Consort Qi (Qing dynasty)

Consort Qi
Died 1737
Burial Tailing Mausoleum, Western Qing Tombs, Hebei
Spouse Yongzheng Emperor[1]
Issue Heshuo Princess Huaike
Hongpan
Hongyun
Hongshi
Father Li Wenhui
Consort Qi
Traditional Chinese 齊妃
Simplified Chinese 齐妃

Consort Qi (died 1737) was a concubine of the Yongzheng Emperor of the Qing dynasty.[2] She is played by Li Man in Palace II.

Biography

Consort Qi was a Han Chinese by birth and her family name was Li (李). Her father was Li Wenbi (李文熚), a prefecture governor.

Lady Li became a concubine of the Kangxi Emperor’s fourth son Yinzhen (the future Yongzheng Emperor)[3] and was given the title of a side chamber consort (側福晉). In 1695 she gave birth to Yinzhen’s second daughter, Heshuo Princess Huaike (和碩懷恪公主). Two years later she gave birth to Yinzhen’s second son Hongfen (弘昐). She bore Yinzhen his third son (but was named second son) Hongyun (弘昀) in 1700 and his third son Hongshi in 1704. Of her four children, only Hongshi lived to see his father ascend to the throne as the Yongzheng Emperor in 1722.

After the Yongzheng Emperor came to the throne, Lady Li was granted the title of Consort Qi (齊妃).[4][5] In 1727 Lady Li’s son Hongshi was expelled from the imperial clan and forced to commit suicide for plotting against his younger half-brother Hongli (the future Qianlong Emperor) in a rivalry for succession to the throne. Lady Li, as Hongshi’s mother, was disgraced and was never promoted from then on.

Lady Li died in 1737 during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor and was interred in the Tailing Mausoleum in the Western Qing Tombs.

Family

References

  1. Schirokauer, Conrad; Miranda Brown (2006). A Brief History of Chinese Civilization. Belmont, California: Thomson Higher Education. ISBN 0-534-64305-1.
  2. Family tree of Chinese Emperors
  3. Wang, Qinggong houfei, 341.
  4. Qi means "even" or "uniformly". See Qi for more information.
  5. The Selection of Women for the Qing Imperial Harem. "The Yongzheng Emperor had a Chinese concubine when he was a prince and granted this concubine an official title (Qi fei, 齐妃) after succeeding to the throne in 1723."
  6. Consort Qi (Qing dynasty); family and biography
  7. The family tree of the Chinese Emperors, "With the princess."
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