Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
people/1420s

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Empress Qian

Empress of China (1442–1449, 1457–1464)


Empress of China (1442–1449, 1457–1464)

FieldValue
nameEmpress Xiaozhuangrui
孝莊睿皇后
image孝莊睿皇后 (1).jpg
spouse
successionEmpress consort of the Ming dynasty
reign8 June 1442 – 22 September 1449
reign-typeFirst tenure
predecessorEmpress Xiaogongzhang
successorEmpress Wang
reign111 February 1457 – 23 February 1464
reign-type1Second tenure
predecessor1Empress Suxiao
successor1Empress Wu
succession2Empress dowager of the Ming dynasty
reign-type2Tenure
reign223 February 1464 – 15 July 1468
predecessor2Empress Dowager Xiaoyi
successor2Empress Dowager Zhou
birth_date1426
birth_placeHaizhou (present-day Lianyungang)
death_date
burial_place4 September 1468
Yu Mausoleum
regnal nameEmpress Dowager Ciyi (慈懿皇太后)
posthumous name**Empress Xiàozhuāng** Xiànmù Hónghuì Xiǎnrén Gōngtiān Qīnshèng **Ruì** (**孝莊**獻穆弘惠顯仁恭天欽聖**睿皇后**)
houseQian (錢)
house-typeClan
fatherQian Gui (錢貴)
motherLady Chen (陳氏)

孝莊睿皇后 | reign-type = First tenure | reign-type1 = Second tenure | reign-type2 = Tenure Yu Mausoleum | house-type = Clan Empress Qian (; 1426 – 15 July 1468) was a Chinese empress consort during the Ming dynasty, married to Emperor Yingzong of Ming. She was addressed posthumously as Empress Xiaozhuangrui ()

Early life

There is no record of Empress Qian's birth name, other than that she was a member of the clan Qian (). She married the Zhengtong Emperor on 8 June 1442, and became his primary consort and empress.

Empress

In 1449, the Zhengtong Emperor was captured after the Battle of Tumu and his captors demanded a ransom, which Empress Qian and her mother-in-law promptly raised. The ransom was rejected in favour of holding on to the Zhengtong Emperor as hostage, which prompted the court to assign him the status of retired emperor and name his half-brother Zhu Qiyu as the Jingtai Emperor. Empress Qian was moved from the court to a separate palace to allow Empress Wang to take the title of empress consort.

When her spouse was returned by the Mongols, arriving in Beijing on 19 September 1450, Empress Qian joined him under house arrest in a guarded section of the Imperial City. When her spouse's only son, the future Chenghua Emperor, was deposed as heir apparent in 1452, he was sent to live with Empress Qian in conditions of physical hardship. In 1457, a coup-d'etat put her spouse back on the imperial throne as the Tianshun Emperor, reinstating Empress Qian as the empress consort.

Empress dowager

Empress Qian had no children, and when the Zhengtong Emperor died in 1464, he was succeeded by the Chenghua Emperor. She became involved in a conflict with Empress Xiaosu, the biological mother of the new emperor. As the mother of the emperor, Empress Xiaosu demanded the same title as Qian: that of empress dowager. Xiaosu pointed out that she was the mother of the emperor while Qian was childless, while Qian demanded the title pointing to her loyalty to the late emperor, whose house arrest she had shared. The emperor was unable to solve the conflict to the satisfaction of both parties, but granted the title of empress dowager to both, though Qian's formal title acknowledged her higher rank and precedence in court proceedings.

Titles

  • During the reign of the Xuande Emperor ():
    • Lady Qian (錢氏; from 1426)
  • During the reign of the Zhengtong Emperor ():
    • Empress (皇后; from 1442)
  • During the reign of the Jingtai Emperor ():
    • Empress Emerita (太上皇后; from 1449)
  • During the reign of the Tianshun Emperor ():
    • Empress (皇后; from 1457)
  • During the reign of the Chenghua Emperor ()
    • Empress Dowager Ciyi (慈懿皇太后; from 28 February 1464)
    • Empress Xiàozhuāng Xiànmù Hónghuì Xiǎnrén Gōngtiān Qīnshèng Ruì (孝莊獻穆弘惠顯仁恭天欽聖睿皇后; from 1468)

Death

Empress Dowager Qian died on 26 June 1468, and was interred at Yu ling in the Ming tomb complex near Beijing on 4 September 1468. The Tianshun Emperor specifically stated that she should only be buried next to him, 'after a thousand years of long life.'

References

Sources

  • {{cite book | editor1-last=Carington |editor1-first=Goodrich L. |editor2-last=Fang |editor2-first=Chaoying
  • {{cite web | editor-first=Zhang |editor-last=Tingyu |editor-link=Zhang Tingyu | access-date=5 February 2017
  • {{cite book
  • {{cite book

References

  1. Li Shi. "History of Ming Dynasty (Part I): 二十四史 明史". DeepLogic.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Empress Qian — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report