Why didn t Emperor Daoguang build a mausoleum for his adoptive mother?

Updated on history 2024-07-06
39 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Xu Guangyuan has explained in the book "The Mausoleum of the Qing Emperor" Chapter 19 The Changxi Mausoleum of Empress Xiaohe The mystery of Emperor Daoguang not building a mausoleum for Empress Xiaohe Great filial piety: the grandson built a mausoleum for his grandmother. According to the usual practice, after the new emperor ascends the throne, he should choose an auspicious place for the empress dowager and build a mausoleum.

    On July 25, the 25th year of Jiaqing, Emperor Jiaqing died in the summer resort of Rehe. When the moon filial piety and the queen were revered as the queen mother. By December of the 29th year of Daoguang, she had been the empress dowager for 29 years, a long time, ranking in the forefront of the empress dowager of the Qing Dynasty.

    At that time, the Qing Dynasty had built Zhaoxi Mausoleum, Xiaodong Mausoleum, Taidong Mausoleum, and Xiaodong Mausoleum and Taidong Mausoleum were built during the lifetime of the Empress Dowager, and these circumstances were clear to Emperor Daoguang and Empress Xiaohe. Moreover, in the first year of Daoguang, before Emperor Jiaqing was buried in the underground palace, Prince Zheng Wuer Gong'a and Prince Mian'en, who were in charge of the Changling project, specially asked Emperor Daoguang whether to reserve a place for Empress Xiaohe in the Changling underground palace. The underground palace of Changling did not reserve a place for Empress Xiaohe, indicating that a separate mausoleum would be built for her.

    After Emperor Daoguang ascended the throne, he couldn't wait to choose an auspicious place for himself and build a mausoleum, which lasted for 15 years, but the mausoleum of Empress Xiaohe was not mentioned for 29 years. "Some people said that it might be a financial problem, but as the king of a country, there must still be money to build a mausoleum. In fact, it's not because of financial problems, it's just for the sake of filial piety.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Empress Xiaoherui, Niu Hulu, Jiaqing his wife.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Empress Xiao and Rui, Niu Hulu.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Emperor Daguan was diligent and thrifty all his life, loved the people like a son, but in the construction of his own cemetery, he spent a lot of materials, the cemetery that Emperor Daoguang chose for the first time, the terrain was relatively low, it was easy to enter the water, and a lot of nutrients had been spent, and it was rebuilt later, so this time Daoguang was more cautious, and had high requirements for the construction quality and appearance of the cemetery, so the cost was particularly large, and even compared with the cemetery of the Empress Dowager Cixi.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Maybe Daoguang has been saving money for building a mausoleum for himself.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Personally, I think there are two possibilities, the first is because he feels that he uses too little money to make money, and after his death, he will build his own forests to him more luxuriously, so that later people are not as good as his own mausoleum, and the second possibility is that there is a legend in ancient times that the emperor can be resurrected in another world after he dies and continue to rule the world, but how luxurious his mausoleum is, and how big the capital will become when he goes to that world, so this thing forest trees are more luxurious for each emperor. aqui te amo。

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    People are frugal in their lives, and of course they should have a quiet place after death. Although his application is very close, he still can't be stingy with his place to live after death.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I don't know, if Daoguang goes to build a mausoleum, he may not necessarily spend much money on himself, because this is repaired for him by later generations, and if he studies on his own, it will also be done by later generations.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Daoguang is the emperor and the king of a country, and Cixi is the empress dowager, although Cixi has real power, but in terms of hierarchy, Cixi has not reached the level of the emperor.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The emperor's so-called thrift and thrift, which is all superficial and superficial to show others the change after his death, is his lifelong rest, of course, at the expense of blood.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Because he is here without worrying about food and clothing. Enjoy the glory and wealth, and don't have to worry about life. After his death, he was worried that he would not be able to be the emperor. There is not so much glory and wealth.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The feudal ideology of feudal society was deeply rooted, and Emperor Daoguang believed that the tomb after death was a place to live for a lifetime, and he did not hesitate to build his own cemetery, which cost more than Cixi's.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Who doesn't want to be more comfortable after death, so it's normal for Daoguang to get himself a luxurious mausoleum. After all, when people die, they want to open it. Anyway, the country belongs to the son, and he has to bear everything himself.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Because this is repaired for him by later generations, if you study by yourself, it is also done well by later generations. After all, when people die, they want to open it. Anyway, the country belongs to the son, and he has to bear everything himself.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Emperor Daoguang admired frugality and abstained from luxury all his life, but he was superstitious, at first he was superstitious about immortality, and secondly, he was superstitious that there was life after death, and there were ghosts and gods, so in order to live a good life after death, he desperately built his mausoleum!

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Because he lived in a feudal society and had a deep feudal mentality.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    After Guangxu succeeded to the emperor, Cixi took power. When Guangxu was 16 years old, Cixi "returned", but still took power in the twentieth year of Guangxu (1894 AD), and during the Jiawu era, there was a rebellion in the study party in eastern Korea. Japan seized the opportunity to occupy Seoul, sank Chinese personnel carriers, and attacked the Qing troops stationed in Yasan.

    On July 1, China and Japan officially declared war, the Qing Dynasty was defeated, and the Treaty of Shimonoseki was signed, known as the Sino-Japanese War.

    The young Guangxu Emperor saw that the Sino-Japanese War had brought great suffering and humiliation to China, "unwilling to be the king of the fallen country", he was determined to make a difference. He accepted the reforms proposed by Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao, and was ready to carry out capitalist reforms to improve China's international standing. He once became the "savior" of the reformers.

    The twenty-fourth year of Guangxu (1898 AD)., the Guangxu Emperor issued an edict to reform the law. Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao, Tan Si and others implemented the new policy and changed the law into a strong. Guangxu issued a number of decrees in favor of the development of capitalism, but this reform endangered the interests of the feudal conservative forces and was blocked by the Qing nobility, mainly Cixi.

    Reformers Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao, and Tan Sitong pinned their hopes on Yuan Shikai, the direct inspector in charge of the new army. Tan Sitong was sent to meet Yuan Shikai in the middle of the night and asked Yuan Shikai to make military suggestions to assist Guangxu in implementing the new policy. Yuan Shikai also said that he was loyal to the emperor and would definitely follow suit.

    But after Tan Sitong left, he went to tell Rong Lu。Cixi immediately returned to the Forbidden City after receiving a secret report of honor and wealth from the Summer Palace. Guangxu expected that things would be **, so he wrote to Kang Youwei and others to escape.

    He was taken to the political hall by Cixi and forced to write an abdication edict. He handed over all power to Cixi. Subsequently, he was confined to a four-bay bungalow in the center of Lotus Pond in Yingtai, South China Sea.

    He cut off all contact with the outside world. His closest princess was also detained by Cixi.

    Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao fled to Japan. Tan Si and others were killed. The failure of the Wuxu Reform Movement stifled the vitality of the Qing Dynasty to change the old chapter.

    The reform lasted only 103 days, also known as the 100-day reform. The case of the Qing Dynasty court doctor falling out of love as a child really tells people that Guangxu died of illness. However, from the day Guangxu died, people suspected that he did not die normally, which was also due to a number of reasons (modern scientific research has proven that this is indeed the case, Guangxu's acute arsenic poisoning).

    Although Guangxu is directly proportional to Cixi's "mother and son", in fact, he is not Cixi's own child. Guangxu, surnamed Ai Xinjuelu, named Zaitian, was a cousin of the nephew of Emperor Tongzhi and Emperor Xianfeng.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    It ended because of the defeat of the Opium War. Cixi pushed for peaceful evolution in the parliament, but Daoguang supported Lin Zexu but died in the end.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Emperor Daoguang? Are you sure that as a daughter-in-law, you can still put your father-in-law under house arrest? If memory serves, Cixi was Xianfeng's wife.

    Run, you history teacher's coffin board can't be pressed!

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    You're so funny, your IQ is really worrying for you; How did your boss hire you, and your history was taught by your math teacher? Emperor Daoguang is Cixi's father-in-law and Emperor Xianfeng's father! Cixi dared to put Daoguang under house arrest, that was not looking for death! Besides, Cixi has never seen Emperor Daoguang!

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Please, it was Emperor Guangxu who was put under house arrest by Empress Dowager Cixi, and Emperor Daoguang was Cixi's father-in-law, that is, the father of Emperor Xianfeng, Empress Dowager Cixi's husband, this question is wrong.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Because the Empress Dowager Cixi needed to keep her rights from being threatened, she could only put the emperor under house arrest.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    Emperor Guangxu, ambitious and talented, politically imbecile, if China is put in his hands, it will definitely be over.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Because of the 100-day Restoration. Emperor Guangxu has never had much power, and the real power is in the hands of Cixi. Guangxu wanted to gain his own power through the reform of the law, but this infringed on Cixi's power and interests.

    In order to protect her power, Cixi not only killed many people who reformed the law at the entrance of the vegetable market and stopped changing the law, but also was afraid that Guangxu would be unfavorable to her, so she imprisoned Guangxu.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Because Emperor Daoguang stole the urinal used by Chiang Kai-shek in the Empress Dowager Cixi's collection to contain the beer that Qin Shi Huang had drunk, and as a result, it was sprinkled on the Sugel Field in the Blue House of the United States, so the Empress Dowager Cixi put the Daoguang Emperor under house arrest in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of the Basic Law of the Macao Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China in Chapter VIII of the First Imperial Charter of the Galactic Republic!

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    Pig-like people, who don't know anything about the Qing Dynasty, dare to post an article, Daoguang is the first emperor of Cixi's husband Xianfeng, whether Xianfeng can be the emperor is just a word of Daoguang, and he was fucking placed under house arrest by Cixi, don't you want to die?

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    Dude, the title is wrong, Daoguang is Cixi's husband! And it was the Cixi who only had Daoguang who died and Xianfeng ascended the throne, but the title of Empress Dowager Cixi was after Tongzhi ascended the throne, and it was not until Tongzhi died that Cixi really took power, which also means that Cixi only ascended the throne when Guangxu took the throne after she survived her husband and son.

  28. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    The title of this article is wrong, the editors work very hard every day, understand, but I also hope that such an obvious mistake will happen as little as possible or no, thank you.

  29. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    Are you serious? Emperor Daoguang was Cixi's father-in-law, and he was still the emperor in power. His son Xianfeng did not die, and there was nothing to do with Cixi. Daoguang and Cixi have been behind for many years.

  30. Anonymous users2024-01-14

    Because the Empress Dowager Cixi wanted to strengthen the power in her hands, she had to do something to the emperor.

  31. Anonymous users2024-01-13

    Is it necessary to answer this question, the question itself is a mistake, Cixi is Xianfeng's wife, Xianfeng is Daoguang's son, and Cixi is under house arrest Daoguang, is it good to have a little common sense. Since you are going to send something out for the public to see, be strict and don't tamper with history!!

  32. Anonymous users2024-01-12

    Because Emperor Daoguang affected the power of the Empress Dowager Cixi, he was put under house arrest.

  33. Anonymous users2024-01-11

    Yingluo was born in the 5th year of Yongzheng (1727), Yingluo was 14 years old when she first entered the palace in the 6th year of Qianlong (1741), 19 years old in the 11th year of Qianlong (1746), 21 years old in the 13th year of Qianlong (1748), 23 years old when she was named a noble in the 15th year of Qianlong (1750), 25 years old in the 17th year of Qianlong (1752), 28 years old in the 20th year of Qianlong (1755), 38 years old in the 30th year of Qianlong (1765), and 48 years old when he died in the 40th year of Qianlong (1775).

  34. Anonymous users2024-01-10

    In fact, this is difficult to verify, after all, most of the performances in the TV series are false, and the specific authenticity has to be verified from the history books.

  35. Anonymous users2024-01-09

    You're so interesting, film and television have become history???

  36. Anonymous users2024-01-08

    At most, they have served a man's relationship. Other relationships may not be verifiable. After all, the description of the harem women will not be paid attention to in history.

  37. Anonymous users2024-01-07

    There is no specific record in historical materials, and the relationship between two people cannot be clarified just by relying on TV dramas or the Internet, and the court struggle for power was not clear in ancient times.

  38. Anonymous users2024-01-06

    As far as the relationship between the two of them is concerned, it should be just a relationship between superiors and subordinates, but it may be because the two have been together for a long time and have a little affection.

  39. Anonymous users2024-01-05

    are all the queens of Qianlong, according to historical records, the relationship between the two of them is very good, but it is difficult to say if they are not masters and servants, there is no way to verify!

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