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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PuyiPuyi - Wikipedia

    During his first reign, he was known as the Xuantong Emperor, with his era name meaning "proclamation of unity". Puyi was briefly restored to the Qing throne by the loyalist general Zhang Xun from 1 July to 12 July 1917.

  2. Puyi, last emperor (1908–1911/12) of the Qing (Manchu) dynasty (1644–1911/12) in China and puppet emperor (under the reign title of Kangde) of the Japanese-controlled state of Manchukuo (1934–45). He was the subject of the biopic The Last Emperor (1987). Learn more about Puyi’s life and reign.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Puyi Was The only Emperor to Be Enthroned 3 times.
    • Puyi's Abdication Was The End of Imperial China.
    • Puyi Was The First Emperor to Learn English and Wear Suits Because...
    • Puyi Spent His Final 8 Years as An Ordinary PRC citizen.
    • Puyi Was The First Emperor to Be divorced.
    • Puyi Had No Children, and This Was Because...
    • Puyi Died of cancer.
    • "The Last Emperor" Used Puyi's Autobiography.
    • Discover More About Imperial Life in China
    • Related Articles

    Puyi was the last emperor three times, but was not in power even for a day! Puyi was "the puppet emperor".

    2,133 years of Chinese imperial history were ended by Puyi's mother's note. Empress Dowager Longyu endorsed the abdication on 12 February 1912, handing over power to Yuan Shikai's Republican army.

    ...Puyi had an English tutor. In 1919, Scotsman Johnston was invited to the Forbidden City as Puyi's teacher of English, mathematics, geography, world history, etc. Puyi's English name Henry was chosen by Johnston. Johnston's arrival opened Puyi's eyes to the world. He then started to wear suits and glasses, cut off his Manchurian queue, used a pho...

    Puyi was pardoned in 1960. After being released from prison, he became a citizen of the People's Republic of China with special permission from Chairman Mao Zedong. At first, he worked as a gardener at the Beijing Botanical Gardens from 1960. Later he became a member of a national organization serving the people — the fourth National Committee of t...

    Puyi had five spouses — Empress Wanrong, concubines Shu, Xiang, and Fu, and Li Shuxian. In 1931, his second wife Wenxiu, the consort Shu, divorced him due to 'emptiness of life for nine years'. Puyi vented on his anger at Wenxiu's divorce on Wanrong. Puyi's ignorance and hatred and the atrocities of the Japanese left Wanrong addicted to opium and h...

    ...Puyi lost his fertility. Puyi's autobiography recorded that eunuchs didn't want to take care of him at night, so they arranged maids to accompany Puyi when he slept. Constant sex with maids in his early years, it is most strongly theorized, led to the loss of his sexual function and fertility, whether due to psychological damage or through a sex...

    Indulging in sex in his early years, it is theorized, made Puyi lose the ability to bear children, and more seriously, TCM theorists say, caused damage to his kidneys, stating depletion of kidney qi as the cause. Though, possibly, his gradually failing kidneys caused his impotence. On October 17, 1967, Puyi died of kidney cancer and was buried in H...

    "The Last Emperor" used the book Twilight in the Forbidden City written by Puyi's tutor, Johnston as the original structure, as well as referring to Puyi's autobiography, From Emperor to Citizen, and other related works. It artistically told the story of Aisin Gioro Puyi, the last emperor of China, who lived a tumultuous life spanning 60 years from...

    The Forbidden City was heart of Chinese imperial life for almost 600 years. See our Private Emperor's Tour of Beijingfor ways to get more out of your time in the last emperors' palace. For a tailor-made Beijing/China tour, please do not hesitate to tell us your interests and requirements.

  3. Aisin-Giro Puyi or Emperor Puyi (Chinese: 溥仪, February 7, 1906–October 17, 1967) was the last Emperor of China. He was crowned emperor in 1908 at the age of three. His era name as Qing emperor, "Xuantong", means "proclamation of unity".

    • Xuāntǒng Dì
    • Syun 1 tung 2 Dai 3
    • [ɕwántʰʊ̀ŋ tî]
    • Hsuan 1 -t'ung 3 Ti 4
  4. Jun 30, 2024 · Emperor Xuantong, named Pu Yi, was the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). He was born in 32nd year of Emperor Guangxu's reign (1906 AD), died in 1967.

  5. Pǔyí (Traditional Chinese: 溥儀; Simplified Chinese: 溥仪) (February 7, 1906–October 17, 1967) of the Manchu Aisin-Gioro [1] (愛新覺羅) ruling family was the last Emperor of China between 1908 and 1924 (ruling emperor between 1908 and 1911, and non-ruling emperor between 1911 and 1924), the twelfth emperor of the Qing Dynasty (清朝) to rule over China.

  6. Oct 14, 2020 · Known during his four-year reign (1908-1912) as Xuantong Emperor, Puyi (1906-1967) was China’s last emperor and also the last ruler of the Qing dynasty. After China’s most radical political transformation of the 20th century – i.e. the Chinese Revolution in 1912 – Puyi was forced to abdicate his throne.