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Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

(Continued from the previous period) Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (1) The Kangxi Dynasty is worth collecting

In the first year of Yongzheng (1723), he was conferred the official title of Shangshu of the Bingbu and Right Capital of the Governor of Liangjiang, and from then on the rank of Viceroy of Liangjiang was congruent to Yipin.

<h1>Eighteenth term: Fan Shixuan</h1>

Period of service: Yongzheng 4th year 4th month of His death (18 May 1726) to March 12, 1730

Reason for leaving office: Acting as the chief soldier of Malan Town, he was not actually granted, and was dismissed due to the impeachment of Li Wei, the governor of Zhejiang

Fan Shixuan (?) –1741), han army with yellow flag, son of Fan Chengxun, the eighth governor of Liangjiang, and grandson of Fan Wencheng, the founding hero of the Qing Dynasty. In the early years of the Yongzheng Dynasty, he was appointed as the commander-in-chief of Malan Town, and successively served as the acting governor of Liangjiang and the capital of the Han army under the Blue Banner, the capital of the Han army with the white flag, the shangshu of the Hubu Shangshu, and the official to the Shangshu of the Ministry of Works and the capital of the Han army with the yellow flag. Qianlong died of illness in the sixth year (1741).

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

[Yongzheng Zhu Approves Fan Shixuan As Acting Governor of Liangjiang Xie En fold]

In the fourth year of Yongzheng (1726), the imperial court appointed Fan Shixuan to act as the governor of Liangjiang, and in the same year, he was moved to the capital of the Zhenglan Banner Han Army. During his tenure, he dredged canals and transportation, and had considerable political achievements. Due to the effective promotion of the new policy of "spreading the land into the mu", Yongzheng was promoted to hubu shangshu in the sixth year and continued to act as the deputy of Liangjiang. It attaches great importance to the water conservancy treatment of the two rivers and builds embankments and dams, which has reduced the flooding in the two rivers area for a time.

Due to the rampant banditry in Suzhou, Songjiang and other provinces, Fan Shixuan was ineffective in arresting thieves, and Yongzheng handed over the case of thieves in the seven provinces and five prefectures of Jiangsu to the management of Li Wei, the governor of Zhejiang. Soon Li Wei captured Zhang Yunru, who had close contacts with Gan Fengchi, and Zhang Ruyun used spells to confuse the crowd with intentions to rebel, but Fan Shixuan had close ties with him, so he was impeached by Li Wei and recalled to the capital division.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Portrait of Li Wei's Imperial Dress】

After returning to Beijing, Yongzheng Ling assisted Tian Wenjing, the governor of Hedong, in handling Hedong River affairs, and was impeached by Tian Wenjing for being passive and slack, delaying the river work, and the ministry was beheaded, and Yongzheng remembered that he was a meritorious man and pardoned him. Soon after, he was appointed as the deputy commander of the Han Army with the Blue Banner.

In the tenth year of Yongzheng (1732), Fan Shixuan was again appointed as the Shangshu of the Ministry of Works and the commander of the Han Army with the Yellow Banner. Two years later, he was dismissed from the Ministry of Works. Thirteen years later (1735), he was impeached and bribed by the bodyguard Baozhu and was convicted by the lower subordinates, and in the same year he was amnesty and released back home. Qianlong died in the sixth year (1741).

<h1>Nineteenth term: Shi Yizhi</h1>

Duration of office: More than one month after March 12, 1730) of the 8th year of Yongzheng

Acted as the left attendant of the official department, and was not actually authorized

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【History Straight Image】

Shi Yizhi (1682-1763), also spelled 儆弦, was a native of Liyang County, Jiangsu Province. In the thirty-ninth year of the Kangxi Dynasty (1699), he entered the priesthood and was commissioned the Hanlin Academy to review. During the Yongzheng period, he served as the cabinet bachelor, the official shilang, the viceroy of Fujian, the acting viceroy of Liangjiang, the acting governor of Fujian and Zhejiang, the zuo du yushi, the assistant inspector of Xi'an, the hubu shangshu, and the bingbu shangshu; during the Qianlong period, he successively served as the viceroy of Huguang, the viceroy of directly subordinate to the gongbu, the prince taifu, and the official to Wenyuange University. In the twenty-eighth year of Qianlong (1758), he died of illness and was posthumously given to Taibao with the courtesy name "Wenjing" and entered the Xianliang Ancestral Hall.

Shi Yizhi was a Han courtier, and he was favored by the three dynasties of Kangxi, Yongzheng, and Qianlong, and almost treated the officials of the Qing Dynasty over and over again, and in his later years he entered the court to worship the chancellor, and after his death, he entered the Xianliang Temple, which really has his superiority.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Shi Yizhi Calligraphy】

In the eighth year of Yongzheng (1730), after receiving the will of the acting governor of Liangjiang, Shi Yizhi resigned on the grounds that he was not in the flag, and Yongzheng did not allow it. In the following year, zuo du was awarded the imperial history, and the official residence was from Yipin, but still left two rivers. When Yongzheng was consulting Dzungar, he was ordered to go to Shaanxi and Gansu to transfer grain and grass, assist the inspector of Shaanxi, and promote Shangshu of the army. In the tenth year of Yongzheng (1732), because of his meritorious service in transporting grain and grass, he was awarded the title of Shangshu of the Ministry of Households and the Governor of Shaanxi.

After Qianlong succeeded to the throne, he gave Shi Yizhi the clothes that Yongzheng wore during his lifetime, which moved him to tears, and soon acted as the governor of Huguang. After his arrival, he suppressed grain prices, built river embankments, combed the salt administration, and fought with the Governor of Hunan, Gao Qi, to quell the rebellion of the Miao chieftains PuYinshan and Fenglaoyi in Chengbu county, Hunan. Qianlong gave him a great reward and specially summoned him back to the capital and transferred him to shangshu of the departments of workers, criminals, soldiers, and officials.

In the seventh year of Qianlong (1742), he ordered his office to be directly subordinate to the governor, and soon recalled to the capital to serve as a co-founder university scholar. Two years later, he was a scholar at Wenyuange University. Ten years later (1745), he was crowned Prince Taibao. Twenty years later (1755), because his son Shi Yi'ang was implicated in the case of Shandong Governor Echang, He Shi returned to his hometown. Two years later, Qianlongnan toured The hometown of Xingshi Yizhi, and was reinstated as a scholar, and soon became a Shangshu of the Ministry of Works. In the twenty-eighth year of Qianlong (1763), he died of illness at the age of 82, and was given the title of Prince Taibao and entered the Xianliang Ancestral Hall.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Tomb of Shi Yizhi】

<h1>Twentieth and twenty-third term: Gao Qikuo</h1>

First term of office: May 1730 (20 June 1730) to 8 August 1731 (8 August 1731)

Reason for leaving office: Entering the capital to assist Yin Xiang, the Prince of Yi, in electing a thousand years of auspicious land for Yongzheng, and later acting as the governor of Yunguang

Second term of office: Yongzheng 11th year of the first month of the first month (23 February 1733) to the 11th year of Yongzheng (8 October 1733)

Reason for leaving office: Because zhao kunheng of Zhixian County was demoted to the inspector of Jiangsu

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Portrait of Gao Qizuo】

Gao Qizuo (1676-1738) Han army with yellow flag, character Zhangzhi, number Meinuma, Zhongjun, Liaoning Tieling people, finger painting founder Gao Qipei cousin. In the 33rd year of the Kangxi Dynasty (1694), he was appointed as a scholar of the Hanlin Academy, and successively served as the examiner of the Sichuan Township Examination, the Right Middle Yun, the Shanxi Xuezheng, the Attendant Lecturer, the Cabinet Bachelor, and the Inspector of Guangxi; during the Yongzheng Period, he successively served as the Viceroy of Yungui, the Shangshu of Bingbu, the Young Fu of the Crown Prince, the Viceroy of Fujian and Zhejiang, the Prince Taibao, the Viceroy of Liangjiang, and the Inspector of Jiangsu. In Fujian, he asked for the lifting of the ban on private sea trade, and later demoted to the inspector of Jiangsu for this reason. During the Qianlong period, he successively served as the inspector of Hubei, the Shangshu of the Ministry of Works, the official to the Shangshu of the Ministry of Works, and the death of Wenliang.

Gao Qizuo was born in a bureaucratic family, his father Gao Yinjue, successively served as Sanhe Zhi County, Shuntianfu South Road Tongzhi, Sichuan Songmao Road, Sichuan Province, Sichuan Cloth Envoy, moved to Zhizhi KouBei Province, with remarkable political achievements, quite valued by Kangxi. Gao Qizuo was intelligent and studious since childhood, Kangxi Thirty-three Years (1694) at the age of 19 years old, high school junior, the first hanlin yuan Shu Jishi, at home closed for many years after studying as an official, five moved to the cabinet bachelor.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

[Yi Zhouzhi's account of Gao Qizuo and Yin Xiang the Prince of Yi surveying the Tailing Tombs]

In the sixty-first year of the Kangxi Dynasty (1722), Yongzheng ascended the throne and was promoted to viceroy of Yungui. After Gao Qiqi arrived in office, he changed the hereditary system of toast and was greatly praised by Yongzheng. During the quelling of the Qinghai Lobzang Tenzin Rebellion, Gao Qiqi recruited the Zhongdian Lama and the Fan Chieftain for meritorious service, and was awarded the hereditary post of Worship of Lobe Haban. In the third year of Yongzheng (1725), he was promoted to bingbu Shangshu, added prince shaofu, transferred to the governor of Fujian and Zhejiang, and promoted the spread of ding into mu. Five years later (1727), he led troops into The Rebellion of The Pingshui Lianshe. Soon, Yongzheng made Li Wei the governor of Zhejiang, and gao Qizuo was made the governor of Fujian, and the crown prince Taibao was created.

In the eighth year of Yongzheng (1730), he was transferred to the governor of Liangjiang. Because Gao Qiqi was proficient in feng shui, he was soon summoned to jingshi, and accompanied Prince Yi to Taipingyu in Yi County, Hebei Province, to serve as Yongzheng Kanding Wannian Jidi, and was specially appointed as the third class of the world as Sihani Hafan, acting governor of Yungui. In the first month of the eleventh year (1733), he was reinstated as the governor of Liangjiang, and in the autumn of that year, he led the governor of Jiangsu with the title of governor. The following year, because of the protection of Zhao Kunheng in Zhi County, he was demoted to the post of inspector of Jiangsu.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Yongzheng Emperor Tailing - Yi County, Hebei】

In the first year of Qianlong (1736), he summoned the Beijing Division, and soon became the governor of Hubei, going to Hunan to quell the Yao rebellion in Chengbu and Suining Counties. Three years later (1739), he was promoted to Shangshu of the Ministry of Works, and Gao Qiqiu died of a sudden illness on the way back to Beijing on the way back to Beijing, passing through Baoying in Yangzhou, and Qianlong heard the news and gave him the honorific title of Wenliang.

<h1>Twenty-first, thirty-first, thirty-fifth, thirty-eighth term: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan</h1>

First term of office: July 1731 (8 August 1731) to 10 September 1732 (24 October 1732)

Reason for leaving office: Acting as the governor of Jiangsu, he was transferred to the governor of Yungui without actual authorization

Second term of office: February Geng, 8th year of Qianlong (11 March 1743) to 13th year of Qianlong (28 October 1748)

Reason for leaving office: Transferred to the governor of Liangjiang

Third term of office: Qianlong 16th year leap May Pengyin (25 July 1751) to Qianlong 18th year 9th month Nongshen (16 October 1753)

Reason for leaving office: Won the award and was recalled to Beijing.

Fourth term of office: Ding Wei in August 19, Qianlong (September 26, 1754) to March 1754 (May 9, 1765)

Reason for leaving office: Qianlong was actually taught for twenty-one years and entered the cabinet to do things

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Portrait of Yin Jishan】

Zhang Jia Yin Jishan (1695–1771) was a chinese monk, a man of the Manchurian Yellow Banner, and the son of Yin Tai, a scholar of Dongge University and a shangshu of the Bingbu Department. Yongzheng was a scholar in the first year of the yongzheng Dynasty, successively served as the governor of Yunnan, Sichuan, Shaanxi, and Liangjiang, a scholar of Wenhuadian University and a bachelor of the Hanlin Academy, and also assisted in river affairs and counselors in military affairs.

In the fifth year of Yongzheng (1727), Yin Jishan moved to be a waiter, and then moved to Hubu Langzhong. In the following year, he was awarded a bachelor's degree in cabinet service, assistant in Jiangnan River Affairs, and soon after, he was the inspector of Jiangsu. In the seventh year (1729), Yin Jishan acted as governor of Hedao, and in the ninth year (1731) acted as governor of Liangjiang. After Yin Jishan entered the army, he became an inspector for six years and a governor for eight years, which can be described as a great miracle in the Qing dynasty.

In the tenth year of Yongzheng (1732), he co-founded the general Jiang Ning and concurrently managed the two Huaiyan administrations. The following year, Yin Jishan was transferred to the post of Governor of Guangxi. Thirteen years later (1735), Yin Jishan played the Guizhou Anlong and other camp systems to quell the Guizhou Miao Rebellion.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Statue of Yin Jishan】

In the first year of Qianlong (1736), Guizhou was set up as another governor, and Yin Jishan was the governor of Yunnan. The following year, he entered the pilgrimage, and because his father Yin Tai was old, he begged to stay in Beijing to serve him, and Qianlong gave him the Shangshu of the Punishment Department and also managed the military department. In the fourth year (1739), he was crowned Prince Shaobao. The following year, he became the governor of Sichuan and Shaanxi, during which time he quelled the rebellion of Guo Luoke's troops.

In the seventh year of Qianlong (1742), Yin Jishan's mother died, Ding You returned home, and the following year he was appointed as the governor of Liangjiang for the second time and assisted in river affairs. In the ten years of Qianlong, he was appointed governor of Liangjiang. In the thirteenth year of Qianlong (1748), he entered the Hajj and was transferred to the viceroy of Liangguang, but did not go to the post of Hubu Shangshu, assistant university scholar, military aircraft department walker, and was also the commander of Manchuria under the Blue Banner, and soon after, he acted as the governor of Sichuan and Shaanxi again. The following year, Yin Jishan was ordered to be a military counsellor and made Crown Prince Taibao.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Qianlong Imperial Gift Yin Jishan "Huiqia Two Rivers" Carving】

In the sixteenth year of Qianlong (1751), he was transferred to the governor of Liangjiang for the third time, and the following year, he was rewarded and recalled to Beijing. Qianlong ordered him to learn from Li Wei, Ertai, Tian Wenjing, and others, and he replied: "Li Wei, the subject learns his courage, but does not learn from his coarseness; Tian Wenjing, the subject learns from his diligence, but does not learn from his carving; Ortai, it is advisable to learn more, but the subject does not learn from him." Qianlong not only did not blame, but praised him as a "true intellectual scholar" and inscribed "Huicha Liangjiang" as a reward.

In the nineteenth year of Qianlong (1754), he was transferred to the governor of Liangjiang for the fourth time and concurrently served as the governor of Jiangsu, a term that lasted for eleven years. In the twenty-ninth year (1764), he was awarded the title of Scholar of Wenhuadian University, and the following year, when Qianlong toured the south again, Yin Jishan was seventy years old. Qianlong made many southern tours, and Yin Jishan was properly dispatched, and specially expanded the Jiangning Weaving Bureau into a palace for Qianlong to live. In the same year, Yin Jishan ended his term as viceroy of Liangjiang, and was enthroned in the cabinet, concurrently serving as the head of the officers and soldiers, and serving as the chief master of the study.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Selected Poems by Yin Jishan】

In the thirty-fourth year of Qianlong (1769), he was also the head of the Hanlin Academy. Two years later, Qianlong toured the east and ordered Yin Jishan to stay in Beijing to deal with government affairs, and in April, he died of illness at the age of 77.

<h1>Twenty-second term: Wei Tingzhen (untruthed</h1>).

Period of service: September 19th of Yongzheng (24 October 1732) to 11th year of Yongzheng (23 February 1733)

Acting as the Governor of Caoyun, not authorized

Wei Tingzhen (1768-1756) was a native of Jingzhou (Jingxian County, Hebei). During the Kangxi Dynasty, when Li Guangdi was supervising his studies, he recruited him to enter the curtain to read the files, and soon after he was recommended to the inner court, he was later introduced by He Zhuo as the Prince of Lian, Yin Yu Xi Xi (teacher). Wei Tingzhen was an official for more than 30 years, and during the three dynasties of Kangxi, Yongzheng, and Qianlong, he was honest and honest all his life, unstained, and favored.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Wei Tingzhen Portrait Disc】

In the fifty-second year of the Kangxi Dynasty (1713), the first three Tanhua and the first, were taught the editor of the Hanlin Academy. He served as an official in the Japanese lecture and became a waiter, and was ordered to pay homage to the Prison and Jihuai Lianghe. In the sixty-first year of the Kangxi Dynasty (1722), wei Tingzhen found out that the two Huai salt transport divisions had a deficit of 1.5 million yuan, reported to the imperial court according to the facts, and proposed to make up for it within 30 years, which not only enriched the national treasury, but also reduced the pressure on the salt merchants.

In the third year of Yongzheng (1725), Wei Tingzhen served as the inspector of Anhui. During his term of office, he intensified his efforts to check money and grain, check tariffs, and eliminate accumulated defects. In the eighth year (1730), he was transferred to Hubei as the inspector, and returned to Beijing in April of the following year to serve as the Rebbe Shangshu. In the same year, he served as the Governor-General. In the tenth year of Yongzheng (1732), he acted as the governor of Liangjiang, rectified the administration of officials, investigated and punished officials for corruption, and actively rectified caoyun.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【雍

At the beginning of Qianlong's succession, he was ordered to go to Yi County to guard the Tailing. In the third year of Qianlong (1738), he was promoted to the post of Shangshu of the Ministry of Works, and a year later he was caused by old age and illness. Thirteen years later (1748), Qianlong toured the east through Jingzhou, Wei Tingzhen went to meet him, and Qianlong personally gave him the plaque of "Lin Quan Qi Shuo" and gave him a poem: "Emperor Ancestor Cultivator, how many people are left today?" It can be seen that Qianlong respected the old courtiers of the former dynasty. In the twenty-first year of Qianlong (1756), Wei Tingzhen died of illness at the age of 88, and was given a sacrifice and burial.

<h1>Twenty-fourth term: Zhao Hong'en</h1>

First term of office: Yongzheng 11th year of September 19th death (October 8, 1733) to Qianlong 2nd year of the first month of Gengzi (10 February 1737)

Reason for leaving office: Yongzheng was actually awarded in May of the twelfth year, and was recalled to the capital due to the re-awarding of Shangshu of the Ministry of Works

Zhao Hong'en (?) —1759), ziyunshu or yuntang, han army with red flag. At the end of the Kangxi Dynasty, he was successively appointed as an envoy of Xiangyang Province, Hunan Province, Sichuan Envoy, Hunan Governor, Governor of Jiangnan, Shangshu of the Ministry of Works, Minister of Internal Affairs, Commander of the Han Army, and General of Jingkou. The official zhizuo capital Yushi and the Zhenghuang banner Han army were all unified. After his death, he posthumously awarded the title of Prince Minor Fu.

Chronology of the Viceroys of Liangjiang in the Qing Dynasty (2) Yongzheng Dynasty, Worth Collecting Eighteenth: Fan Shixuan Nineteenth: Shi Yizhi Twenty-first, Twenty-third: Gao Qizuo Twenty-first, Thirty-first, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-eighth: Zhang Jia Yin Jishan Twenty-second: Wei Tingzhen (unassigned) Twenty-fourth: Zhao Hong'en

【Tv series "Yongzheng Dynasty" Yongzheng Emperor Stills】

Zhao Hong'en served in the three dynasties of Kangxi, Yongzheng and Qianlong, and was diligent and capable of official work, and was successively promoted during the Yongzheng period, and yongzheng became the governor of Liangjiang in the twelfth year (1734), with outstanding political achievements and fame in the government and the opposition. Although he served as governor for only three years, Zhao Hong'en had considerable achievements in local governance.

During his term of office, he straightened out the administration of officials, clearly distinguished rewards and punishments, eliminated the maladministration left behind by the previous governors, and vigorously promoted the anti-corruption work; showed compassion for the people, eliminated illegal labor, cleaned up unjust prisons, and reduced taxes, which greatly reduced the peasants' burdens, and was strongly supported by the people of Liangjiang, so it was also deeply valued by Yongzheng. What is puzzling is that during the Qianlong period, Zhao Hong'en was repeatedly reprimanded for his extremely resentful crimes of "accepting bribes" and "dereliction of duty." In the twenty-fourth year of Qianlong (1759), Zhao Hong'en died. In the following year, he was posthumously awarded the title of Prince Minor Fu (明武) with the courtesy name "Ming Wu".

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