Empress Xiaoshengxian: Difference between revisions
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{{succession box|title=Empress of China|before=[[Xiao Jing Xian|Ulanala, the Empress Xiao Jing Xian]] ([[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 孝敬宪皇后乌喇纳拉氏)|after=[[Xiao Xian Chun|Fucha, the Empress Xiao Xian Chun]] ([[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 孝贤纯皇后富察氏)|years=[[1692]] - [[1777]]}} |
{{succession box|title=Empress of China|before=[[Xiao Jing Xian|Ulanala, the Empress Xiao Jing Xian]] ([[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 孝敬宪皇后乌喇纳拉氏)|after=[[Xiao Xian Chun|Fucha, the Empress Xiao Xian Chun]] ([[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 孝贤纯皇后富察氏)|years=[[1692]] - [[1777]]}} |
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==Imperial Portraits== |
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[[Image:孝圣.jpg|frame|center|The Imperial Portrait of Niuhuru, Empress Xiao Sheng Xian, the Chong Qing Imperial Dowager Empress (1692 - 1777) on her 60th Birthday]] |
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[[Image:Dowager Empress On Birthday.jpg|center|frame|The Chong Qing Dowager Empress On 70th Birthday]] |
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[[Category:1692 births]] |
[[Category:1692 births]] |
Revision as of 14:36, 26 December 2006
Empress Xiao Sheng Xian | |
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Niuhuru, the Chong Qing Imperial Dowager Empress | |
File:孝圣皇后朝服像.jpg |
Empress Xiao Sheng Xian (Chinese: 孝圣宪皇后钮祜禄氏; Manchu: Hiyoošungga Enduringge Temgetulehe Hūwanghu), 1692 - 1777, was a daughter of Ling Chu, the First Prince Liang Rong of the Manchu yellow banner corps, and granddaughter of Prince Eidu of the Niuhuru Clan.
Biography
Lady Niuhuru entered the Yongzheng Emperor's household in 1705. In 1711 she gave birth to Prince Hongli, the future Qianlong Emperor. Niuhuru was granted the title of the "Consort Xi" (Chinese: 熹妃) in 1723. One year later she was granted the title of the "Noble Consort Xi" (Chinese: 熹贵妃). And after the death of her husband in 1735, her son Hongli became the new Emperor. She was thus granted the title of the "Empress Dowager Chong Qing" (Chinese: 崇庆皇太后).
The Qianlong Emperor often visited his mother. Niuhuru always joined the Emperor on his trips to the North and the South. By all accounts the Dowager Empress was widely respected. When she became too old for travelling, the Emperor stopped and travelled again after her death. The Emperor had great respect for his mother and would often seek her advice. Her sixtieth birthday was lavishly celebrated, poems read in her honour and sacrifices made to the gods by the Emperor and the entire court. He even made a concubine of the Wuya clan his Empress only because she was in favour with the Dowager Empress.
Niuhuru died in 1777 with, for its time, a ripe old age of 85 years.