Prince Yu (裕)

Prince Yu of the First Rank, or simply Prince Yu, was the title of a princely peerage used in China during the Manchu-led Qing dynasty (1644–1912). As the Prince Yu peerage was not awarded "iron-cap" status, this meant that each successive bearer of the title would normally start off with a title downgraded by one rank vis-à-vis that held by his predecessor. However, the title would generally not be downgraded to any lower than a feng'en fuguo gong except under special circumstances.

Prince Yu of the First Rank
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese和碩裕親王
Simplified Chinese和硕裕亲王
Manchu name
Manchu scriptᡥᠣᡧᠣᡳ
ᡝᠯᡤᡳᠶᡝᠨ
ᠴᡳᠨ ᠸᠠᠩ
Romanizationhošoi elgiyen cin wang

The first bearer of the title was Fuquan (1653–1703), the Shunzhi Emperor's second son. In 1667, Fuquan was granted the title "Prince Yu of the First Rank" by his third brother, the Kangxi Emperor. The peerage was passed down over ten generations and held by 12 persons.

Members of the Prince Yu peerage

Portrait of Guanglu, Prince Yu
  • Fuquan (1653 – 1703) (1st), the Shunzhi Emperor's second son, held the title Prince Yu of the First Rank from 1667 to 1703, posthumously honoured as Prince Yu Xian of the First Rank (裕憲親王)
    • Baotai (保泰; 1682 – 1730) (2nd), Fuquan's third son, held the title Prince Yu of the First Rank from 1703 to 1724, stripped of his title in 1724
      • Guangshan (廣善; 1697–1745), Baotai's eldest son, designated as Baotai's hereditary prince from 1722 to 1724, stripped of his heir apparent position and demoted to a grace defender duke in 1724, stripped of his title in 1728
    • Baoshou (保綬; 1684–1706) (posthumously honoured), Fuquan's fifth son, posthumously honoured as Prince Yu Dao of the First Rank (裕悼親王) in 1725
      • Guangning (廣寧; 1705–1739) (3rd), Baoshou's second son, held the title Prince Yu of the First Rank from 1724 to 1726, stripped of his title in 1726
      • Guanglu (廣祿; 1706–1785) (4th), Baoshou's third son, held the title Prince Yu of the First Rank from 1726 to 1785, posthumously honoured as Prince Yu Zhuang of the First Rank (裕莊親王)
        • Lianghuan (亮煥; 1740–1808) (5th), Guanglu's 12th son, held the title Prince Yu of the Second Rank from 1735 to 1808, posthumously honoured as Prince Yuxi of the Second Rank (裕僖郡王)
          • Hengcun (恆存; 1762–1796) (posthumously honoured), Lianghuan's second son, posthumously honoured as a third-rank prince in 1808
            • Wenhe (文和; 1781–1815) (6th), Hengcun's eldest son, held the title of a third-rank prince from 1808 to 1815
              • Xiangduan (祥端; 1799–1836) (7th), Wenhe's eldest son, held the title of a fourth-rank prince from 1816 to 1836
            • Wenjie (文傑; 1783–1834), Hengcun's second son, held the title of a grace general
              • Xiangrui (祥瑞; 1807–1837), Wenjie's third son, held the title of a grace general
                • Jishan (繼善; 1829–1861) (8th), Xiangrui's son and Xiangduan's heir, held the title of a grace defender duke from 1836 to 1861
                  • Rongyu (榮毓; 1846–1897) (9th), Jishan's eldest son, held the title of a grace defender duke from 1861 to 1897
                    • Kuizhang (魁璋; born 1894) (10th), Rongyu's eldest son, held the title of a grace defender duke
                      • Yuedi (岳棣; 1913–1935), Kuizhang's son
                        • Dasheng (達聲; born 1932), Yuedi's son

Cadet lines

Fuqian's line

  • Changquan (昌全; 1676-1677), Fuquan's first son
  • Zhansheng (詹升; 1678–1681), Fuquan's second son
  • Bao'an (保安; 1683–1686), Fuquan's fourth son
  • Baoyong (寶永; 1701–1705), Fuquan's sixth son

Family tree

adoption
Fuquan
福全
(1653–1703)
Prince Yuxian of the First Rank
裕憲親王
(1667–1703)
Baotai
保泰
(1682–1730)
Prince Yu of the First Rank
裕親王
(1703–1724)
(stripped of his title)
Baoshou
保綬
(1684–1706)
Prince Yudao of the First Rank
裕悼親王
(posthumously awarded)
Guangshan
廣善
(1697–1745)
Shizi
世子
(1722–1724)
(stripped of his title)
Guangling
廣靈
(1705–1739)
Prince Yu of the First Rank
裕親王
(1724–1726)
(stripped of his title)
Guanglu
廣祿
(1706–1785)
Prince Yuzhuang of the First Rank
裕莊親王
(1726–1785)
Lianghuan
亮煥
(1740–1808)
Prince Yuxi of the Second Rank
裕僖郡王
(1786–1808)
Hengcun
恆存
(1762–1796)
Beile
貝勒
(posthumously awarded)
Wenhe
文和
(1781–1815)
Beile
貝勒
(1808–1815)
Wenjie
文傑
(1783–1834)
Feng'en Jiangjun
奉恩將軍
Xiangduan
祥端
(1799–1836)
Feng'en Zhenguo Gong
奉恩鎮國公
(1816–1836)
Xiangrui
祥瑞
(1807–1837)
Feng'en Jiangjun
奉恩將軍
Jishan
繼善
(1829–1861)
Feng'en Zhenguo Gong
奉恩鎮國公
(1836–1861)
Rongyu
榮毓
(1846–1897)
Feng'en Zhenguo Gong
奉恩鎮國公
(1861–1897)
Kuizhang
魁璋
(1894–?)
Feng'en Zhenguo Gong
奉恩鎮國公
(1898–?)
Yuedi
岳棣
(1913–1935)
Dasheng
達聲
(1932–?)
gollark: I looked.
gollark: I guess *hatchlings* or lower-time eggs would be in demand, but... random new releases?
gollark: If people want them they can just go to the cave.
gollark: You know, with TJ09 meddling a dragon *could* become its own parent...
gollark: It looked like you'd somehow created a loop before I reread it.

See also

References

  • Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing (Qing Shi Gao). Volume 219. China.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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