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The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

author:Zhen Bo Rui

Xu Zhan'en, a descendant of Xu Da, king of Zhongshan

Xu Zhan'en (Kangxi Eleventh Year - Qianlong Twenty Years, i.e. 1672-1755), also spelled Pei Huang ,Yi Zi Pei Huang, was a Qing Dynasty politician and a Han army member of the Zhenglan Banner. Serving as a bodyguard with a warrior, he was appreciated by the Kangxi Emperor for his poetry, changed his civilian position, and became a cabinet scholar and ruled the two rivers.

Xu Zhan'en was a famous general in the early Ming Dynasty and the king of Zhongshan, xu da. He served as a commander in the capital at the end of the Ming Dynasty and settled in Liaoyang. The Qing Dynasty rose and was naturalized into the Zhenglan Banner Han Army. Xu Zhan'en was a gongsheng in his early years, kangxi in the fifty years (1711) changed to the Martial Arts Chinese style, kangxi fifty-four years (1715) ascended to the wu jinshi, appointed a bodyguard, and held the sword to his highness. Accidentally wrote poems on the orders of the Kangxi Emperor, which was deeply appreciated, and was specially changed to Bingbu Langzhong.

In the first year of Yongzheng (1723), Xu Zhan'en was sent to Yanning Province, Shandong. In the third year of Yongzheng (1725), he was promoted to Shandong as an envoy, and the following year he was transferred to Guangxi as an envoy. In the sixth year of Yongzheng (1728), The Left Governor of The Imperial Household of The Gadu Chayuan co-organized the affairs of the Hedong River and assisted in the affairs of the Henan and Shandong rivers. In the seventh year of Yongzheng (1729), he was appointed as an additional cabinet scholar and ceremonial attendant, and lied to the deputy general of the East River and the deputy general of the North River. In the eleventh year of Yongzheng (1733), he was dismissed from the vice-general river and handed over to Gu Chun for dispatch. Qianlong died in the twentieth year (1755).

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

King Kaiping often met Sun Changlang, the ninth grandson of Chun

When the ninth Annam king ChangLang moved to Liaoyang, after surrendering to the Qing army, he was incorporated into the Han army's Zhengbai Banner, and now his descendants are also Manchus.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

Qianning Zhaojing Wang Mu Ying after Mu Xianzhong

Mu Xianzhong, the son of Mu Tianbo, the last Duke of Qianguo, was incorporated into the Eight Banners Zhengbai Banner Han Army, although he had no descendants, but it did not mean that Mu Tianbo's bloodline was severed.

Because Mu Tianbo's daughter married Ai Chengye, the son of Ai Nengqi, Ai Chengye's sister-in-law Ai Fang served as a waiter in the Qing Dynasty's Punishment Department as a Han army with a yellow flag, and Ai Zhaochang served as the deputy governor of the Eight Banners and Yellow Banner Han army in the Qianlong Dynasty.

That is to say, Mu Tianbo's grandson and great-grandson were mixed well in the Qing Dynasty.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

The country is a descendant of Ye Zheng Chenggong

After Zheng Ketuan surrendered and was sent to Beijing, the Kangxi Emperor incorporated him into the Eight Banners of the Han Army and gave him a title, "Duke of Han Jun".

Later they no longer valued surnames. The names of these descendants of the country's surnames began to change into Manchu names such as "Tushan", "Tumin", "Deshan", "Qingxiang", "Yuliang", "Enfu", and "Deyin".

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

Chen Mengqiu, a descendant of Hongmen's grandfather Chen Jinnan

Chen Mengqiu (?) –1700), courtesy name Erzhu (二受), was the second son of Chen Yonghua of the Ming Dynasty.

The second son of Chen Yonghua (i.e., Chen Jinnan), the commander-in-chief of Ming Zheng Dongning, after the demise of Ming Zheng, he accompanied Zheng Ketuan to Yanjing, became a naturalized Han army Zhengbai banner, and was a jinshi in the thirty-third year of Kangxi (1694), who was personally summoned by the Kangxi Emperor and called him "the son of Zhongyi Chen Yonghua", who served as the editor of the Hanlin Academy, was ordered to supervise Shanxi, and died during his term of office.

His grandson Chen Huan, the Han Army, was a white flag man. Kangxi Ji Ji Lifted Up, Gengchen Lianjie Jinshi.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

The descendants of Zu Dashou have increased

Han Junzheng White Banner Man, Zu Clan, Character Yizhi. After Zu Dashou. The hygienist enters the TongwenKan. Fluent in French, he accompanied the British and Russian countries, successive protectors, and the rank of political envoy. Try to translate the "Whole Map of Tibet" and "Trans-Siberian Railway Map" into the presentation. During the xuanun period, he was promoted to the position of envoy to Yunnan. The Xinhai Revolution broke out, and he was pushed to be the governor, did not obey, and was killed. Yu Zhongcheng.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

Yuan Chonghuan's descendant Fuming Amitabha Buddha

Fuminga (?-1882) was a general of the late Qing Dynasty. His original surname was Yuan, the sixth grandson of the famous general Yuan Chonghuan at the end of the Ming Dynasty, and the character Zhi'an was a white banner man of the Han Army. In his early years, he enlisted in Kashgar with a horse armor, was awarded the knighthood school, was promoted to a staff leader, and was promoted to the rank of general of Jilin Province. Guangxu died in the eighth year (1882).

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

Shang Kexi's descendant Shang Qiheng

Shang Qiheng (16 January 1859 – 21 September 1920), courtesy name Huicheng (惠丞), Yizi Boheng (一字伯恒), Trumpet Huichen (号会臣), Late Da'an (達庵), Han Army with blue flag, qing dynasty official. Prince Shang Kexi of Pingnan was the seventh son and the eighth grandson of Shang Zhilong. Guangxu eighteen years into the soldier. In 1905, he was sent to the Qing government to investigate abroad.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

Geng Zhongming's descendant Deokshou

People from a human background. During the Guangxu period, he served as the governor of Guizhou, Hunan, Jiangxi, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, and Guangdong, and from the 25th to the 29th year of Guangxu (1899-1903), he acted as the governor of Liangguang three times, and the official was the governor of Caoyun. His sister is the wife of Rong Shan, a descendant of Pearl.

The descendants of those Ming Dynasty nobles and military generals who became the sons of the Eight Banners

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