Consort Duan

Consort Duan (d. 1542) was a Ming Dynasty concubine of the Jiajing Emperor. She was one of the emperor's most beloved concubines, but was implicated in an assassination attempt and subsequently executed.[1]

Consort Duan
端妃
BornWuxi, Jiangxi
Died1542
Yingtian
SpouseJiajing Emperor
IssueZhu Shouying, Princess Chang'an
Zhu Luzheng, Princess Ning'an
ClanCao (曹)
FatherCao Cha (曹察)

Biography

Cao was born the daughter of an official in Wuxi, modern Jiangsu Province.[2] It is unknown when she entered the Ming Palace, but she was initially titled Lady Cao (Chinese: 淑人曹氏).

In 1536, Lady Cao gave birth to the emperor's first daughter, Shouying (Chinese: 壽媖), Princess Chang'an. The same year, she was promoted to Imperial Concubine Duan (Chinese: 端嬪) and her father was made a member of the Jinyiwei with authority over 1,000 households.[2] After the first month of his daughter's birth, the emperor held a lavish feast to celebrate.[3]

In 1537, Imperial Concubine Duan was promoted to Consort Duan.[3] She gave birth to the emperor's third daughter in 1539, Luzheng (Chinese: 禄媜).

Palace women uprising

In 1542, the emperor was staying in Consort Duan's quarters. A group of palace women pretended to wait on him whilst there, tied a rope around his neck and attempted to strangle him.[1] They failed to do so and, in the meantime, a palace woman named Zhang Jinlian (Chinese: 張金蓮) alerted Empress Fang. The palace eunuchs revived the emperor and arrested the palace women.[1]

After the attack, the Jiajing Emperor was incapable of speaking, so Empress Fang ordered the palace women executed. As the attack had taken place in Consort Duan's palace, the empress determined that she had conspired with the palace women and sentenced her to death by slow slicing in the marketplace.[1] Her body was then displayed, alongside those of Imperial Concubine Ning and the other palace women.[4] 10 members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers.[4] It was later determined that Consort Duan had not been involved,[1] but she was not granted a posthumous title.

Burial

Zhaosi Hall, a national-level protected site near Shuofang in Wuxi New Area, was owned by Consort Duan's father. An archway near to it is built in the style of an imperial memorial, but has no inscription. Local people reported the presence of a grave tumulus near the arch that had been levelled and, as cedar (Chinese: ; pinyin: nán) sounds similar to the local dialect's word for daughter (Chinese: ; pinyin: nān), the archway is popularly believed to have been erected by Cao in memory of his daughter.[5]

gollark: Yeeees, American healthcare does seem to be uniquely bizarre and wasteful. There are a bunch of theories about this.
gollark: (there are probably, at most, something like a thousand offices getting that)
gollark: This furniture budget thing probably doesn't add up to a significant amount of the total spend, so it's a bad comparison.
gollark: Apparently American healthcare spending is something like 17% of GDP for some insane reason. So it would be a big fraction of the government budget, if they ran it as efficiently as it currently operated.
gollark: Possibly. Paying people if they want to move out seems more reasonable than doing stupid things to local property markets, or whatever, or adjusting taxes so those already there can afford it.

References

Notes

  1. Zhang (1739)
  2. History Office (1620s), volume 181
  3. History Office (1620s), volume 191
  4. History Office (1620s), volume 267
  5. Gu 谷, Yuefei 岳飞 (13 July 2013). "无锡曹端妃无字牌坊穿越470年 系真实版"甄嬛传"" [Consort Duan's blank memorial in Wuxi extends back over 470 years. This is the true "Empresses in the Palace"]. China News (in Chinese). Retrieved 27 June 2017.

Works cited

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.