Empress Xiaoxianchun

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Empress Xiaoxianchun
Empress of the Qing Dynasty
Tenure 1737–1748
Predecessor Empress Xiaoshengxian
Successor Ulanara, the Step Empress
Spouse Qianlong Emperor
Issue
Qianlong Emperor's eldest daughter
Yonglian
Kurun Princess Hejing
Yongcong
Posthumous name
Empress Xiaoxian Chengzheng Dunmu Renhui Weigong Kangshun Futian Changsheng Chun
(孝賢誠正敦穆仁惠徽恭康順輔天昌聖純皇后)
Father Fuca Lirongbao
Born (1712-03-28)28 March 1712
Died 8 April 1748(1748-04-08) (aged 36)
Burial Yuling Mausoleum, Eastern Qing Tombs, China
Empress Xiaoxianchun
Simplified Chinese 孝贤纯皇后
Traditional Chinese 孝賢純皇后
Lady Fuca
Chinese 富察氏

Empress Xiaoxianchun (28 March 1712 – 8 April 1748) was the first Empress Consort of the Qianlong Emperor of the Qing Dynasty.

Biography

Family background

Empress Xiaoxianchun was born in the Manchu Fuca (富察) clan, which was under the Bordered Yellow Banner of the Eight Banners. Her personal name is unknown. She was the eighth child of Lirongbao (李榮保), the Supervisor of Chahar Province.

Marriage to the Qianlong Emperor

In 1727 Lady Fuca married Hongli, the fourth son of the Yongzheng Emperor. She was granted the title of Primary Consort (嫡妃) of Hongli, who was then known as Prince Bao of the First Rank (寶親王), and moved into the Palace of Eternal Spring in the western part of the Forbidden City. In 1735 the Yongzheng Emperor died and was succeeded by Hongli, who became the Qianlong Emperor. Two years later in 1737 Qianlong instated Lady Fuca as his Empress.

As Empress

Empress Xiaoxianchun fondling silkworms

In the Draft History of the Qing Dynasty, Lady Fuca is depicted as a respected and virtuous person. She looked after the Qianlong Emperor and the people in the palace, and served her role as Empress well. She was praised and favoured by Qianlong.[1]

It is also said that Lady Fuca did not like spending money for her own good. Instead of wearing jewellery she would put wild flowers in her hair.

The Qianlong Emperor once told her a story that Manchus were too poor to make their own pouches from cloth and had to settle for simple deer hide instead. She immediately made one for him. He was touched by the gift. Lady Fuca also made other pouches for him.[2]

Lady Fuca took her duties seriously when it came to Confucian rituals. As head of the women's quarters in the palace, she supervised the emperor's concubines when performing a ritual. One of these was a rite concerning sericulture that was presided over by the Empress. This rite, which had been practiced since the Zhou Dynasty, was gradually restored during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor. For this a sericulture altar was constructed in 1742.

In 1744 a new Altar to Sericulture was completed,[3] largely at Lady Fuca's urging.[4] In the same year Lady Fuca became the first empress in the Qing Dynasty to personally lead the women in the palace in these rites. They made offerings of mulberry and presented them to silkworm cocoons, all of them working industriously.

The whole rite was painted on four scrolls in 1751 in memory of Lady Fuca, who died in 1748.[5]

Death

Lady Fuca often joined the Qianlong Emperor on his excursions throughout China. In 1748, during one of Qianlong's southern tours, Lady Fuca became seriously ill and eventually died on 8 April at the age of 36. She was interred in the Yuling Mausoleum in the Eastern Qing Tombs. It is said that the Qianlong Emperor often visited her grave with wistful longing, and remained heartbroken to the end of his days.

Family

Empress Xiaoxianchun was born in an aristocratic family that saw many members serving as officials in the Qing imperial court.

Ancestors and elders

  • Great-grandfather: Hashitun (哈什屯; 1589–1663), served as a member of the Vanguards under Nurhaci and later joined the Imperial Guards. He served the Shunzhi Emperor after 1650 and was conferred the title of a baron.
  • Father: Lirongbao (李榮保; died 1723), served as Supervisor of Chahar Province. He was posthumously granted the title of a Duke of the First Class when Lady Fuca became Empress in 1737.
  • Uncles:
    • Maqi (馬齊; 1652–1739), served as Grand Secretariat. He was appointed to the Deliberative Council of Princes and Ministers after displaying meritorious action in the military campaign against Galdan Khan.
    • Mawu (died 1726), served in the Imperial Guards, and accompanied the Kangxi Emperor in the campaign against Galdan Khan. He was disgraced in 1709 after conspiring with other court officials to help Yinsi seize the succession to the throne when the Kangxi Emperor was seriously ill. He later took up various posts in the inner court and banners, and became Chamberlain of the Imperial Guards in 1721.

Siblings

Lady Fuca had seven older brothers, two younger brothers and several sisters. The most notable of her siblings was a younger brother, Fuheng.

  • Fuheng (1715–1770), commanded the Qing armies in the Fourth Burma Campaign in 1769.

Issue

Lady Fuca bore the Qianlong Emperor two sons and two daughters, of whom only one daughter survived to adulthood.[6]

  • Unnamed daughter (1728), the Qianlong Emperor's eldest daughter, died prematurely.
  • Yonglian (永璉; 1730–1738), the Qianlong Emperor's second son, posthumously granted the title of Crown Prince Duanhui (端慧皇太子).
  • Kurun Princess Hejing (固倫和敬公主; 1731–1792), the Qianlong Emperor's third daughter.
  • Yongcong (永琮; 1746–1747), the Qianlong Emperor's seventh son, posthumously granted the titles of Prince Daomin (悼敏皇子) and Prince Zhe of the First Rank (哲親王).

Posthumous title

Empress Xiaoxianchun's full posthumous title is:

  • Empress Xiao xian cheng zheng dunmuren huiwei gong kangshun futian chang shengchun
    (孝賢誠正敦穆仁惠徽恭康順輔天昌聖純皇后)

See also

Notes

  1. Draft History of Qing (Qingshi gao 清史稿), chapter 214, biography of Empress Xiaoxian (高宗孝贤纯皇后).
  2. Splendors of China's Forbidden City "The glorious reign of Emperor Qianlong" ISBN 1-85894-203-9
  3. Susan Naquin, Peking: Temples and City Life, 1400–1900 (University of California Press, 2000), p. 308.
  4. Qing liechao houfei zhuan gao, F. 86. Qingchao yeshi daguan, 1.55.
  5. "Empress supervising the rites of sericulture" painting hangs in the National Palace Museum, Beijing.
  6. 《清史稿》卷二百十四.列傳一.后妃傳.高宗孝贤纯皇后.

References

  • Norman Kutcher. "The Death of the Xiaoxian Empress: Bureaucratic Betrayals and the Crises of Eighteenth-Century Chinese Rule." The Journal of Asian Studies. Vol. 56, No. 3 (Aug. 1997), pp. 708–725.
  • Daily Life in the Forbidden City, Wan Yi, Wang Shuqing, Lu Yanzhen ISBN 0-670-81164-5
  • Splendors of China's Forbidden City "The glorious reign of Emperor Qianlong" ISBN 1-85894-203-9

Succession

Chinese royalty
Preceded by
Empress Xiaoshengxian
(Empress Xiaojingxian was the actual predecessor)
Empress of China
1738 – 8 April 1748
Succeeded by
Ulanara, the Step Empress
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