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This daughter was Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, who was born taller than "Zhen Huan" and was buried three times

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Chinese history emphasizes that people can "go into the ground for safety" after death, even if they encounter special circumstances that need to be relocated, it is very rare, if multiple burials are also disrespectful to the deceased, the deceased will not get peace in another world. However, there was a woman in the Qing Dynasty who was buried three times after her death, and this woman was also Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, the empress dowager of the Qing Dynasty.

This daughter was Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, who was born taller than "Zhen Huan" and was buried three times

In the first year of Jiaqing in the Qing Dynasty, the Jiaqing Emperor, who was nearly forty years old, did not have a daughter-in-law, and his great-grandfather Kangxi had already been a grandfather when he was 35 years old, and in ancient times, he hoped to have more children and more blessings, not to mention that in the royal family, it was particularly important to spread branches and leaves. Therefore, in the first year of Jiaqing's succession, he personally selected a daughter-in-law among the xiunu, this woman came from the foreign relatives of the Niuhulu clan, and the father was the then Luan Yiwei envoy BuYanDalai.

Speaking of the origin of this woman with the surname NiuHulu, it is not a small thing, she comes from the most prominent "Hongyi Gong" clan of the Niuhulu clan, Hongyi Gong is the founding father of the Qing Dynasty, Yidu, this family can be born from generations, Emperor Taizong Taiji's concubines, Kangxi's assistant chancellor Shu Bilong, Kangxi's Empress Xiaozhao, Wen Yi's concubines, etc. are all from this family. As we all know, Qianlong's birth mother, Empress Xiaoshengxian (Zhen Huan's prototype), was also from the Niuhulu clan, but her branch was only distant relatives with the "Hongyi Gong", far less prominent than the "Hongyi Gong" branch.

This daughter was Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, who was born taller than "Zhen Huan" and was buried three times

After Jiaqing took a fancy to this woman of the Niuhulu clan, he pointed it out to the second brother Min Ning (later the Daoguang Emperor), and then the Niu Hulu clan entered the palace to become the concubine fujin of the crown prince Min Ning. Jiaqing's original intention was to let the NiuHulu clan have children for their son Min Ning, so that they could hug their grandchildren as soon as possible, who knew that more than ten years had passed, and the niuhulu clan's stomach was just not moving.

In the thirteenth year of Jiaqing, niuhulu clan suddenly fell ill, although the tai doctors tried their best to heal, but still could not keep the life of niuhulu, niuhulu still passed away, only 28 years old. Although as early as April of the fourth year of Jiaqing, the second brother Min Ning was secretly designated as the heir to the throne, but after all, Jiaqing was still alive, even if the Niu Hulu clan was to be posthumously crowned empress in the future, this secret could not be announced at that time, so Jiaqing held a super-standard funeral for his daughter-in-law and buried her in Wang Zuocun Garden, which was the first burial of the Niu Hulu clan.

This daughter was Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, who was born taller than "Zhen Huan" and was buried three times

After Daoguang succeeded to the throne, he posthumously honored his wife Niu Hulu as Empress Xiaomu, 12 years after the death of Niu Hulu. The Daoguang Emperor ordered the construction of a mausoleum at Baohuayu in the Eastern Qing Dynasty, and then buried Empress Xiaomu in the Baohuayu Mausoleum Underground Palace, which was the second burial of Empress Xiaomu's Niuhulu clan.

This daughter was Qianlong's granddaughter-in-law, who was born taller than "Zhen Huan" and was buried three times

However, later someone found that the Baohuayu underground palace was seeping water, and Empress Xiaomu's coffin was actually soaked in the water, so the Daoguang Emperor decided to abandon the Baohuayu underground palace and built a new mausoleum in Longquanyu, the later Muling, in the Qing Dynasty. After the completion of the Muling Tomb, the tortuous Empress Xiaomu was buried in the underground palace for the third time, and the Empress Tangtang Daqing was buried three times after her death, which is also extremely rare in Chinese history.

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