Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Men and Han can't get married. Which emperor said that?

Men and Han can't get married. Which emperor said that?

Emperor Qianlong began, and Emperor Guangxu officially allowed it! In the Qing Dynasty, "Manchu and Han did not marry" was widely circulated, and offenders were severely punished and even beheaded. But there is a strange case of intermarriage. But this was planned by Emperor Qianlong. Gan Long gave birth to a little daughter, but unfortunately she has a mole on her face. The fortune teller told her fortune and said "the main disaster". You have to marry someone more prominent than the princes to "avoid disaster". Gan Long loves his daughter very much. Think about it, there is no suitable Manchu aristocrat. I accidentally thought of Confucius' House in Qufu, Shandong Province, which is recognized by this generation as big noble. I'm afraid there is no one like it in the world, and my face lit up at once. But on second thought, Kong Shi is a Han Chinese. How can he marry a Han Chinese as the daughter of Emperor Qianlong? I can't help being in a dilemma Fortunately, Emperor Qianlong was a flexible man. He made a clever arrangement, turned a corner and sent his daughter to the home of Yu Minzhong, a college student in the Literature Museum, and became Yu Minzhong's adopted daughter. Yu Minzhong is a Han nationality, so the princess borrowed the light of "Han nationality" and became a Han girl. After a while. Qianlong's daughter married Kong Xianpei, the duke of Confucius' seventy-second grandson feast. As Yu Minzhong's adopted daughter, she was extravagant and extremely grand. Now, anyone who has been to Kong Lin in Qufu, Shandong Province, will see that in the northeast of Confucius' tomb, there is a luxurious tomb workshop called Yufufang, which is the tomb of Gan Long's daughter. In Guangxu period, due to long-term mixed residence, there were no pure Han or Manchu people. However, the rule of "Man Han does not marry" is still very strict. 1902, in order to maintain the crumbling Qing regime, Emperor Guangxu promulgated a series of "new policies", including allowing "marriage between Manchu and Han" to win over the children of Han nationality.