H.I.M. Emperor
Tao-kuang [Hsüan Tsung Huang Ti], had further issue:
6) Field
Marshal H.I.H. Prince (HuangTzu)
Yi-hsin (=Yi Xin) [Chung], 1st Prince
Kung (Kung HoShêCh'inWang=Gongzhong
Qinwang) (cre. 1850). b. 11th
January 1833 (s/o Empress Hsiao Ching), educ.
privately. Granted the additional title of ToLoPeiLê 1864, and to the
first rank with perpetual inheritance 1872,
reduced to a prince of the second rank 10th
September 1874, restored 1874. Grand Counsellor
1853-1855, 1861-1865, 1875-1884 and 1894-1898,
Lt-Gen. of a Banner Corps 1854, Presiding
Controller Imperial Clan Court 1854-1855, Senior
Chamberlain Imperial Bodyguard 1857, Peace
negotiator with the British 1860, Presdt. Brd. of
Foreign Affairs 1861-1865, 1875-1884 and
1894-1898, Presdt. of the Grand Cncl. 1886, and
Presdt. of the Imperial Clan Cncl. 1898, Mbr.
Admiralty Brd. and War Cncl. 1886. m. at
Peking, 1848, H.H. Princess Consort (Fu Chin)
(b. 1834; d. 1880), tenth
daughter of General H.E. Kuei-liang [Wen-tuan],
of the Gualgiya clan, sometime Grand Counsellor,
Governor-General of Fukien, Chekiang and Chichli.
He d. at the Kung Wang Fu, Peking, 29th
May 1898, having had issue, four sons and at
least six daughters, including:
a)
H.I.H. Prince (To Lo Chün Wang)
Tsai-cheng. b. 1856, educ.
privately. Received his name, 7th
October 1858. Raised to the rank of To
Lo Pei Lê 1862, prom. to To Lo
Chün Wang 14th February
1874 (degraded 10th September
1874) but later restored. Adopted his
nephew, Prince P'u-wei, as his heir and
successor. m. at Peking, 1874,
He d.s.p.m.
1885 (succ. by his nephew, Prince
P'u-wei).
b)
H.H. Prince Tsai-ying [Zhai Ying], 2nd
Prince (To Lo Pei Lê) Chung.
Received his name, 30th April
1861, educ. privately. Adopted by
his uncle, Prince Yi-chia [Yi-ho], 1st
Prince Chung, an succeeded him as Chung
To Lo Pei Lê 27th
December 1868. Lieut-Gen. Bordered Yellow
Banner, Supt. of Customs at Peking
1894-1895, Lieut-Gen. Bordered Red Banner
1895-1900. Deprived of his styles and
titles for his part in the Boxer
rebellion in August 1900 but posthumously
restored by Dowager Empress Lung Yu. He d.
30th September 1909, having
had issue, three sons:
(7)
H.I.H. Prince Yü-chan, 3rd
Prince (HoShêCh'inWang)
Kung (succ. 1937).
b. at the Kung
Wang Fu, Peking, educ.
privately. Imprisoned by
the Soviets in Siberia,
1945-1950 then by the
Chinese Communists at Fu
Shun Detention Centre,
Harbin, Manchuria
1950-1957. Calligrapher
and employee of the
Chinese Acad. of Arts,
Peking. m. Kao
Chin-hua, a Han Chinese
lady.
ii)
H.H. Prince P'u-ju (=Pu Ru), 4th
Prince (KuShanPeiTzu) Chung (succ.
196x). b. at Wanping,
September 1896, educ.
privately and at Univ. of Berlin
(PhD 1917). A distinguished
painter, illustrator and
calligrapher under the nom de
plume 'Pu Xinyu'. Mbr. Pine
Breeze Painting Soc. Painter and
Poet known as 'the Northern Pu',
Lecturer at Peking National Univ.
and Inst. of Fine Arts, MNA
(Manchu) 1947-1949, fled to Korea
in 1949and later settled in
Taiwan 1950, teacher at the
Taiwan Normal Univ. The foremost
upholder of the classical
scholarly tradition of painting
and chaligraphy during his
lifetime. m. Lady (Fu
Jen) Li Mo-yun. He d.
at Taipei, Taiwan, 18th
November 1963. He had issue, two
sons and one daughter:
(1)
H.H. Prince (FêngÊnChênKuoKung) Yü-li [Loi
Li] [Hsiao hua]. b.
24th May 1924.
Settled in Taiwan.
(2)
The Noble (Chên Kuo
Chiang Chün) Yü-chi
[Loi Ling]. b. 27th
May 1925.
(1)
Princess (Hsien Chün
Kung Chu) Yao-chao, educ.
in Italy.
c)
H.E. Prince (Pu Ju Pa Fên Chên Kuo
Kung) Tsai-chun. b. 1864. He d.
1866.
d)
H.E. Prince (Pu Ju Pa Fên Chên Kuo
Kung) Tsai-huang. b. 1880. He d.
1885.
f)
H.I.H. Princess (Ku Lun Kung Chu)
Jung-shou. b. 1854. Adopted by the
Empress Dowager Hsiao Chin. m.
1866, H.H. Prince (Ku Lun E Fu)
Chih-tuan (d. 1871), a descendant
of H.E. Ming-jui, 1st Prince
Ch'eng-chia I-yung. She d. 1911.
7)
General H.I.H. Prince (HuangTzu)
Yi-huan (=Yi Xuan)[Hsien], 1st Prince
Ch'un (Ch'un HoShêCh'inWang=Chunxian
Qinwang) (cre. 1850). b. 16th
October 1840, educ. privately. Lt-Gen. of
a Manchu Banner Corps, Adj-Gen. and Chamberlain
of the Imperial Bodyguard 1861, Assist. cdt.
Peking Field Force 1862-1875 (cdr. 1876),
Controller of the Admiralty Brd. 1885. Granted
the title of HoShêCh'inWangCh'un 1872 (made perpetually inheritable
1875). m. (first) H.I.H. Princess (Fu
Chin) ... (d. 1875), sister of the
Grand Empress Dowager Tzu Hsi, and daughter of
Captain Kuei Siang, of the Ye'honala clan. m.
(second) Lady (Ts'eFu Chin) Tsui (b.
1868; d. 1925), daughter of a groom. He d.
1st January 1891, having had issue,
seven sons and one daughter:
a)
H.E. Prince (PuJuPaFênFuKuoKung)
Tsai-han. b. 1865 (s/o the
princess). He d.v.p.
1866.
b)
H.H. Prince (FêngÊnFuKuoKung) Tsai-t'ien (=Zhai
Tian)), who succeeded as H.I.M. Emperor
Kuang-hsü [Teu Tsung], Great Emperor of
the Great Ching Dynasty (s/o the
princess)- see below.
c)
H.E. Prince (PuJuPaFênFuKuoKung)
Tsai-li. b. and d. 1875 (s/o
the princess).
d)
H.I.H. Prince Tsai-fêng (=Zhai Feng), 2nd
Prince Ch'un (HoShêCh'un
Ch'inWang), GCVO (22.6.1911).
b. 12th December 1877 (s/o
Lady Tsui), educ. privately.
Succeeded his father as 2nd
Prince Chun, 1st January 1891.
Lieut-Gen. Plain White Banner 1901,
Special Ambassador to the Emperor of
Germany 1901, Raised to the hereditary
rank of HoShêCh'inWang 13th November
1908, Lieutenant of the Empire and Prince
Regent (ChienKuoShêChêngWang) for his infant
son, 13th November 1908 to 6th
December 1912. Thereafter, private school
director and teacher. Rcvd: Knt.
of the Orders of the Black Eagle of
Prussia (27.1.1910), and the Annunziata
of Italy, the Collar of the Order of the
Chrysanthemum of Japan (2.11.1909), and
GC of the Orders of the Legion of Honour
of France (19.12.1909), Red Eagle of
Prussia (27.1.1910), King George V Coron.
Medal (1911), etc. m. (first) at
Peking, in the Autumn of 1902, H.I.H.
Princess Consort (Fu Chin) Kua Erh
Chia Shih [Thai Ri] [Jung Hui] (b.
1884; d. at the Pei Mansion,
Shichahai, Peking, 30th
September 1921), eighth daughter of
General H.E. Baron Jung Lu [Wen-chung],
of the Gualgiya clan, Viceroy, PC, Grand
Counsellor and Grand Secretary. m.
(second) He d. at Peking, 30th
March 1951, having had issue, five sons
and seven daughters:
i)
H.I.M. [P'u-yi] Hsüan-t'ung
[K'angiTeh], Great Emperor of the
Great Ching Dynasty (s/o
Kua Erh Jia Shih) - see below.
ii)
H.I.H. Prince P'u-chieh (=Pu
Jie), 3rd Prince (HoShêCh'inWang)
Ch'un, Head of the Imperial
Ch'ing Dynasty (s/o Kua
Erh Jia Shih) - see below.
iii)
H.E. Prince (PuJuPaFênChênKuoKung) P'u-chien. He d.
at the age of one year.
iv)
H.E. Prince (Pu Ju Pa Fên
Chên Kuo Kung) P'u-chi. b.
at the Pei Mansion, Shichahai,
Peking, 4th October
1916. He d. there, 25th
September 1918.
v) H.H.
Prince (To Lo Pei Lê)
P'u-chen (=Pu Ren). b. at
the Pei Mansion, Shichahai,
Peking, 17th August
1918 (s/o the second
wife). Renamed Chin Yü-chih
after the Chinese revolution.
Schoolteacher, Mbr. Cttee. Peking
West City Dist. Political
Consultative Conf. m.
(first) m. (second)
Lady (Fu Jen) Chang
Mao-ying. He had issue, three
sons and two daughters:
(1)
H.H. Prince (Ku Shan
Pei Tzu) Chin
Yü-chung (=Jin Yuzhang).
b. 1943 (s/o
Lady Chang Mao-ying).
Sec. to his uncle, Prince
P'u-chieh. Dep. Dir. of
Peking Ethnic Affairs
Cttee. and Vice-Mayor of
Chongwen dist. m.
a Han Chinese lady. He
has issue, a daughter:
(2)
The Noble (Chên Kuo
Chiang Chün) Chin
Yü-lan (=Jin Yu-lan). b.
1949. Schoolteacher.
(3)
The Noble (Chên Kuo
Chiang Chün) Chin
Yü-chüan (=Jin Yu-quan)
(s/o Lady Chang
Mao-ying). Vice-Presdt.
Energy & Environment
Protection at Beijing
Univ. Mbr. Cttee. Caoyang
Dist. Political
Consultative Conf.
i) H.H.
Princess (Chün Chu Kung Chu)
Yun-ying [Gege Ta Ko Ko]. b.
at the Pei Mansion, Shichahai,
Peking, 1909 (d/o Kua Erh
Jia Shih). m. 192x, a son
of H.E. Prince Jung-Yuan, of the
Manchu White Banner Corps and the
Kokol clan, sometime Minister of
the Imperial Household. She d.
1926.
ii)
H.H. Princess (Chün Chu Kung
Chu) Jun-ho [Erh Ko Ko]
[Ping-hssi]. b. at the Pei
Mansion, Shichahai, Peking, 1911,
educ. UK. Renamed Chin
Hsin-ju after the revolution.
Employee at the former Imperial
Palace after the Communist
revolution. m. at
Hsinking, 1932, Cheng Yun-kai, educ.
Univ. of London, eldest son of
Cheng Ch'ui, Chief Sec. to his
father, and grandson of H.E.
Cheng Hsiao-hsu, sometime Prime
Minister of Manchuria. She had
issue, one son and three
daughters, including:
(1)
Cheng Ying-ts'ai. b.
at the home of Sir Robert
Ho Tung, London, 15th
February 1933.
iii)
H.H. Princess (Chün Chu Kung
Chu) Yun-ying [San Ko Ko]
[Lily]. b. at the Pei
Mansion, Shichahai, Peking, 1913
(d/o Kua Erh Jia Shih).
Renamed Chin Hua-hsiu after the
revolution, becoming a
dressmaker. Mbr. East City
District Political Consultative
Conf. m. 1936, H.H. Prince
(Chün Chu E Fu) Jung Ch'i
[Jack Gubolo Ronqi] (b. at
the Gubolo Mansion, Peking, 1912;
d. there, 1999), educ.
in Japan, imprisoned at the Shun
War Criminals' Detention Centre
at Harbin in 1945, released from
confinement 1957, later assigned
work in the Inst. of Legal
Research within the Chinese Acad.
of Sciences, retd. 1987 and took
up acupuncture, Mbr. National
Consultative Cncl. and People's
Consultative Cttee., brother of
Empress [Chih-lien] Hsiao
Hung-ch'iu [Jung Wan], and son of
H.E. Prince Jung-Yuan, of the
Manchu White Banner Corps and the
Kokol clan, sometime Minister of
the Imperial Household. She d.
1992, having had issue, one son:
(1)
Tsung-yen, educ.
in Japan. Imprisoned with
his mother, he suffered
from ill health and
eventually succumbed to
malnutrition at the age
of eight years.
iv)
H.H. Princess (Chün Chu Kung
Chu) Yun-hsien. b. at
the Pei Mansion, Shichahai,
Peking, 1914. Fled to Taiwan
after the revolution in 1948 but
returned to Peking with her
second husband in 1982. m.
(first) the Chief of Staff to
Chang Hsun. m. (second)
Zhao Qifan, a Mongol who worked
as an artist, sometime Mbr.
Mongolian-Tibetan Affairs Cttee.
in Taiwan, and of the Municipal
Cmsn. of Nationality Affairs in
Peking after 1982.
v) H.H.
Princess (Chün Chu Kung Chu)
Yun-hsiang. b. at the Pei
Mansion, Shichahai, Peking, 1917.
Imprisoned at Fushan War
Criminals Detention Centre at
Harbin 1945-1949, worked as an
accountant and a dressmaker in
Peking after 1949. m. Wan
Jiaxi (d. at Peking,
1972). She had issue five
children, including three sons
and one daughter.
vi)
H.H. Princess (Chün Chu Kung
Chu) Yun-yü [Liu Ko Ko]
[Fo-erh]. b. at the Pei
Mansion, Shichahai, Peking, 1919.
Painter at the Peking Painting
Acad. m. Wang Li-min [Wang
Ailan]. She d. 1982.
vii)
H.H. Princess (Chün Chu Kung
Chu) Yun-Huan [Ch'i Ko Ko].
b. at the Pei Mansion,
Shichahai, Peking, 1921. Renamed
Chin Chih-chien or Chin Huan
after the revolution.
Schoolteacher. m. (first)
1939, Wu Chi-lun (k. by a
Kuomintang assasin, at Shanghai,
4th March 1940),
Attorney-at-Law. m.
(second) at Peking, 1950, Ch'iao
She had issue, two sons
and one daughter, by her second
husband:
g)
General H.H. Prince Tsai-t'ao, 3rd
Prince Chung (ToLoChung
PeiLê) (cre. 15th
July 1902). b. 1887 (s/o
Lady Tsui), educ. privately.
Adopted son and successor of Prince
Yi-mo. C-in-C Imperial Guards dvsn.
1908-1910, COGS 1910-1911, representative
of the Manchus in the National Peoples'
Congress 1954, Mbr. Regional Cttee of the
Advisory Political Conf. of the PRC 1954.
Rcvd: the Order of the Double
Dragon 1st class, 2nd
grade, GC of the Orders of the Red Eagle
of Prussia (5.1.1908) and Leopold of
Austria (1910). He d. at Peking,
September 1970, having had issue, five
sons, including:
i) H.H.
Prince P'u-kuang, 3rd
Prince (KuShanPeiTzu) Tuan (succ.
1924). b. June 1904, as
P'u-chien, educ.
privately. Adopted by his uncle
Prince Tuan and given the new
name of P'u-kuang. Succeeded his
adopted father, 1949.
ii)
H.H. Prince (KuShanPeiTzu) P'u-chia. b.
9th June 1908, educ.
at the Imperial Palace, Peking. m.
He had issue.
iii)
The Noble (Chên Kuo Chiang
Chün) P'u-an.
i) A
daughter. m. 1931, Darjia.
a)
Princess (Chün Chu Kung Chu)
(d/o the princess). She d.
young.
b)
Another daughter by Lady Tsui, who also d.
young.
c)
A daughter. m. General H.E.
T'ieh-liang, Grand Counsellor 1906,
Presdt. Brd. of War 1906-1910, Tartar
General at Nanking 1910-1911.
d)
A younger daughter. m. Chao
Kuo-chi, of the Kharachin tribe of
Mongols.
9)
H.I.H. Prince (HuangTzu) Yi-hui, 1st
Prince Fu (Fu ToLoChünWang)
(cre. 1850). b. 1845, educ.
privately. He d. 1877, having had issue:
a) H.H.
Prince Tsai-shu, 2nd Prince (ToLoPeiLê) Fu (succ.
1877). Adopted his cousin, Prince P'u-chin. Dean
of the Coll. of Art, Fujen Univ. Rcvd: the
Order of the Double Dragon 1st class,
2nd grade. He d.s.p.
1966.1) H.I.H. Princess (KungChu)
Tuan-min (d/o Empress Hsiao Shen-sheng).
She d. 1819.
2)
H.I.H. Princess (KungChu)
Tuan- She d. young.
3)
H.I.H. Princess Tuan-shun (Ku Lun Tuan-shun
KungChu) (d/o Empress Hsiao
Kuan-sheng). She d. young.
4)
H.I.H. Princess Shuo-an (Ku Lun Shou-an KungChu). b. 1826 (d/o Empress
Hsiao Kuan-sheng). m. 1841, H.H. Prince
Demchüghjab (Ku Lun Demchugjab EFu),
son of Aghwangduwadijab, a Mongol prince and cdr.
of the Naiman Banner of the Juu-uda League. She d.
1860.
5)
H.I.H. Princess Shou-chang (Ho Shê Shou-chang
KungChu). b. 1829 (d/o
Empress Hsiao Ching-sheng). She d. 1856.
6)
H.I.H. Princess Shou-en (Ku Lun Shou-en KungChu). b. January 1831 (d/o
Empress Hsiao Ching-sheng). m. 1845, H.H.
Ching-shou, 5th Prince Cheng-chia
I-yung (Ku Lun Cheng-chia I-yungE Fu)
(d. 1889), Mbr. Cncl. of Regency 1861,
grandson of General H.E. Hui-lun, 2nd
Prince Cheng-chia I-yung. She d. 1859.
7)
H.I.H. Princess Shou- (KungChu).
8)
H.I.H. Princess Shou-hsi (HoShêShou-hsi
KungChu). m. 8th
December 1863, H.H. Prince (Ho Shê E Fu)
Jalafengge, son of Major-General Xilabu of the
Niohuru clan. She d. September 1866.