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Yunti, Prince Xun

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Yunti
Prince Xun of the Second Rank
Portrait of Yunti
Prince Xun of the Second Rank
Tenure1748–1756
SuccessorHongming
Born(1688-01-16)16 January 1688
Beijing, China
Died13 January 1756(1756-01-13) (aged 67)
Beijing, China
SpousePrimary spouses:
Lady Wanyan
Secondary spouses:
Lady Shushu-Gioro
Lady Irgen-Gioro
Lady Irgen-Gioro
Concubines:
Lady Wu
IssueHongchun
Hongming
Hongying
Hongkai
seven daughters
Names
Aisin-Gioro Yunti (愛新覺羅·允禵)
Aisin-Gioro Yinti (愛新覺羅·胤禵) (pre-1722)
Posthumous name
Prince Xunqin of the Second Rank
(恂勤郡王)
HouseAisin Gioro
FatherKangxi Emperor
MotherEmpress Xiaogongren
Yunti, Prince Xun
Chinese允禵
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYǔntí
Yinti
Chinese胤禵
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYìntí
Wade–GilesYin-t'i

Yunti (16 January 1688 – 13 January 1756), born Yinzhen and also known as Yinti before 1722, formally known as Prince Xun, was a Manchu prince and military general of the Qing dynasty.

Life

Kangxi era

Yunti was born "Yinzhen" (胤祯; 胤禎; Yìnzhēn) in the Aisin Gioro clan as the 14th son of the Kangxi Emperor. His mother was Empress Xiaogongren, who also bore the Yongzheng Emperor. As Yunti's birth name "Yinzhen" was similar to that of his fourth brother, Yinzhen (胤禛), it was changed to "Yinti".

In 1709, Yinti was granted the title of a beizi. In 1718, after Dzungar forces defeated a Qing army along the Salween River in Tibet, the Kangxi Emperor appointed Yinti as "Great General Who Pacifies the Frontier" (撫遠大將軍) to lead an army of 300,000 into Tibet to attack the Dzungars and their leader, Tsewang Rabtan. It was believed that this was a sign that the Kangxi Emperor was considering Yinti as a potential heir to his throne. In February 1720, Yinti ordered his deputies Galbi and Yanxin to set out from Xining to take Lhasa, while he remained in Xining to build up support with their Mongol allies and then escort the Seventh Dalai Lama to Lhasa. On 24 September 1720, Yinti's army captured Lhasa and returned the Dalai Lama to the Potala Palace.

Yongzheng era

On 21 December 1722, just as Yinti was planning for a conquest of the Dzungar Khanate, he received news of the Kangxi Emperor's death and was immediately summoned back to the capital, Beijing, to attend his father's funeral. His fourth brother, Yinzhen, succeeded their father and became historically known as the Yongzheng Emperor. Yinti and his brothers had to change the character Yin (胤) in their names to Yun (允) to avoid naming taboo, because the reigning emperor's personal name contained the character Yin.

In 1723, Yunti was promoted from beizi to junwang (second-rank prince). However, in the following year, he was demoted back to beizi. The Yongzheng Emperor perceived Yunti as a potential threat to his throne, so he stripped Yunti of his beizi title in 1725 and placed him under house arrest at Shouhuang Palace, in the present-day Jingshan Park.

Qianlong era

In 1735, the Yongzheng Emperor died and was succeeded by his fourth son Hongli, who became historically known as the Qianlong Emperor. The Qianlong Emperor released Yunti in the same year after his coronation. In 1737, Yunti was restored to the ranks of nobility as a fuguo gong (a lesser duke). Ten years later, in 1747, he was promoted to beile. In 1748, he was further promoted back to junwang and granted the title "Prince Xun of the Second Rank" (恂郡王).

Yunti died in 1756 and was posthumously honoured as Prince Xunqin of the Second Rank (恂勤郡王). The Prince Xun peerage was inherited by his second son, Hongming (弘明; 1705–1767), who became a beile in 1735.

Family

Spouses
  • Lady Wanyan (完顏氏), Yunti's primary consort, daughter of Luocha (羅察), bore Hongming and Hongkai
  • Lady Shushu-Gioro (舒舒覺羅氏), Yunti's secondary consort, daughter of Mingde (明德), bore Hongchun, and Yunti's second, third and fifth daughters
  • Lady Irgen-Gioro (伊爾根覺羅氏), Yunti's secondary consort, daughter of Shibao (石保), bore Hongying, and Yunti's first and fourth daughters
  • Lady Irgen-Gioro (伊爾根覺羅氏), Yunti's secondary consort, daughter of Xitai (西泰), bore Yunti's seventh daughter
  • Concubine: Lady Wu (吳氏), Yunti's concubine, daughter of Changyou (常有), bore Yunti's sixth daughter
Children
  • Hongchun (弘春; 1703–1739), Yunti's first son, granted the title of a junwang as "Prince Tai of the Second Rank" (多羅泰郡王) in 1733, demoted to beizi in 1734, stripped of his title in 1735
  • Hongming (弘明; 1705–1767), Yunti's second son, inherited the Prince Xun peerage as a beile, posthumously honoured as "Gongqin Beile" (恭勤貝勒)
  • Hongying (弘映; b. 1707), Yunti's third son, served as a sanzhi dachen (散秩大臣; miscellaneous affairs official)
  • Hongkai (弘暟; b. 1707), Yunti's fourth son, served as a dutong (都統; banner commander) and sanzhi dachen
  • First daughter (b. 1705)
  • Second daughter (b. 1705), held the title of a junzhu
  • Third daughter (b. 1706), held the title of a xianjun
  • Fourth daughter (b. 1706), held the title of a xianjun
  • Fifth daughter (b. 1707), held the title of a junzhu
  • Sixth daughter (b. 1737)
  • Seventh daughter (b. 1753), held the title of a xianzhu

Ancestry

Family of Yunti, Prince Xun
16. Nurhaci
8. Hong Taiji
17. Empress Xiaocigao
4. Shunzhi Emperor
18. Jaisang
9. Empress Xiaozhuangwen
19. Lady Mou
2. Kangxi Emperor
20. Tong Yangzhen
10. Tong Tulai
5. Empress Xiaokangzhang
1. Yunti
6. Uya Weiwu
3. Empress Xiaogongren

See also

References

  • Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing (Qing Shi Gao). Vol. Volumes 164, 220. China. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)