HeÃ
¡eri (; Manchu: HeÃ
¡eri), is a clan of Manchu nobility with Jianzhou Jurchens roots, originally hailing from the area which is now the modern Chinese provinces of Jilin and Liaoning. It was once one of the most important and powerful noble families in the early Qing dynasty in China, second only to the royal House of Aisin Gioro, to whom they were closely related by marriage.
The power of the HeÃ
¡eri family reached its zenith in the period of Duke HeÃ
¡eri Sonin and his third son Lord HeÃ
¡eri Songgotu (from approximately 1650 to 1705). Although its influence declined following Songgotu's death, the HeÃ
¡eri clan continued to be the hereditary nobility and play a role in Chinese politics until the demise of the Qing dynasty in early 1912.
History
Origins
The name HeÃ
¡eri was first recorded in the Thirty Common Surnames of Jurchen during the later Tang dynasty (c. 800-850), and is said to be derived from the name of an ancestral river (Ã
¡eri loosely translating to water-spring in the Manchu language). Alternatively, some have suggested that the name may stem from that of an ancient tribe. During the Tang dynasty, the HeÃ
¡eri lived on the northern outskirts of the empire, co-existing to some degree with the then extant Khitan and the Liao dynasty they founded (which dynasty the Jurchen ultimately conquered and destroyed in 1125); while the bulk of the clan maintained their ancestral residencies, the (second) ascendancy of the Jurchen (renamed by this time to Manchu) during the Qing dynasty and the administrative and military appointments clan HeÃ
¡eri enjoyed as a result saw moderate diffusion of HeÃ
¡eri throughout the more interior northern and central provinces.
After the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 and the resulting 1912 collapse of the Qing dynasty, the vast majority of HeÃ
¡eri saw fit to distance themselves from their Manchu origins. To accomplish this, the more Han-sounding diminutive He (Chinese: 赫 / ä½Â) was adopted as a replacement surname (commonly spelled Ho in Hong Kong and several other Cantonese-speaking regions); a few HeÃ
¡eri went further and changed their surnames completely to Gao (é«Â), Kang (康), Zhang (å¼ ), Lu (è¦), He (è´º), Suo (ç´¢), Ying (è±), Hao (éÂÂ), Hei (é»Â), Pu (æÂ®), Li (æÂÂ), or Man (满).
Notable figures
Jin dynasty
In the 119-year history of the Jin dynasty, at least 52 people from this clan were powerful enough to affect the government's decisions. Their names were recorded in the History of Jin.
- Lihua, Empress Qinxian (), wife of Taizu of Jin
- Zhining, Prince Jinyuan of the Second Rank ().
- Liangbi, Prince Jinyuan of the Second Rank ().
- Ziren ().
- Cupei ().
- Machan (), Cupei's brother.
- General Heshilie Zhizhong (ç´Âç³çÂÂå·ä¸Â; also known as Hushahu è¡æ²ÂèÂÂ)
- Yawuta (; ?-1231), a general.
- Heshilie Zhushennu (ç´Âç³çÂÂ諸ç¥Â奴), husband of Emperor Shizong of Jin's 14th daughter
Qing dynasty
Males
- Ã
 ose (Chinese: ), Sonin's father. Fluent in Mandarin, Mongolian and Manchu. Awarded the honorific Baksi ("Knowledgeable Man", Chinese: BÃÂkèshÃÂ) by the Qing dynasty's founding father, Nurhaci.
- Sonin (Chinese: ; ?-1667), Duke of the First Rank (Chinese: ), Chief minister, Grand Councillor (Chinese: ) of the Shunzhi Emperor. Senior among the Four Regents of the Kangxi Emperor;
- Gabula (Chinese: ; ?-1681), first son of Sonin, Duke of the First Rank (Chinese: ). Father in law and Chief Minister (Chinese: ) of the Kangxi Emperor.
- Songgotu (Chinese: ; ?-1703), third son of Sonin, Grand Councillor (Chinese: ), Baohe Scholar (Chinese: ) Chief Minister of the Kangxi Emperor, main signatory of the Treaty of Nerchinsk.
- Xinyu (Chinese: å¿Âè£Â), fifth son of Sonin, Earl of the First Rank (Chinese: ).
- Fabao (Chinese: æ³Âä¿Â), sixth son of Sonin, inherited the Duke of the First Rank from his father.
- Hife (Chinese: ; ?-1662), Ã
 ose's brother. Viscount of the Third Rank (Chinese: ). He had the same language skill as his elder brother. Also awarded the honorific Baksi and honored as one of only three companions to the then-emperor with the epithet "[one] whose merit aided our Way."
- Suwayamboo (Chinese: ; 1641âÂÂ1684), son of Hife, Sonin's cousin. Viscount of the Third Rank (Chinese: ) . Minister of River Transport for the Kangxi Emperor (Chinese: ).
- Sungseo (Chinese: ; ?-1755), grandson of Suwayamboo (), Viscount of the First Rank (Chinese: ), Co-minister of Rites ().
- Erdeni (Chinese: , not to be confused with Panchen Erdeni), originally from the Nara clan, one of the two inventors of the Manchu script. He was inducted into the clan and given the surname HeÃ
¡eri by the Qing ruler Hong Taiji as a reward for his contributions.
- Dingshou (Chinese: ; ?-1731), the General of Light Chariot of the Third Rank (Chinese: ) one of the greatest military generals of the early Qing dynasty. Ultimately served as Vice Governor of the Mongolian Plain Yellow Banner.
- Songzhu (Chinese: ; 1657âÂÂ1735), Grand Councillor (Chinese: ), Minister of Rites(Chinese: ), Wenhua Scholar (Chinese: ), Royal Tutor (Chinese: )
- Giyamo (Chinese: ; 1711-1777), Minister of River Transport (Chinese: ), Minister of Home Office (Chinese: ).
- Guangliang (Chinese: ; ?-1800), General of Heilongjiang.
- Fuzhina (Chinese: ; ?-1810), Viceroy (or more precisely Governor-General) of Guizhou (Chinese: ).
- Saicungga (Chinese: ; ?-1826), Baron of the Second Rank (Chinese: ), Governor of the Mongolian Plain Yellow Banner. Served also as the Governor of the Manchu Plain Red Banner and the Mongolian Bordered Blue Banner prior to this appointment. Awarded the posthumous title 'Taizitaishi (Chinese: )'.
- Jirun (Chinese: ; ?-1826), Governor of the Manchu Plain Blue Banner, Minister of River Transport (Chinese: ), Governor of Shandong (Chinese: ), Co-Minister of Works (Chinese: ).
- Fulehungga (Chinese: ; ?-1829), Baron of the First Rank (Chinese: ),Ã¥ÂÂ
éÂÂå¦士, Co-Minister of Wars (Chinese: ), Co-Minister of Foreign Affairs (Chinese: )
- Nadanju (Chinese: ; ?-1832), Minister of Rites (Chinese: ), Co-Minister of Wars (Chinese: ).
- Shutong'a (Chinese: ; 1776âÂÂ1836), Vice Military Conmmander of Zhili (Chinese: ).
- Chunqing (Chinese: ; ?-1847), Viceroy of Yunnan and Guizhou (Chinese: ).
- Mutengge (Chinese: ; 1780âÂÂ1852), General of Jiangnin (Chinese: ).
- Ã
 uhingga (Chinese: ; ?-1858), Viceroy of Shanxi and Gansu (Chinese: ), Co-Minister of Wars (Chinese: ), è»Âæ©Â大è£, dead as é²åÂÂå·¡æÂ«.
- Shuyuan (Chinese: ; ?-1859), Supreme Court Shaoqing (Chinese: ), çÂÂ京æÂ¶é¨ä¾ÂéÂÂÃ¥Â
¼å¥Â天åºÂåºÂå°¹, æÂ¶é¨å³ä¾ÂéÂÂÃ¥Â
¼ç®¡é¢æ³Âå ÂäºÂÃ¥ÂÂ.
- Hebao (Chinese: ), Ã¥Â
µé¨åÂÂå¤ÂéÂÂ, éÂÂæÂ¿å¸åÂÂè®®.
- Yinggui (Chinese: ; ?-1879), Viceroy of Fujian and Zhejiang (Chinese: ), General of the Army (Chinese: ). Gained title 太åÂÂ太俠after his death.
- Warda (Chinese: ), a general.
- Tundali (Chinese:), an important military commander.
- Hechun (Chinese: ; ?-1860), Viceroy and Imperial Admiral of Jiangnan (Chinese: ) and military commander.
- Encang (Chinese: ), a military commander.
- Rushan (Chinese: ), Magistrate of Sichuan (Chinese: ).
- Sebjengge (Chinese: ; ?-1907), General of Ningxia (Chinese: )
Prince Consort
Females
Imperial Consort
- Imperial Concubine
- Imperial Concubine Xi (d. 1702), the Kangxi Emperor's imperial concubine
- Second Class Female Attendant
- Second Class Female Attendant Mu (d. 1832), the Daoguang Emperor's second class female attendant
Princess Consort
- Primary Consort
- Yun'e's second primary consort
- Secondary Consort
- Mianyu's secondary consort (d. 1860)
- Yicong's secondary consort, the mother of Zailian (1854âÂÂ1917), Zaiyi (1856âÂÂ1923), fifth daughter (b. 1857), Zaiying (1859âÂÂ1930) and Zaisheng (1860âÂÂ1864)
Modern Era
Gallery
See also
References
External links