The princes of the ancient imperial palace all had servants around them, and these servants had some accidents due to frequent contact with the emperor, after which they would be accepted by the prince as concubines, and if any of them were fortunate enough to give birth to a son, they would be likely to become the prince's side Fujin. Today, the author wants to talk about a lady who was Daoguang when she was a prince, who was lucky to give birth to the emperor's eldest grandson, but unfortunately was kicked to death by the emperor, and this lady was the later concubine.

The surname of Concubine Huifa Nala is the same as qianlong's successor, but the two are not related by blood, that is, Concubine Hefei is not a descendant of the lord of huifa. The ancestor of the Hefei family into the flag is named Subathai, is the original wrapper of the White Banner of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the Concubine family was not prominent in the early years of the Qing Dynasty, but only served as a middle-level bureaucrat in the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and during the Qianlong period, the Mendi was gradually promoted, and many members of the family were in the south as weavers or in the customs, which was also considered a rich family.
Therefore, although Shefei was originally a low-ranking lady, her origin was not as low as people thought, on the contrary, she had a certain economic strength. Concubine He's father, named Chengwen, was a mid-level official in the Ministry of Internal Affairs with the rank of secretary.
As early as the first year of Jiaqing, Jiaqing designated Consort Fujin for his eldest son Mianning (Daoguang), who was from the Niuhulu clan of the Hongyi Principality and had a strong family background. However, for some reason, This Concubine Fujin of Mianning never gave birth to a child, which made Jiaqing, who had already entered the age of confusion, very anxious, so Jiaqing selected several handmaidens from the palace to serve as mianning (Daoguang) servants, including the later concubine Huifa Nara.
In fact, Mianning was a relatively old-fashioned and conservative prince, afraid that what he had done would affect his image in the heart of his father Jiaqing, so he usually had the intention of alienating a man like Huifa Nala. However, often walking by the river, where there are shoes that are not wet. A fortuitous accident caused Huifa Nara to conceive Mianning's child, and in April of the thirteenth year of Jiaqing, she successfully gave birth to the emperor's eldest grandson, which made Jiaqing Longyan very happy, and immediately personally named the emperor's eldest grandson: Yiwei.
Yi Wei's birth completely changed the fate of the Huifa Nara clan, and the Jiaqing Emperor decided to give him the title of Mianning Side Fujin, which gave him the opportunity to be promoted upwards. Moreover, Jiaqing also loved the emperor's eldest grandson Yiwei, often taking it with him, and even in the twenty-fourth year of Jiaqing, the emperor's eldest grandson was named Dorobele, which was extremely rare in the history of the Qing Dynasty.
However, only a year later, Daoguang (Mianning) inherited the throne, and after Daoguang succeeded to the throne, Yiwei's birth mother Huifa Nala was given the title of concubine and concubine, and the position was quite OK, but Yiwei was demoted from Dorobele to ordinary prince treatment. It can be seen that Daoguang really does not want to see the mother and son of the concubine.
However, this kind of undesirableness changed in the Daoguang decade.
At that time, Daoguang's second son Yi Gang and third son Yi Ji died one after another, Yi Wei became Dao Guang's only son, and his value immediately doubled, and Dao Guang suddenly became concerned about this eldest son, and sent a chancellor to teach Yi Wei to study. However, Yi Wei, who has not been restrained for many years, has long been accustomed to a life of unbridled wandering, and suddenly being strictly disciplined by others must be very uncomfortable.
Once, Yi Wei confronted the teacher in class and claimed that after he succeeded to the throne in the future, the first person to kill was the teacher. When the Daoguang Emperor heard this, he was very angry, severely reprimanded this son who did not understand the rules, and even kicked Yi Wei a few times. Unexpectedly, Yi Wei's key point was mentioned, and only half a year later, the emperor's eldest son died young.
There is no detailed description of Yiwei's death in the Draft History of the Qing Dynasty, which is from a book called "Memories of the Old Eunuch", although this is not necessarily true, it can reflect the discord between The father and son of Daoguang Yiwei.
References: Draft History of the Qing Dynasty, Memories of the Old Eunuch, Records of Emperor Xuanzong of the Qing Dynasty