-
On August 15, 1945, Japan surrendered. On August 17, Pu Yi was captured by the Soviet Red Army while preparing to flee in Shenyang and taken to the Soviet Union. At the beginning of August 1950, he was escorted back to China, where he studied and reformed in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center.
On December 4, 1959, he received an amnesty decree from the President of the People's Republic of China and became a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Pu Yi married four times in his life, married five women, and his last marriage was to Li Shuxian in 1962.
Pu Yi is the author of his autobiography "The First Half of My Split Boy", which was published by the People's Publishing House in April 1964. His unique and dramatic experience has been adapted into film and television works many times, including the movie "The Last Emperor" Ma Yuantong, which won many awards such as the 1987 Academy Awards.
On October 17, 1967, Pu Yi died of kidney cancer in Beijing at the age of 61. He was first buried in Babao Mountain, and then moved to the Hualong Royal Cemetery near Chongling (Guangxu Mausoleum) in the Qing Dynasty.
-
Pu Yi was the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty and the last emperor in Chinese history. He was also an emperor with a special experience, first the last emperor of the Manchu Qing Dynasty, and then the puppet Emperor Kant of Manchukuo, a puppet emperor. At the same time, he was also the son of Zaifeng, the last regent of the Qing Dynasty, and was known as Emperor Xuantong.
-
It varies from person to person, and it is a great miracle to think that the monarch has successfully transformed himself into a self-reliant man.
-
When Pu Yi was the puppet Manchu emperor, the Northeast people were trampled on by the Japanese devils, and the puppet Manchurian ** can be said to be the prelude to the Japanese invasion of China, and it can also be said that Pu Yi was used and betrayed by Japan. I remember reading a sentence where Pu Yi once said, "I don't care how many people die, in short, I must be the emperor." "Poor people must have something to hate If you want to know more clearly, go watch "The First Half of My Life".
-
The first half of his life is pitiful, and the second half of his life is happy.
-
Everyone is very familiar with the name Pu Yi, so we can also see that Pu Yi was the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty, and everyone has a very deep impression of Pu Yi. thinks that such an emperor is actually very pitiful, and in the end of his life, he did not get a good life. Then there are many people who want to know where Pu Yi lived in his old age
Then we can see from some records that Pu Yi spent several years of peaceful time in Beijing with his last wife, Li Shuxian。And for this period, he is also relatively calm, although he is the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty, but he himself does not have the arrogance of the emperor at all. <>
In the temple of Kannon.
also makes everyone feel that he often revisits the Forbidden City, and he is also thinking about his previous life. Many people themselves saw that the fall of the Qing Dynasty did make Pu Yi's experience very complicated. And Pu Yi also took refuge in the Japanese in order to become the emperor at that time, but after some setbacks, he was indeed pardoned.
Then we also learned that Pu Yi's last life was actually good compared to some other people, but it was not expected that this emperor would live like this in the end. <>
What is now Xicheng District, Beijing.
Then Pu Yi also lived to die in the 70s, and everyone felt that such an emperor witnessed the advent of New China, which was also a very fortunate thing. And for Pu Yi's life, everyone will feel that it is very confusing. In some historical records, it can also be seen that Pu Yi also experienced some hardships when he was young.
And for such an emperor, when he was a child, he couldn't live the life he wanted to talk about, which made people feel very distressed. <>
Then his last living area is still in Beijing, and according to his ID card for lead accompaniment, we can also see that his last address is in Xicheng District, Beijing. And for such a place, there are still some relics of Puyi.
-
His last place of life was in Beijing, where he lived in Jingyuan in Tianjin for a while, and then moved to the Northeast for a while.
-
He ended up living in Guanyin Temple, which is not too far from the Forbidden City, and he was doing some literary and historical work.
-
In a small hutong in Beijing, he has been living in his sister's house, Pu Yi is the last emperor, and he embodied freedom in his last moments.
-
In 1967, Pu Yi fell ill with uremia. When the prime minister heard the news, he personally instructed the CPPCC staff to cure Pu Yi's illness. Later, he was instructed to arrange for him to be sent to the Capital Hospital for a consultation of traditional Chinese and Western medicine.
When his condition was at his most critical, he assigned the famous old Chinese medicine doctor Pu Fuzhou to see him and conveyed his greetings.
Later, due to ineffective medical treatment, he died on October 17, 1967, and his ashes were placed in the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery. On May 29, 1980, 13 years after Pu Yi's death, the party and ** held a memorial service for Pu Yi. On January 26, 1995, Puyi's ashes were buried in the Hualong Royal Cemetery near the Chongling (Guangxu Mausoleum) in the Qing Dynasty.
Hualong Royal Cemetery is located next to the Chongling Tomb of Qingxi Tomb in Yixian County, Hebei Province, only 200 meters away from the back wall of Chongling.
Pu Yi had the desire to be buried in the soil before his death, and the Qingxi Mausoleum was also the burial place that Pu Yi determined before his death. Pu Yi's burial in this cemetery was carefully arranged by his fifth wife Li Shuxian, and it was also handled by his wife Li Shuxian herself, and at the same time, Ms. Li Shuxian also hoped that she could be buried with Pu Yi after her death. On June 9, 1997, Ms. Li Shuxian passed away, and due to various objective reasons, the wish for a joint burial has not been realized.
Pu Yi is known as Emperor Xun in history, also known as Emperor Xuantong. He was the last emperor in Chinese history.
When you send something from Japan to China, you can get a certificate from the Japan Post Office. >>>More
They were really stronger than China at that time, and they came to our land to spread wilderness, and of course we lost a lot, and they succeeded economically, but they created a reputation for aggression that has not been changed for thousands of years, and I don't think their aggression was successful...