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  1. Qi was born in Dingtao, Shandong. She bore Emperor Gaozu a son Liu Ruyi, who was later installed as Prince of Zhao. Gaozu felt that the crown prince Liu Ying (his second son) was an unsuitable heir to his throne. He tried several times, fruitlessly, to replace Liu Ying with Liu Ruyi, as his desire was objected to by Liu Ying's mother Empress ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Consort_QiConsort Qi - Wikipedia

    Consort Qi (Han dynasty) (224–194 BC), concubine of Emperor Gaozu of Han; Empress Qi (fl. 412), wife of Yao Xing (Emperor Wenhuan of Later Qin) Consorts with the title Consort Qi. Consort Qi (Yongzheng) (1676–1739), concubine of the Yongzheng Emperor; Imperial Noble Consort Duanke (1844–1910), concubine of the Xianfeng Emperor; See also

  3. Oct 4, 2018 · While horrible, Liu Ruyi’s early death was a kind fate compared to what allegedly happened to his mother. At the time of Emperor Gaozu’s death, Lady Qi had already been in Chang’an, so the empress dowager quickly arrested her and locked her in the palace. With Lady Qi in her grasp, the empress dowager apparently delved into her own ...

  4. The future Consort Qi was born in 1676. In 1691 or 1694, Lady Li entered the residence of Prince Yong of the First Rank, Yinzhen, and became his secondary consort. On 15 August 1695, she gave birth to her first child a daughter, Princess Huaike of the Second Rank. On 19 July 1697, she gave birth to her second child, a son, Hongfen, who died ...

  5. Jun 22, 2014 · Lü Zhi then had Concubine Qi killed in an inhumane manner: she had Qi's limbs chopped off, eyes gouged out, ears sliced off, forced her to drink a potion that made her mute, and thrown into a latrine. She called Qi a "human swine" (人彘). OP got it wrong and no one in this thread noted the difference. Am I the only one who actually read the ...

  6. May 31, 2018 · The last straw came when Lady Qi, the emperor’s favourite consort, schemed to replace the heir apparent – Liu and Lü’s firstborn son, Liu Ying – with her own.

  7. Feb 10, 2019 · TIL of Consort Qi, a Chinese concubine that bore the Emperor a son he favored over his/the Empress’ son. The Empress responded by torturing Qi, chopping her limbs off, gouging her eyes out, cutting off all her facial features, and locking her in a pigsty until she died - dubbing her the human swine

  8. Jun 6, 2012 · After the Yongzheng Emperor came to the throne, Lady Li was granted the title of Consort Qi (齊妃). In 1727 Lady Li's son Hongshi was expelled from the imperial clan and forced to commit suicide for plotting against his younger half-brother Hongli (the future Qianlong Emperor) in a rivalry for succession to the throne.

  9. Consort Qi (224? – 194 BC), also known as Lady Qi, was a consort of Emperor Gaozu, founder of the Han dynasty. Biography. Qi was born in Dingtao, Shandong. She bore Emperor Gaozu a son Liu Ruyi, who was later installed as Prince of Zhao. Gaozu felt that the crown prince Liu Ying (his second son) was an unsuitable heir to his throne.

  10. Nov 26, 2020 · https://www.tommyworlds.com/post/legend-of-zhen-huan-empress-in-the-palace-consort-li-real-life-and-her-endingConsort Qi was well mentioned in legend of Zhen...