Fuca clan
Fuca (Manchu: ᡶᡠᠴᠠ
ᡥᠠᠯᠠ ; Chinese: 富察氏) was a clan of Manchu nobility. After the demise of the dynasty, some of its descendants sinicized their clan name to the Chinese surnames Fu (富/傅) or Li (李).
Notable figures
Males
- Arantai (阿蘭泰; d. 1699), served as the Minister of Works from 1687–1688
- Funingga (富寧安; d. 1728), Arantai's son; political figure
- Maci (1652–1739), political figure
- Fuheng (1720–1770), Maci's nephew; political and military figure
- Fulong'an (福隆安; 1746–1784), Fuheng's second son
- Fuk'anggan (1754–1796), Fuheng's son; general
- Mingliang (明亮; 1736–1822), Fuheng's nephew
- Mingrui (d. 1768), Fuheng's nephew; general
- Fumin (福敏; 1673–1756), official
- Jingshou (景壽; 1829–1889), served as one of the Eight Regents of the Tongzhi Emperor
- Zhiduan (志端; d. 1871), Jingshou's son by Princess Shou'en
- Prince Consort
Date | Prince Consort | Princess |
---|---|---|
1753 | Mingliang | Yuntao's fourth daughter (1736–1825) by secondary consort Fanggiya |
1760 | Fulong'an | Princess Hejia (1745–1767), the Qianlong Emperor's fourth daughter by Imperial Noble Consort Chunhui (Su) |
1845 | Jingshou | Princess Shou'en (1831–1859), the Daoguang Emperor's sixth daughter by Empress Xiaojingcheng (Khorchin Borjigit) |
1866 | Zhiduan | Princess Rongshou (1854–1924), Yixin's first daughter by primary consort (Gūwalgiya) |
1905 | Songchun (松椿; d. 1927) | Yixuan's third daughter (1887–1914) by secondary consort (Ligiya) |
Females
- Imperial Consort
Imperial Consort | Emperor | Sons | Daughters |
---|---|---|---|
Primary consort (Gundei; d. 1620) | Nurhaci | 5. Prince Manggūltai (1587–1633) 10. Prince Degelei (1597–1635) | 3. (Mangguji; 1590–1636) |
Empress Xiaoxianchun (1712–1748) | Qianlong Emperor | 3. Princess Hejing (1731–1792) | |
Imperial Noble Consort Zhemin (d. 1735) | 1. Yonghuang, Prince Ding'an (1728–1750) | ||
Consort Jin (d. 1823) | |||
Concubine Tian (1789–1845) | Daoguang Emperor | ||
Imperial Noble Consort Shushen (1859–1904) | Tongzhi Emperor |
- Princess Consort
Princess Consort | Prince | Sons | Daughters |
---|---|---|---|
Secondary consort | Prince Šurhaci | 2. (E'enzhe; 1584 – 1638 or 1639) 3. (b. 1588) | |
Primary consort | General Tanggūdai | 1. General Niekesai (1601–1666) | |
Mistress | Fuquan, Prince Yuxian | ||
Yunzhi, Prince Chengyin | |||
Yunyou, Prince Chundu | 9. Princess (1726–1745) | ||
Primary consort | Yuntao, Prince Lüyi | ||
Secondary consort | Yinxiang, Prince Yixian | ||
Mistress | Yunlu, Prince Zhuangke | ||
Primary consort | Prince Yunqi | ||
Yongrong, Prince Zhizhuang | 1. Miancong (1766–1780) | ||
Yongxing, Prince Chengzhe | 1. Mianqin, Prince Cheng (1768–1820) 2. Prince Mianyi (1771–1809) |
gollark: I operate a matrix homeserver, although matrix has nonnegligible bee density. We *could* use APIONET #g.
gollark: osmarks.net's source is on git too, it might just be somewhat outdated if I'm doing testing.
gollark: Interesting fact: unlike your "git push and have the site recompile" setups, osmarks.net is always locally compiled on my laptop and submitted to osmarks.net over SCP.
gollark: I will vote on it in the unknowable future.
gollark: Gitea was easy enough, just had to `pacman -S gitea`, edit a several hundred line config file, `systemctl enable --now gitea`.
See also
References
- Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing (Qing Shi Gao) (in Chinese).
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