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Speaking of the princesses of the Qing Dynasty, it may give people the impression that they were born with golden branches and jade leaves, born with golden keys from childhood, and enjoyed inexhaustible gold and jade food, and were envied by the world. As everyone knows, the fate of some princesses in the Qing Dynasty was quite tragic, such as Nurhaci's fourth princess Mukushge.

Mukushge was the fourth daughter of the Qing Taizu Nurhaci, born around 1595 to the mother of Nurhaci's concubine Jiamu Hujue Luoshi. Jammuhujue Roche was a woman that Nurhaci had acquired on the battlefield in his early years, not from a modest birth, but very capable of having children, and she gave birth to five children in succession, including Mukushge.
At that time, even if the girls were born noble, they could not escape becoming chips in the political bargaining, and Mukushge was no exception. In the year when Mukushge was 14 years old, she was married by her father Nurhaci to the lord of the Ula kingdom, Buzhantai, a villain with two sides and three knives, who flattered Nurhaci on the one hand and made a marriage contract with Yehe's old daughter on the other. The old woman of Yehe had a marriage contract with Nurhaci, and This move of Bu zhantai was undoubtedly humiliating the old man, and Bu Zhantai actually shot his pregnant wife Mukushge with a whistle.
Nurhaci could not bear it, and in 1612 he sent an army to destroy the Urab, taking his daughter Mukush back to Jianzhou, while Buzhantai fled to Yehe to take refuge.
After bringing her daughter Mukush back, the 18-year-old daughter was in a good adolescent, so Nurhaci married her to his fierce general Ngaidu. Ngyitu was more than 50 years old at the time, more than 30 years older than Mukushge, but Mukush saw him as a heroic Manchurian Batulu, so he married into the residence of the Duke of Hongyi, and soon after gave birth to Eyidu's youngest son (the sixteenth character), Shubilung, who later became one of the four auxiliary ministers in the early years of Kangxi and became Kangxi's father-in-law.
In 1621, Hongyi Died of Illness, and the 27-year-old Mukushge once again became a widow, and according to the custom of "fathers die and sons and wives and stepmothers" in Manchu society, Mukush actually married Turg, the eighth son of Eyidu. Mukush was about the same age as Turg and was very harmonious and happy, but Mukushge was pit by his daughter. At that time, Mukush's daughter (the daughter of Mukush and Buzhantai) married Nurhaci's grandson Nikan, and since she had not given birth to a child for more than ten years, she took the daughter born of a servant to raise her, which at that time was a major sin of impersonating the clan.
As a result, Mukushge's title of HeshuoGege was removed by his brother Emperor Taiji, and her husband Turge was dismissed from his post, and Mukush divorced Turg. Mukushge became a widow for the third time, and she was already more than forty years old, and she had no choice but to live in her brother Babtai and Bab Hai Province, but Mukushgege was a relatively long-lived princess, and she lived until the sixteenth year of Shunzhi, at the age of 65.