Jiaqing Emperor

Emperor of China from 1796 to 1820

Empress Xiaoshurui of the Hitara clan
(m. 1774; died 1797)
Empress Xiaoherui of the Niohuru clan
(m. 1790)
IssueDaoguang Emperor
Miankai, Prince Dunke of the First Rank
Mianxin, Prince Ruihuai of the First Rank
Mianyu, Prince Huiduan of the First Rank
Princess Zhuangjing of the Second Rank
Princess Zhuangjing of the First Rank
Names
Aisin Gioro Yongyan (愛新覺羅·顒琰)
Manchu: Yong yan (ᠶᠣᠩ ᠶᠠᠨ)
Era dates
Jiaqing (嘉慶): 9 February 1796 – 2 February 1821
Manchu: Saicungga fengšen (ᠰᠠᡳᠴᡠᠩᡤᠠ ᡶᡝᠩᡧᡝᠨ)
Mongolian: Сайшаалт ерөөлт (ᠰᠠᠶᠢᠰᠢᠶᠠᠯᠲᠤ ᠢᠷᠦᠭᠡᠯᠲᠦ)
Posthumous name
Emperor Shoutian Xingyun Fuhua Suiyou Chongwen Jingwu Guangyu Xiaogong Qinjian Duanmin Yingzhe Rui (受天興運敷化綏猷崇文經武光裕孝恭勤儉端敏英哲睿皇帝)
Manchu: Sunggiyen hūwangdi (ᠰᡠᠩᡤᡳᠶᡝᠨ
ᡥᡡᠸᠠᠩᡩᡳ
)
Temple name
Renzong (仁宗)
Manchu: Žindzung (ᡰᡳᠨᡯᡠᠩ)
HouseAisin GioroDynastyQingFatherQianlong EmperorMotherEmpress Xiaoyichun of the Weigiya clanSeal[a]
Jiaqing Emperor
Traditional Chinese嘉慶帝
Simplified Chinese嘉庆帝
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiāqìng Dì
Wade–GilesChia1-ch'ing4 Ti4
IPA[tɕjátɕʰîŋ tî]
This article contains Manchu text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Manchu alphabet.

The Jiaqing Emperor (13 November 1760 – 2 September 1820), also known by his temple name Emperor Renzong of Qing, personal name Yongyan, was the sixth emperor of the Manchu-led Qing dynasty and the fifth Qing emperor to rule over China proper, from 1796 to 1820. He was the 15th son of the Qianlong Emperor. During his reign, he prosecuted Heshen, the corrupt Manchu favorite of his father and attempted to restore order within the Qing Empire while curbing the smuggling of opium into China.

Assessments of his reign are mixed, either seen as the 'beginning of the end' of the Qing dynasty, or as a period of moderate reform which presaged the intellectual movements of the 1860s.[1]

Early years

Yongyan was born in the Old Summer Palace, 8 km (5 mi) northwest of the walls of Beijing. His personal name, "Yongyan" (永琰), was later changed to "Yongyan" (顒琰) when he became the emperor. The Chinese character for yong in his name was changed from the more common 永 to the less common 顒. This novelty was introduced by the Qianlong Emperor, who believed that it was not proper to have a commonly used Chinese character in an emperor's personal name due to the longstanding practice of naming taboo in the imperial family during ancient China period.

Yongyan was the 15th son of the Qianlong Emperor. His mother was Noble Consort Ling, the daughter of Wei Qingtai (魏清泰), an ethnic Han Chinese official whose family had been long integrated into the Manchu Eight Banners as part of a Han Banner.

The Qianlong Emperor originally had two other sons in mind for succeeding him, but both of them died early from diseases, hence in December 1773 he secretly chose Yongyan as his successor. In 1789, the Qianlong Emperor instated Yongyan as "Prince Jia of the First Rank" (嘉親王; or simply "Prince Jia").

Accession to the throne

In October 1795, the 60th year of his reign, the Qianlong Emperor announced his intention to abdicate in favour of Prince Jia. He made this decision because he felt that it was disrespectful for him to rule longer than his grandfather, the Kangxi Emperor, who was on the throne for 61 years. Prince Jia ascended the throne and adopted the era name "Jiaqing" in February 1796, hence he is historically known as the Jiaqing Emperor. For the next three years, however, the Jiaqing Emperor was emperor in name and rite only because decisions were still made by his father, who became a Taishang Huang (emperor emeritus) after his abdication.

After the death of the Qianlong Emperor in the beginning of February 1799, the Jiaqing Emperor took control of the government and prosecuted Heshen, a favourite official of his father. Heshen was charged with corruption and abuse of power, stripped of his titles, had his property confiscated, and ordered to commit suicide. Heshen's daughter-in-law, Princess Hexiao, a half-sister of the Jiaqing Emperor, was spared from punishment and given a few properties from Heshen's estates. The Jiaqing Emperor commuted the death sentence of the scholar Hong Liangji who had criticised the policies of the Qianlong Emperor and Heshen, instead exiling him to a remote part of northern China and pardoning him altogether in 1800. [2]

Heshen was described as the 'primary evil' effecting the Empire, and after his removal the Emperor pursued a series of reforms of the court, civil service and treasury. [3] He was a traditionalist in terms of his role as an ethnic Manchu leader, taking parts in imperial hunts, inspection tours, and upholding strict court protocol. [4] As part of this traditionalist approach, the Jiaqing Emperor promoted ministers on the basis of their commitment to a 'purist' approch to Confucian rule. [5]

The impact of the Jiaqing Emperor's reforms are questionable, with the Emperor described by Jonathan Spence as having 'relied on rhetoric more than specific policies to cleanse his empire', with Heshen's clique soon replaced by other bureaucratic factions. [6]

At the time, the Qing Empire faced internal disorder, most importantly the large-scale White Lotus (1796–1804) and Miao (1795–1806) rebellions, as well as an empty imperial treasury. The Jiaqing Emperor engaged in the pacification of the empire and the quelling of rebellions, although this came at a steep fiscal cost.[7] He endeavored to bring China back to its 18th-century prosperity and power.

In 1813, the Jiaqing Emperor also faced the threat of the Eight Trigrams uprising, led by a millenarian Buddhist sect that launched a failed attack on the Forbidden City, with the intention of assassinating the Emperor upon his return from a hunting trip. The Jiaqing Emperor was intrigued by the leader of the rising, Lin Qing, and summoned him to a private interrogation.[8] Lin was later executed by slicing. [9]

Foreign Relations

In 1816, William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst was sent as ambassador extraordinary to the court, intending to establish more satisfactory commercial relations between China and Great Britain. The Amherst Embassy proved a failure as a result of Amherst's refusal to perform a kowtow to the Emperor, but would prove to have a significant impact on British views of China and the Qing dynasty. [10]

The Jiaqing Emperor refused the Vietnamese ruler Gia Long's request to change his country's name to Nam Việt. He changed the name instead to Việt Nam.[11] Gia Long's Đại Nam thực lục contains the diplomatic correspondence over the naming.[12]

Opposition to Christianity

The Great Qing Legal Code includes one statute titled "Prohibitions Concerning Sorcerers and Sorceresses" (禁止師巫邪術). In 1811, a clause was added to it with reference to Christianity. It was modified in 1815 and 1817, settled in its final form in 1839 under the Daoguang Emperor, and repealed in 1870 under the Tongzhi Emperor. It sentenced Europeans to death for spreading Catholicism among Han Chinese and Manchus. Christians who would not repent their conversion were sent to Muslim cities in Xinjiang, to be given as slaves to Muslim leaders and beys,[13] or Oirat Mongols.[14] Shanxi merchants already regularly traded in Mongolia and Xinjiang so Shanxi Catholic merchants were able to redeem exiled "slaves" in Xinjiang and buy them back. The first Christians exiled under the law were exiled to Xinjiang to be slaves to Oirat Mongols in Yili north Xinjiang in the 1780s. The Oirats didn't even want to bother to extract agricultural labour from unwilling exiles and instead accepted cash payments for their freedom by Christian merchants from Shanxi. There are descendants of Catholic exiles in Yili, Xinjiang who have relatives in Inner Mongolia as well. After checking on the Christians exiled to Yili, Jacobus Wang then went to Kashgar in southern Xinjiang. At first people thought exile to Kashgar was horrible but then Li Zibiao found out the region had tons of wine, grapes, fruit and a temperate climate and the exiles were free to practice their religion and were not slaves. Then Kashgaria was invaded by Jahangir Khoja and the Qing allowed Christian exiles in Yili to return home in exchange for fighting against Jahangir.[15] Uyghur Muslims convicted of crimes were also exiled to northern Xinjiang to become slaves of Manchu banner garrisons there. In addition to sending exiles from the east convicted of crimes to Xinjiang to be slaves of Banner garrisons there, the Qing also practiced reverse exile, exiling Inner Asian (Mongol, Russian and Muslim criminals from Mongolia and Inner Asia) to China proper where they would serve as slaves in Han Chinese Banner garrisons in Guangzhou. Russian, Oirats and Muslims (Oros. Ulet. Hoise jergi weilengge niyalma) such as Yakov and Dmitri were exiled to the Han banner garrison in Guangzhou.[16] In the 1780s after the Muslim rebellion in Gansu started by Zhang Wenqing 張文慶 was defeated, Muslims like Ma Jinlu 馬進祿 were exiled to the Han Banner garrison in Guangzhou to become slaves to Han Chinese Banner officers.[17] The Qing code regulating Mongols in Mongolia sentenced Mongol criminals to exile and to become slaves to Han bannermen in Han Banner garrisons in China proper.[18]

Chinese nobility

The Jiaqing Emperor granted the title Wujing Boshi (五經博士; Wǔjīng Bóshì) to the descendants of Tang essayist Han Yu.[19][20][21][22]

Personal Life and Interests

The Jiaqing Emperor commissioned printed compendia of courtly collections, which are an important source for our present understanding of Qing court art. [23] He was a keen scholar of the Confucian classics (to which he devoted much of his time in the early years of his reign when the Qianlong Emperor remained de facto ruler), with 15,267 poems attributed to him. [24]


Death and burial

On 2 September 1820, the Jiaqing Emperor died at the Rehe (Jehol) Traveling Palace (熱河行宫), 230 km (140 mi) northeast of Beijing, where the imperial court was in summer quarters. The Draft History of Qing did not record a cause of death. Some have alleged that he died after being struck by lightning, but others prefer the theory that he died of a stroke, as the emperor was quite obese. He was succeeded by his second son, Mianning, who became known as the Daoguang Emperor.

The Jiaqing Emperor was interred amidst the Western Qing Tombs, 120 km (75 mi) southwest of Beijing, in the Chang (昌; lit. "splendid") mausoleum complex.

Family

Empress

  • Empress Xiaoshurui (孝淑睿皇后) of the Hitara Clan (喜塔臘氏)
    Titles: Primary Consort of the Fifteenth Prince (十五王子福晋) → Princess Consort Jia of the First Rank (嘉親王妃) → Empress (皇后)
    • Second daughter (2 June 1780 – 6 September 1783)
    • Minning (宣宗 旻寧; 16 September 1782 – 26 February 1850), the Daoguang Emperor (道光帝), second son
    • Princess Zhuangjing of the First Rank (莊靜固倫公主; 20 October 1784 – 27 June 1811), fourth daughter
      • Married Manibadala (瑪尼巴達喇; d. 1832) of the Tumed Borjigit clan in November/December 1802.
    • Miscarriage at three months (18 August 1785)
  • Empress Xiaoherui (孝和睿皇后) of the Niohuru Clan (鈕祜祿氏)
    Titles: Secondary Consort (侧福晋) → Noble Consort (貴妃) → Imperial Noble Consort (皇貴妃) → Empress (皇后) → Empress Dowager Gongci (恭慈皇太后)
    • Seventh daughter (2 August 1793 – 16 July 1795)
    • Miankai, Prince Dunke of the First Rank (惇恪親王 綿愷; 6 August 1795 – 18 January 1838), third son
    • Mianxin, Prince Ruihuai of the First Rank (瑞懷親王 綿忻; 9 March 1805 – 27 September 1828), fourth son

Imperial Noble Consort

  • Imperial Noble Consort Heyu (和裕皇貴妃) of the Liugiya Clan (劉佳氏)
    Titles: Mistress (格格) → Consort Xian (諴妃) → Noble Consort Xian (諴貴妃) → Dowager Imperial Noble Consort Xianxi (諴禧太皇貴妃)
    • Prince Mu of the Second Rank (穆郡王; 4 February 1780 – 10 June 1780), first son
    • Princess Zhuangjing of the Second Rank (莊敬和碩公主; 30 January 1782 – 4 April 1811), third daughter
      • Married Sodnamdorji (索特納木多布濟; d. 1825) of the Khorchin Borjigit clan on 24 December 1801.(one daughter)
  • Imperial Noble Consort Gongshun (恭順皇貴妃) of the Niohuru Clan (鈕祜祿氏)
    Titles: Noble Lady Ru (如貴人) → Imperial Concubine Ru (如嬪) → Consort Ru (如妃) → Dowager Noble Consort Ru (如貴太妃)→ Dowager Imperial Noble Consort Ru (如太皇貴妃)
    • Eighth daughter (8 March 1805 – 14 January 1806)
    • Princess Huimin of the First Rank (慧愍固倫公主; 18 February 1811 – 28 June 1815), ninth daughter
    • Mianyu, Prince Huiduan of the First Rank (惠端親王 綿愉; 8 March 1814 – 9 January 1865), fifth son

Consort

  • Consort Shu (恕妃) of the Wanyan Clan (完顏氏)
    Titles: Secondary Consort (侧福晋)
  • Consort Hua (華妃) of the Hougiya Clan (侯佳氏), personal name Liuniu (六妞)
    Titles: Servant (管女子) → Mistress (格格) → Imperial Concubine Ying (莹嫔) → Consort Hua (华妃)
    • Sixth daughter (2 August 1789 – June/July 1790)
  • Consort Zhuang (莊妃) of the Wanggiya Clan (王佳氏)
    Titles: Mistress (格格) → First Class Female Attendant Chun (春常在) → Noble Lady Chun (春貴人) → Imperial Concubine Ji (吉嬪) → Consort Zhuang (莊妃)
  • Consort Xin (信妃) of the Liugiya Clan (劉佳氏)
    Titles: Noble Lady Xin (信贵人) → Imperial Concubine Xin (信嫔) → Dowager Consort Xin (信太妃)

Imperial Concubine

  • Imperial Concubine Jian (簡嬪) of the Guangiya Clan (關佳氏)
    Titles: Mistress (格格)
    • First daughter (14 May 1780 – 24 November 1783)
  • Imperial Concubine Xun (遜嬪) of the Shen Clan (沈氏)
    Titles: Mistress (格格)
    • Princess Hui'an of the Second Rank (慧安和碩公主; 31 December 1786 – June/July 1795), fifth daughter
  • Imperial Concubine Chun (淳嬪) of the Donggiya Clan (董佳氏)
    Titles: Noble Lady Chun (淳贵人) → Imperial Concubine Chun (淳嫔)
  • Imperial Concubine En (恩嬪) of the Uya Clan (烏雅氏)
  • Imperial Concubine Rong (榮嬪) of the Liang Clan (梁氏)
  • Imperial Concubine An (安嬪) of the Gūwalgiya Clan (瓜爾佳氏)
    Titles: First Class Female Attendant An (安常在) → Dowager Imperial Concubine Kaoan (皇考安嫔).

Noble Lady

  • Noble Lady Yun (芸贵人) of a certain clan
    Titles: Noble Lady Yun (芸贵人)
  • Noble Lady Yu (玉贵人) of a certain clan
    Titles: Noble Lady Yu (玉贵人)

First Class Female Attendant

  • First Class Female Attendant Hui (慧常在) of a certain clan
    Titles: First Class Female Attendant Hui (慧常在)

Ancestry

Shunzhi Emperor (1638–1661)
Kangxi Emperor (1654–1722)
Empress Xiaokangzhang (1638–1663)
Yongzheng Emperor (1678–1735)
Weiwu
Empress Xiaogongren (1660–1723)
Lady Saiheli
Qianlong Emperor (1711–1799)
Wulu
Lingzhu (1664–1754)
Lady Qiao
Empress Xiaoshengxian (1692–1777)
Wugong
Lady Peng
Jiaqing Emperor (1760–1820)
Sixing
Jiuling
Lady Chen
Qingtai
Empress Xiaoyichun (1727–1775)
Lady Yanggiya

In fiction and popular culture

  • Portrayed by Yu Yang in War and Beauty (2004)
  • Portrayed by Xin Baiqing Legend of Jiaqing (2005)
  • Portrayed by Shaun Tam in Succession War (2018)
  • Portrayed by Tang Jiatong in Story of Yanxi Palace (2018)
  • Portrayed in Throne of Jade (2006), a historical fantasy novel by Naomi Novik.
  • Lord Jiaqing's Journey to Taiwan (Chinese: 嘉慶君遊臺灣), a Taiwanese folklore[25]
    • Portrayed in Lord Jiaqing's Journey to Taiwan (1980)[26]
    • Portrayed by Chen Ya Lan [zh] (Tân A-lân) in Lord Jiaqing and The Journey to Taiwan [zh] (2022)

See also

  • Chinese emperors family tree (late)

Notes

  1. ^ Chenhan (宸翰, Chénhàn) seal used for calligraphy and handwritten works.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  2. ^ Jonathan Spence. The Search for Modern China (Norton, 1990), pp143-144
  3. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  4. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  5. ^ Jonathan Spence. The Search for Modern China (Norton, 1990), p166
  6. ^ Jonathan Spence. The Search for Modern China (Norton, 1990), p166
  7. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  8. ^ Jonathan Spence. The Search for Modern China (Norton, 1990), p168
  9. ^ Jonathan Spence. The Search for Modern China (Norton, 1990), p168
  10. ^ Gao Hao. “The Amherst Embassy and British Discoveries in China.” History, vol. 99, no. 4 (337), 2014, pp. 568–87, here p.568
  11. ^ Woodside 1971, p. 120.
  12. ^ Jeff Kyong-McClain; Yongtao Du (2013). Chinese History in Geographical Perspective. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 67–. ISBN 978-0-7391-7230-8.
  13. ^ Robert Samuel Maclay (1861). Life among the Chinese: with characteristic sketches and incidents of missionary operations and prospects in China. Carlton & Porter. p. 336. Retrieved 6 July 2011. mohammedan slaves to beys.
  14. ^ Vogel, Stuart (2020). Christian-Muslim Relations. A Bibliographical History Volume 16 North America, South-East Asia, China, Japan, and Australasia (1800-1914). BRILL. p. 483. ISBN 9004429905.
  15. ^ Harrison, Henrietta (2013). The Missionary's Curse and Other Tales from a Chinese Catholic Village (illustrated ed.). University of California Press. p. 58. ISBN 0520273125. ISSN 1555-7812.
  16. ^ Yongwei, MWLFZZ, FHA 03-0188-2740-032, QL 43.3.30 (April 26, 1778).
  17. ^ Šande 善德, MWLFZZ, FHA 03-0193-3238-046, QL 54.5.6 (May 30, 1789) and Šande, MWLFZZ, FHA 03-0193-3248-028, QL 54.6.30 (August 20, 1789).
  18. ^ 1789 Mongol Code (Ch. 蒙履 Menggu lüli, Mo. Mongγol čaγaǰin-u bičig), (Ch. 南省,給駐防爲, Mo. emün-e-tü muji-dur čölegüljü sergeyilen sakiγči quyaγ-ud-tur boγul bolγ-a). Mongol Code 蒙例 (Beijing: Lifan yuan, 1789; reprinted Taipei: Chengwen chubanshe, 1968), p. 124. Batsukhin Bayarsaikhan, Mongol Code (Mongγol čaγaǰin - u bičig), Monumenta Mongolia IV (Ulaanbaatar: Centre for Mongol Studies, National University of Mongolia, 2004), p. 142.
  19. ^ Qin ding da Qing hui dian (Jiaqing chao). 1818. p. 1084.
  20. ^ 王士禎 [Wang Shizhen] (3 September 2014). 池北偶談 [Chi Bei Ou Tan]. 朔雪寒 [Shuo Xue Han]. GGKEY:ESB6TEXXDCT.
  21. ^ 徐錫麟 [Xu, Xilin]; 錢泳 [Qian, Yong] (10 September 2014). 熙朝新語 [Xi Chao Xin Yu]. 朔雪寒 [Shuo Xue Han]. GGKEY:J62ZFNAA1NF.
  22. ^ Brunnert, H. S.; Hagelstrom, V. V. (15 April 2013). Present Day Political Organization of China. Routledge. pp. 493–94. ISBN 978-1-135-79795-9.
  23. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  24. ^ Ricarda Brosch, "The Jiaqing Emperor" in Jessica Harrison-Hall and Julia Lovell (eds) Creators of Modern China: 100 Lives from Empire to Republic 1796–1912 (Thames & Hudson, 2023) pp14 -16
  25. ^ Lai, Shu Chuan (2005). 嘉慶君遊臺灣故事之研究. Taipei: Taipei Municipal University of Education. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  26. ^ "臺語文學發展年表 (1980-1989)". 臺灣文學館線上資料平臺. National Museum of Taiwan Literature. Retrieved 1 September 2023.

Sources

  •  This article incorporates text from China in the light of history, by Ernst Faber, a publication from 1897, now in the public domain in the United States.
  •  This article incorporates text from The Chinese recorder, Volume 27, a publication from 1896, now in the public domain in the United States.
  •  This article incorporates text from Life among the Chinese: with characteristic sketches and incidents of missionary operations and prospects in China, by Robert Samuel Maclay, a publication from 1861, now in the public domain in the United States.

Further reading

External links

  • Media related to Jiaqing Emperor at Wikimedia Commons
Jiaqing Emperor
Born: 13 November 1760 Died: 2 September 1820
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