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Brief Introduction to the Life of Princess Jin of the Guangxu Emperor How Did Princess Jin die?

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A brief biography of Princess Jin

Concubine Jin, concubine of The Duankang Emperor, concubine of the Guangxu Emperor, he was of the Tatra clan, the daughter of changshu, the left attendant of the Rebbe, and the Manchurian Zhenghong bannerman. Born in the twelfth year of Tongzhi (1873), Zhenfei was his sister, the two were half-siblings, and princess Jin ranked fourth in the family. Princess Jin and Concubine Zhen, the two are sisters, but their appearance and personality are very different. When Concubine Jin entered the palace, she was a concubine, called Jin Concubine, with a general appearance, a relatively calm personality, and a relatively mediocre performance.

In the fifteenth year of Guangxu (1889), Princess Jin and Concubine Zhen were chosen as concubines by the Guangxu Emperor. After entering the palace, Princess Jin was given the title of Concubine Jin and lived in the Yonghe Palace, one of the Six Palaces of the East, where concubine Jin did not receive the favor of the Guangxu Emperor like her sister Zhen Concubine, on the contrary, she was snubbed like the empress, and after six years, she was promoted to Concubine Jin. In the twentieth year of Guangxu (1894), after the failure of the Pengshu Reform Law, Zhenfei offended Empress Dowager Cixi for some reason, and Concubine Jin was also implicated and demoted to a nobleman, and when Cixi was happy on her sixtieth birthday, she promoted Concubine Jin to Concubine Jin and still lived in Yonghe Palace.

In July of the 26th year of Guangxu (1900), the Eight-Nation Alliance invaded the Beijing Division, and Empress Dowager Cixi fled the Forbidden City with her palace dependents, and Concubine Jin also escaped from the Forbidden City. After emperor Puyi ascended the throne, Concubine Jin continued to live in Yonghe Palace and was honored as a concubine of Emperor Kao Jin. After Xuantong abdicated, the upper emblem was Duankang Emperor Taifei. In the eleventh year of the Republic of China, when the Sunqing court was negotiating the marriage of Puyi, Concubine Jin supported Wanrong as empress. Princess Jin lived a very tasteful life in the Yonghe Palace, often entertaining herself with Danqing calligraphy. In the thirteenth year of the Republic of China (1924), after celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival with Puyi and the rest of the Sunqing royal family, Concubine Jin suffered from wind and cold and fell ill, and five days later died in Yonghe Palace due to worsening conditions, at the age of fifty-one, and was buried as a noble concubine of the Duankang Emperor in the Chongling Concubine Garden of the Guangxu Emperor, and was honored as the noble concubine of the Wenjing Emperor.

Brief Introduction to the Life of Princess Jin of the Guangxu Emperor How Did Princess Jin die?

<b>Fun History Official WeChat ID: qulilshi_v5</b>

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