Empress Dowager Ci'an

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Empress Dowager Ci'an
Regent of Qing Dynasty
Regency11 November 1861 - 8 April 1881 (19 years, 148 days)
concurrently with Empress Dowager Cixi
PredecessorSushun, Zaiyuan, Duanhua and other 5 officials as regents for Tongzhi Emperor
SuccessorEmpress Dowager Cixi as the sole regent for Guangxu Emperor
Empress of Qing Dynasty
Tenure24 July 1852 - 22 August 1861
(9 years, 29 days)
PredecessorEmpress Xiao Quan Cheng
SuccessorEmpress Xiao Zhe Yi
Burial
Puxiangyu Dingdonling, Eastern Qing Tombs
SpouseXianfeng Emperor
Posthumous name
Empress Xiaozhen Ci'an Yuqing Hejing Chengjing Yitian Zuosheng Xian 孝贞慈安裕庆和敬诚靖仪天祚圣显皇后
FatherNiuhuru Muyangga
MotherLady Giyang

The Empress Dowager Ci'an (Chinese: 慈安皇太后) 1837 - 8 April 1881, popularly known in China as the East Empress Dowager (Chinese: 东太后), before she was widowed known as Empress Zhen (Chinese: 贞皇后), and officially known posthumously as the Xiaozhen Empress (Chinese: 孝贞显皇后), was the second Empress Consort of the Xianfeng Emperor (b.1831 - d.1861) of the Manchu Qing Dynasty in China, and then Empress Dowager after 1861. Born the Lady Niuhuru, she was the daughter of Muyangga, an official from a powerful Manchu family, the Niuhuru clan. Her mother was Lady Giyang, of the Giyang clan.

Biography

Lady Niuhuru entered the Imperial Palace in the late 1840s, and became a concubine of the crown prince, the future Xianfeng Emperor. At the time, the principal wife of the crown prince was the Lady Sakda, of the Manchu Sakda clan, who was made posthumously Empress Xiao De Xian (Chinese: 孝德显皇后). However, Lady Sakda died on 24 January 1850. During the following month, on 25 February, the Dao Guang Emperor also died. Thus, the crown prince became the Xianfeng Emperor, but was left without an empress consort.

Two years later, at the end of March or the beginning of April 1852, after a proper mourning period, the Lady Niuhuru was firstly made an Imperial Concubine (Chinese: ), and was given the name Zhen (Chinese: , meaning "upright", "chaste", "virtuous", "faithful to the memory of one's husband", i.e., by remaining chaste after his death and not remarrying). At the end of June or the beginning of July of the same year, she was promoted from Imperial Concubine Zhen (Chinese: 贞嫔) to Noble Consort Zhen (Chinese: 贞贵妃). Then on 24 July 1852, she was officially made Empress Consort (Chinese: 皇后).

The Empress Consort Niuhuru was unable to produce a male heir, and it was the Imperial Concubine Yehenara (Chinese: 懿嫔), later known as the Empress Dowager Cixi, who succeeded in giving a son to the Xianfeng Emperor in April 1856. On 22 August 1861, in the wake of the Second Opium War, Emperor Xianfeng died at the Rehe Travelling Palace (Chinese: 热河行宫), 230 km (140 mi) northeast of Beijing, where the imperial court had fled. His heir, the son of the Noble Consort Yehenara, who was about to become the Tongzhi Emperor, was only five years old. As a consequence, the imperial family was shaken by a struggle over who would assume the regency. Eventually, in November 1861, the Noble Consort Yehenara, with the help of Prince Gong (Chinese: 恭亲王), staged a palace coup known as the Xinyou Coup (Chinese: 辛酉政变), had the opposing princes commit suicide and their leader the Manchu official Sushun beheaded, and succeeded in securing the power into her hands and those of the Empress Consort.

Empress Dowager Ci'an

Noble Consort Yehenara was officially created "Holy Mother Empress Dowager" (Chinese: 圣母皇太后), a high privilege considering that she had never been an Empress Consort while Emperor Xianfeng was alive. She was privileged to become an empress dowager only because she was the biological mother of the new Emperor. She was also given an honorific name which was Cixi (Chinese: 慈禧 - meaning "motherly and auspicious"). As for the Empress Consort Niuhuru, she was made "Empress Mother Empress Dowager" (Chinese: 母后皇太后), a title giving her precedence over Cixi, and she was given the honorific name Ci'an (Chinese: 慈安 - meaning "motherly and calming"). As she dwelled in the eastern part of the Forbidden City, Empress Dowager Ci'an became popularly known as the East Empress Dowager (Chinese: 东太后), while Empress Dowager Cixi, who dwelled in the western part of the Forbidden City became known as the West Empress Dowager (Chinese: 西太后).

On several occasions after 1861, Empress Dowager Ci'an was given additional honorific names (two Chinese characters at a time), as was customary for emperors and empresses, until by the end of her life her name was a long even string of characters starting with Ci'an.

The case of An Dehai

For the next twenty years until her death in 1881, Empress Dowager Ci'an assumed the regency of the Empire of the Great Qing, along with co-regent Empress Dowager Cixi, first during the minority of the Tongzhi Emperor, then during the minority of the Guangxu Emperor after the premature death of Emperor Tongzhi in January 1875. Although in theory she had precedence over Empress Dowager Cixi, she was in fact a self-effacing person and seldom intervened in politics, unlike Empress Dowager Cixi, who was the actual master of China. Her only notable intervention in politics was in 1869. The most feared grand eunuch of the imperial court An Dehai (Chinese: 安德海), close confidant of Empress Dowager Cixi, was on a trip south to buy some dragon robes for Empress Dowager Cixi. While traveling in Shandong province, he used his power as an envoy of Empress Dowager Cixi to extort money from people, which caused great trouble. The matter was reported to the court by the governor of Shandong, and Empress Dowager Ci'an who heard about it ordered the immediate execution of An Dehai, who had been the all powerful figure at the imperial court until then. This was quite an unusual reaction for Empress Dowager Ci'an, and the execution of An Dehai is said to have greatly displeased Empress Dowager Cixi.

Ci'an's death and entombment

On 8 April 1881, during an audience at the court, Empress Dowager Ci'an did not feel well and was accompanied to her private apartments, where she died within an hour. Her sudden death was a shock for people, as the health of the Empress Dowager Ci'an had always been excellent. Thirty years after her death rumors would be spread that she had been poisoned by Empress Dowager Cixi. However, such claims have never been substantiated and new evidence has not appeared in the many years since.

The posthumous name given to Empress Dowager Ci'an, which combines the honorific names which she gained during her lifetime with new names added just after her death, was:

  • (Chinese: 孝贞慈安裕庆和敬诚靖仪天祚圣显皇后)

which reads:

  • "Empress Xiao ² -zhen ³ Ci'an Yuqing Hejing Chengjing Yitian Zuosheng 4 Xian 5 ".

This long name is still the one that can be seen on Ci'an's tomb today. The short form of her posthumous name is:

  • "Empress Xiao Zhen Xian" (Chinese: 孝贞显皇后).

Empress Dowager Ci'an was interred amidst the Eastern Qing Tombs (Chinese: 清东陵), 125 kilometers/75 miles east of Beijing, in the Dingdongling (Chinese: 定东陵) tomb complex (literally: the "Tombs east of the Dingling tomb"), along with Empress Dowager Cixi. More precisely, Empress Dowager Ci'an lies in the Puxiangyu Dingdonling (Chinese: 普祥峪定东陵) (literally: the "Tomb east of the Dingling tomb in the Vale of wide good omen"), while Cixi built herself the much larger Putuoyu Dingdongling (Chinese: 菩陀峪定东陵) (literally: the "Tomb east of the Dingling tomb in the Vale of Putuo"). The Dingling tomb (literally: the "Tomb of quietude") is the tomb of the Xianfeng Emperor, the emperor of Empress Dowager Ci'an and Empress Dowager Cixi, which is located indeed west of the Dingdongling. The Vale of Putuo owes its name to Mt Putuo (literally: the "Mountain of the Dharani of the Site of the Buddha's Enlightenment"), at the foot of which the Dingdongling is located.

Ci'an as person

A popular view of Empress Dowager Ci'an is that she was a highly respectable person, always quiet, never hot-tempered and that she treated everybody very well, and was highly respected by Xianfeng. Her good-hearted personality was no match for the Empress Dowager Cixi, who managed to sideline the naive and candid Empress Dowager Ci'an, and is even alleged to have contributed to her death. This is still the popular view in China, the image of a quiet Empress Dowager Ci'an perhaps stemming from the meaning of her honorific name. However, some historians have painted a very different reality, mainly that of a self-indulgent and idle Empress Dowager Ci'an, who did not care as much for government and hard work as she cared for her pleasures and sweet life inside the Forbidden City. Empress Dowager Cixi, on the other hand, was a shrewd and intelligent woman who was ready to make sacrifices and work hard in order to obtain the supreme power, and who faced the complex problems that were besetting China at the time, while Empress Dowager Ci'an was indulging in an easy life. As often, the reality may lie in-between these two extremes.

Notes

1. i.e. mother of Tongzhi
2. "filial"; during the Qing Dynasty this was always the first character at the beginning of empresses' posthumous names
3. same character as when she was a concubine
4. this string of 12 characters are the honorific names that she received while alive, with possibly the last characters having been added only just after her death
5. "the Clear", or "the Illustrious"; this is the posthumous name of the Xianfeng Emperor; during the Qing Dynasty the last character of empresses' posthumous names was always the posthumous name of their emperor

References

  • Barbara Bennet Peterson, Notable Women of China: Shang Dynasty to the Early Twentieth Century - Page 352, M.E. Sharpe, ISBN 076560504X

Most books in which Ci'an makes an appearance are about Cixi.

Succession

Chinese royalty
Preceded by Empress of China
1852 - 1861
Succeeded by
Preceded by Empress Dowager of China
concurrently with Empress Dowager Cixi:
1861 - 1881
Succeeded by