Necin (, , 1708âÂÂ1749), born in Niohuru clan, was a Qing dynasty official from the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner.
Necin was the second son of Yende. In 1727, he inherited the hereditary dukedom and appointed as the Junior Assistant Chamberlain of the Imperial Guard (Chinese: æÂ£ç§©å¤§è£, Manchu: sula amban). He was favored by Yongzheng Emperor, and appointed the Grand Councillor in 1728. He had served as lieutenant-general of the Manchu Bordered White Banner (é²ç½æÂÂ滿洲é½統), commander of the imperial bodyguard (é Âä¾Âè¡Â堧大è£), lieutenant-general of the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner (é²é»ÂæÂÂ滿洲é½統), Minister of War (å µé¨å°ÂæÂ¸), Minister of Personnel (Ã¥ÂÂé¨å°ÂæÂ¸) and other positions. He was one of the officials whom Qianlong Emperor relied on, described as a "hard-working, cautious, capable and honest" official.
In 1748, during the First Jinchuan campaign, Necin was made the Military Commissioner (ç¶Âç¥大è£) and sent to Sichuan to put down the rebellion. It was soon deprived of his post because of his failure to advance. He and Zhang Guangsi, whom was the Viceroy of Chuan-Shaan, quarreled over military strategy, mutually blamed each other. In the next year, Zhang was escorted to Beijing and later executed. Meanwhile, Necin was also condemned to death for cowardly conduct, for abusing his trust, and for making dishonest reports to the emperor. He was beheaded in full view of the army, making use of Ebilun's sword. His dukedom was given to his elder brother, Tsereng.