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Empress Dowager Chaoxing: Difference between revisions

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Wang Jinyu, a professor at [[Basingse University]], said that the reason why there are not many photos of the Empress Dowager was because she lived in constant fear of the early-modern Jin superstition of having one's soul snatched by a camera if their photograph was taken. Others believe that there are, in fact, photos of her since she was politically active and suspect that the [[Republic of Jin|ROJ government]] had removed any traces of the Empress Dowager after her assassination.  
Wang Jinyu, a professor at [[Basingse University]], said that the reason why there are not many photos of the Empress Dowager was because she lived in constant fear of the early-modern Jin superstition of having one's soul snatched by a camera if their photograph was taken. Others believe that there are, in fact, photos of her since she was politically active and suspect that the [[Republic of Jin|ROJ government]] had removed any traces of the Empress Dowager after her assassination.  


=== Alleged portraits of Empress Dowager Chaoxing ===
=== Alleged photograh of Empress Dowager Chaoxing ===


=== Daoan illustration ===
=== Daoan illustration ===

Revision as of 12:12, 7 September 2023

Empress Houshiyun
霍诗韵皇后
Empress Dowager Chaoxing
Erdeni Bumba.jpg
Purported portrait of Empress Houshiyun during her marriage to the Zhengyou Emperor, 1859
Empress consort of the Huang dynasty
Tenure29 October 1859 – 20 March 1868
PredecessorEmpress Xiaogongzhang
SuccessorEmpress Gongrangzhang
Empress dowager of the Huang dynasty
Tenure20 March 1868 – 14 February 1898
PredecessorEmpress Dowager Cixi
SuccessorEmpress Dowager Longyu
BornChen Wenxuan
(陳文宣)
(1843-11-29)29 November 1843
(貞祐十一年 十一月 二十九日)
Yonggucheng, Huang Empire
Died28 December 1899(1899-12-28) (aged 56)
(元光十四年 十二月 二十八日)
Tooth Relic Temple, Zhongnanhai, Basingse, Huang Empire
Burial
Spouse
Zhengyou Emperor
(m. 1859; died 1869)
IssueYuanguang Emperor
Full name
Chen Wenxuan
(陳文宣)
Posthumous name
Empress Houshi Chaoxing Zhenhua Zheshun Renhui Chengtian Yushen Zhide Yun
(霍诗超性貞化哲順仁徽成天育聖至德韵皇后
霍诗贞化哲顺仁徽成天育圣至德韵皇后)
HouseLi (李; by birth)
Huang (黃; by marriage)
FatherHuoguang (霍光)
MotherLady Xian
ReligionJin shamanism, Jin N'nhivaranism

Life

Birth

Zhenyou era

Yuanguang era

Assassination

Aftermath

Funeral procession and tomb

Legacy

Photographs and illustrations

Documents note that she was in an official royal family photograph, but its whereabouts are unknown if it perished or was kept hidden by Da Huang's government. Another royal family portrait does exist, but it purported to have been destroyed when the warlord Sun Dianying and his army plundered the Eastern Mausoleum during the early stages of the Wucheng Heavenly Rebellion. The mausoleum complex was methodically stripped down of its precious ornaments, and the entrance to her burial chamber was dynamited. Sun Dianying's army opened Chaoxing's coffin, threw her corpse (said to have been found intact) on the ground, and stole the jewels in the coffin. They also took the massive pearl placed in the empress dowager's mouth to protect her corpse from decomposing (in accordance with Jin tradition). They subsequently tried to burn down the complex as they fled the area when Royalist forces under the command of the Yuanguang emperor stormed it. Royalist forces were able to put out the fire and found her body, which miraculously survived the fire, albeit in a ruinous state. The Yuanguang emperor brought his grandmother's remains along as he and his army fled the central plains, reburying it in the Royalist stronghold in Baixiangshan during the Republican era. After the Corrective Movement and re-establishment of the Huang dynasty in 1943, the Gaozu Emperor ordered the restoration of the complex of Empress Dowager Chaoxing's tomb, and her remains were reburied once more there. When asked why he looted the Eastern mausoleum, Sun Dianying claimed the desecration was revenge for the fallen in the First Cross-Strait War.

Wang Jinyu, a professor at Basingse University, said that the reason why there are not many photos of the Empress Dowager was because she lived in constant fear of the early-modern Jin superstition of having one's soul snatched by a camera if their photograph was taken. Others believe that there are, in fact, photos of her since she was politically active and suspect that the ROJ government had removed any traces of the Empress Dowager after her assassination.

Alleged photograh of Empress Dowager Chaoxing

Daoan illustration