I felt bad for Lady Yehenala Wanzhen. She was resentful towards her older sister Cixi for taking away her son despite the improvement of their family reputation thanks to Cixi. I was under the impression of what Puyi said about Lady Wanzhen being a scary woman like Cixi. Since Zaitian was taken to the Forbidden City became emperor Guangxu, Lady Wanzhen didn't properly raise her other children well. She was depressed, anxious, and irritable during the Guangxu Era. Zaitian was her only surviving son and she missed him terribly. If she happened to learn the news of her son was placed under house arrest and possibly poisoned to death by Cixi, Lady Wanzhen could hate and curse Cixi under her dying breath.
Looking at the resentment she had for Cixi and how it affected her personality, I would not be surprised if this also affected her relationship with Yixuan's concubines and step children since Puyi had to have gotten the information on Wanzhen being a scary woman from somewhere and it was most likely his father and biological grandmother who lived with her when she was alive.
To be fair Guangxu likely would have died of starvation like the others, none of her kids lived. One has to wonder if she actually didn't want her husband to have any heirs with her blood
Thank you for telling her story. You chose wonderful photographs for this video. I think you are right in believing that it was Guangxu's parents' great fortune to have died before the Hundred Days Reforms. Thank you again for this video.
I like Ci Xi less every time I learn something new about her. She spent so much energy trying to arrange her family standing she destroyed the Great Qing. So it doesn't matter anyway
I wonder what the relationship between Lady Yehe Nara and her step children was like? I heard that Puyi described in his memoirs that his step grandmother was an abusive person who terrorized the servants, her own children, and the step children born to Yixuan's concubines. Given that Puyi was born after Lady Yehe Nara died, is it plausible that his father Zaifeng and his biological grandmother, Lady Liugiya who was one of Yixuan's concubines, had a bad relationship with Lady Yehe Nara given that they would be the only sources for Puyi to draw his information from since they lived with her when she was still alive?
@@kasvinimuniandy4178 Lady Yehe Nara was married to Puyi's grandfather, Yixuan, Prince Chunxian of the First Rank, as his wife. Puyi counts as Lady Yehe Nara's step grandson since none of Yixuan's children by her survived or were able to have children of their own. This left the succession of Yixuan's title to the sons he had by his concubine, Lady Liugiya, who is Puyi's biological grandmother. Puyi's father, Zaifeng, who is Yixuan's fifth son and Lady Liugiya's eldest born son, was chosen to succeed the Prince Chun peerage after his father's death.
@@SolitaryBee-wd5wf Thank you! I see.. wow... The royal dynasty really had to depend on Prince Chunxian's lineage in the end, didn't it? Puyi's insider information must have been invaluable to researchers.
That was very aful from Ci Xi, to "Steal the Son from her Little Sister and don´t let him see his Mother, only short befor the lieve the World. It must be the Hell for her do not know how goes her child and over all her Sadness about it, she don´t realy care about her another Kids.😰😢 If Yeha Nara were become a imperial Woman, I think her Life goes another way or another War in the Inner Court.🥴😵💫. But it was good She was dying befor her Son, so she don´t must see what happen with him. Thank you Bing to tell us her Story.
I felt bad for Lady Yehenala Wanzhen. She was resentful towards her older sister Cixi for taking away her son despite the improvement of their family reputation thanks to Cixi. I was under the impression of what Puyi said about Lady Wanzhen being a scary woman like Cixi. Since Zaitian was taken to the Forbidden City became emperor Guangxu, Lady Wanzhen didn't properly raise her other children well. She was depressed, anxious, and irritable during the Guangxu Era. Zaitian was her only surviving son and she missed him terribly. If she happened to learn the news of her son was placed under house arrest and possibly poisoned to death by Cixi, Lady Wanzhen could hate and curse Cixi under her dying breath.
Looking at the resentment she had for Cixi and how it affected her personality, I would not be surprised if this also affected her relationship with Yixuan's concubines and step children since Puyi had to have gotten the information on Wanzhen being a scary woman from somewhere and it was most likely his father and biological grandmother who lived with her when she was alive.
Unfortunately wanzhen died before Zaitain himself died. So sad
To be fair Guangxu likely would have died of starvation like the others, none of her kids lived. One has to wonder if she actually didn't want her husband to have any heirs with her blood
Ci Xi ruined what was left of the QIng empire.
Thank you for telling her story. You chose wonderful photographs for this video. I think you are right in believing that it was Guangxu's parents' great fortune to have died before the Hundred Days Reforms. Thank you again for this video.
This is actually a really sad video. I feel so bad for Wanzhen and Guangxu. Cixi is terrible.
I like Ci Xi less every time I learn something new about her. She spent so much energy trying to arrange her family standing she destroyed the Great Qing. So it doesn't matter anyway
The photos of the gardens are beautiful! May i ask where they are from?
Prince Gong’s mansion.
@@ancientchinesehistorychannel Thank you!
Everybody from the govt that died before the Japanese and other countries that wanted to take a piece of China, were lucky in my eyes
I wonder what the relationship between Lady Yehe Nara and her step children was like? I heard that Puyi described in his memoirs that his step grandmother was an abusive person who terrorized the servants, her own children, and the step children born to Yixuan's concubines. Given that Puyi was born after Lady Yehe Nara died, is it plausible that his father Zaifeng and his biological grandmother, Lady Liugiya who was one of Yixuan's concubines, had a bad relationship with Lady Yehe Nara given that they would be the only sources for Puyi to draw his information from since they lived with her when she was still alive?
How was Puyi related to Yehe Nara?
@@kasvinimuniandy4178 Lady Yehe Nara was married to Puyi's grandfather, Yixuan, Prince Chunxian of the First Rank, as his wife. Puyi counts as Lady Yehe Nara's step grandson since none of Yixuan's children by her survived or were able to have children of their own. This left the succession of Yixuan's title to the sons he had by his concubine, Lady Liugiya, who is Puyi's biological grandmother. Puyi's father, Zaifeng, who is Yixuan's fifth son and Lady Liugiya's eldest born son, was chosen to succeed the Prince Chun peerage after his father's death.
@@SolitaryBee-wd5wf Thank you! I see.. wow... The royal dynasty really had to depend on Prince Chunxian's lineage in the end, didn't it? Puyi's insider information must have been invaluable to researchers.
That was very aful from Ci Xi, to "Steal the Son from her Little Sister and don´t let him see his Mother, only short befor the lieve the World.
It must be the Hell for her do not know how goes her child and over all her Sadness about it, she don´t realy care about her another Kids.😰😢
If Yeha Nara were become a imperial Woman, I think her Life goes another way or another War in the Inner Court.🥴😵💫.
But it was good She was dying befor her Son, so she don´t must see what happen with him.
Thank you Bing to tell us her Story.
May I know which movie the scene from 1.13 is from? Thank you.
ruclips.net/video/Dw-qjjgpOs0/видео.html
@@ancientchinesehistorychannel Thank you so much.
@@ancientchinesehistorychannel Oh, I remember this show. I found it very interesting because of the Japanese involvement.
That's heartbreaking... Just heartbreaking.
Wait, so how was Puyi related to Yehe Nara?