Yongrong (28 January 1744 â 13 June 1790) was a Manchu prince and calligrapher of the Qing dynasty in China. He was born in the Aisin Gioro clan as the sixth son of the Qianlong Emperor; his mother was Imperial Noble Consort Chunhui.
Biography
In 1759, he was adopted into the lineage of his granduncle Yunxi (Ã¥Â
Â禧; 1711âÂÂ1758) as Yunxi's grandson, because Yunxi had no son to inherit his Prince Shen peerage. Yongrong was made a beile in the same year. In 1772, he was promoted to junwang (second-rank prince) as "Prince Zhi of the Second Rank" (質é¡çÂÂ). In 1789, he was further promoted to qinwang (first-rank prince), as "Prince Zhi of the First Rank" (質親çÂÂ). He died in 1790 and was posthumously honoured as "Prince Zhizhuang of the First Rank" (質èÂÂ親çÂÂ).
He was succeeded by his fifth son, Mianqing.
Artist
Yongrong is best known for his work as a general editor of the Siku Quanshu, and for his calligraphy in the manuscript Twenty-One Hymns to the Rescuer Mother of Buddhas (). He was also a poet and painter of Chinese paintings with landscape painting as his focus, with knowledge of astronomy and mathematics.
Family
Primary Consort
- Imperial Princess Consort Zhizhuang, of the Fuca clan (質èÂÂ亲çÂÂç¦ÂæÂ å¯Âå¯Âæ°Â, d. March 1772)
- Miancong (ç¶¿è°; 22 March 1766 â 15 August 1780), first son
- Second daughter (5 February 1768 â 8 February 1768)
- Mian'ai (ç¶¿æÂÂ; 22 February 1769 â 8 September 1771), second son
- Fourth daughter (3 October 1770 â 20 September 1779)
- Step Imperial Princess Consort Zhizhuang, of the Niohuru clan (質èÂÂ亲çÂÂç»§ç¦ÂæÂ éÂÂç¥Â祿æ°Â)
- Mianxin (ç¶¿ä¿¡; 14 August 1775 â 25 November 1777), fourth son
- Princess of the Fourth Rank (縣主; b. 1 September 1776), fifth daughter
- Married Deqin (德欽) of the Aohan in January/February 1793
- Mianqing, Prince Zhike of the Second Rank (質æÂªé¡ç 綿æÂ
¶; 17 June 1779 â 27 November 1804), fifth son
Secondary Consort
- Secondary consort, of the You clan (å´ç¦ÂæÂ å°¤æ°Â)
- First daughter (20 March 1766 â 27 November 1769)
- Third daughter (23 July 1769 â 7 July 1770)
- Mianci (ç¶¿æÂ
Â; 21 December 1770 â 23 May 1773), third son
Concubine
- Mistress, of the Geng clan (è¿æ°Â)
- Mianyi (ç¶¿æÂÂ; 12 May 1787 â 12 June 1792), sixth son
In fiction and popular culture
See also
References
External links