress Dowager Cixi, followed by Empress Guangxu and Princess Guangxu, as well as photos of Puyi's childhood and abdication, but there are no photos of Guangxu and Princess Zhen.

In the second year after Zhenfei was killed, Cixi and Emperor Guangxu returned to Beijing from xi 'an, and ordered Zhenfei's body to be salvaged and sealed as a precious princess, and Enjizhuang was buried first. In the archives of the Qing Palace preserved in the First Historical Archives of China, there is such a record: "On the fourth day of July in the twenty-seventh year of Guangxu, Princess Zhen was buried in Enjizhuang, passing through the first battalion". In the imperial edict to make Zhen Fei a concubine, there is a saying, "I changed my capital last year, so I was in a hurry, so I died in the palace, which is a commendable book, so I thank posthumous title." Writing "truth" as "truth" probably means to show reverence. When Xuan Tong ascended the throne, she was posthumously named Queshun Guifei.