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Royal Family, Imperial Clan, Jueluo and Their Descendants in Qing Dynasty [1]
1. Let's talk about jade records and their classification in the Qing Dynasty.

Yushu in Qing Dynasty is the genealogy of Aisin Qiaoluo family, where the royal family lived in Qing Dynasty.

Before the Qing dynasty entered the customs, there was no system of compiling royal genealogy, nor did it compile royal genealogy. After the Qing Dynasty entered the customs, in 1652 (that is, the ninth year of Shunzhi), the clan mansion was established to take charge of royal affairs, and the Yushu Map, that is, the royal family tree of the Qing Dynasty, was compiled.

Qing Jade Dies, also known as Aisingiorro Genealogy by later generations, is divided into eight volumes, namely Xingyuan Qing Ji, which records the genealogy of the direct royal family, volume one, volume two, volume three, volume four, volume five, volume one and volume seven, and records the genealogy of Jueluo.

2. The ins and outs of the direct royal family in Qing Dynasty.

Xingyuan Qing Ji recorded the genealogy of the direct royal family, which was first revised in Jiaqing period. At first, it recorded the son and grandson of Emperor Qianlong. In the 19th year of Daoguang (A.D. 1839), when Xing Yuan Qing Ji was revised, the recorded scope changed, and only the son of Emperor Jiaqing, namely the children of Daoguang and his brothers, was recorded. Among the descendants of Emperor Qianlong, except one of Emperor Jiaqing, the descendants of other sons are no longer recorded.

After Emperor Xianfeng ascended the throne, when the Xingyuan Jiqing was rebuilt, the scope of records changed again. Only the branch of Daoguang, that is, the descendants of Xianfeng and his brothers, and the descendants of other princes of Emperor Jiaqing were taken as collateral branches of the direct royal family, which were excluded from the Xingyuan Jiqing and no longer recorded.

Later emperors Tongzhi, Guangxu and Xuantong had no children. Therefore, when the Star Source Celebration is rebuilt every year, it is recorded according to the rules compiled by Xianfeng Dynasty, that is, the descendants of Daoguang are included in the Star Source Celebration.

According to the recording rules in Xing Yuan Qing Ji, only the descendants of Daoguang can be regarded as the direct descendants of the royal family, that is, the descendants of the royal family in a narrow sense.

Daoguang has nine sons, namely Yi Wei, Yi Gang, Yi Ji, Yi Yi, Yi Xin, Yi Xuan, Yi Yi and Yi Yi.

Yi Gang and Yi Ji died when they were babies. Yi Wei, Yi Yi and Yi Yi have no biological sons, but they have adopted children.

Yi Kun, the emperor of Xianfeng, did have two sons. One was born by the queen but died young, and the other was born by Cixi, the later Tongzhi emperor Zai Chun, but he only lived 18 years old and left no children.

Joy had eight sons, three of whom died young. Zaijin, the fifth of the five adult sons, gave birth to three sons, but all died young, and the other four sons also had adult children.

Prince Gong Yixin had four sons, and the third and fourth died young. The eldest son died at the age of 28. He left no children, but he adopted a son. The second son, Zaiying, has four sons.

Yi Xuan, the Prince of Alcohol, had seven sons, three of whom died young, and three of the other four sons had descendants, but the most famous son, Zai Tian (Emperor Guangxu), inherited the throne and had no children.

As mentioned earlier, the direct descendants of the Qing royal family had a small population.