Puyi talked about Wanrong's death twice before and after: the first time was when Fushun War Criminals Management Office wrote the first draft of My First Half Life. He wrote: "Eight? After the Tenth Five-Year Plan, although she was really liberated physically and mentally like the people in Northeast China, she was immersed in cure a disease and finally died in Harbin, ending her extremely unfortunate life. " Wanrong has never been to Harbin in her life, nor can she die in Harbin. The second time was in the early 1960s, and my first half life was officially published. The book revised the above paragraph and changed it to: "'Eight? When she broke up with me after the first five-year plan, she was already very addicted to cigarettes and was ill and weak. She died in Jilin the following year. "If the word' Jilin' includes the scope of a province, that's not bad, but it doesn't point out the specific location. If it only refers to Jilin City, it is undoubtedly wrong. Second, Ji Ehao's statement: In the book "The Wandering Princess", Ji Ehao said that after they left Yanji, the troops "sent Wanrong to Tumen City on the border between China and North Korea" and "Wanrong Queen was there, and she died alone". Because the army was afraid of bumps on the road, it left Grace behind, refused to let her go to Jiamusi with * * * *, and certainly wouldn't send her to Tumen. Besides, Yanji and Tumen are only two hours away, so there is no transfer significance. Iii. Li's statement: Li described in detail the process of breaking up with Wanrong in his memoirs, and then talked about a rumor about Wanrong's place to go. She wrote: "When the troops retreated from Changchun, the poor last queen of China had to follow the troops. At that time, Chiang Kai-shek launched a civil war, and the troops were fighting for the liberation of China. It is extremely inconvenient to take her. In addition, she was seriously ill and could not take care of herself. When the troops arrived in Yanji, they had to leave her there. Later, they heard that she died in Dunhua. "Who has something to do with empress wanrong? Wanrong, Guo Bouroche, Daur, Zhengbaiqi, 1905 was born in Rongyuan House, Minister of the Interior Office. 1922, Wan Rong, who has reached the age of 17, is famous among the nobles for his dignified and beautiful appearance, fresh and refined, and his piano, chess and calligraphy are pervasive. In the same year, she was elected to the palace and became the last queen in history of qing dynasty. However, Wanrong was elected not because of her beauty and versatility, but because Emperor Puyi drew a circle on her photo and delineated Wanrong's tragic life. Wen Xiu, another girl, was also selected with Wanrong. However, Wenxiu's family power is not as great as Wanrong's, so Wenxiu came second and became the imperial concubine. However, Wan Rong's lucky election seems to be the beginning of her unfortunate fate.
In the days of living in the Forbidden City, Wanrong lived comfortably because of the glory of the mother instrument and the joy of the newlyweds. Her gentleness and liveliness also brought a lot of happiness to Puyi, and her extensive knowledge made Puyi regard her as a confidant. However, Wanrong also has the narrow-mindedness and jealousy that most women have, so the existence of Wen Xiu makes her and Puyi somewhat uncoordinated. /kloc-at the end of 0/924, Puyi was driven out of the Forbidden City, and the honorific title of the emperor became the history of China. He lives in Jingyuan, Tianjin. He is graceful and can embroider. With the passage of time, the weakness of Puyi's personality gradually exposed, and the physical defects eventually led Wen Xiu to file for divorce. Puyi, on the other hand, blamed Wan Rong for all the faults that "Princess Knife Revolution" brought him great shame. Puyi fled to Changchun and became a puppet of Manchukuo, turning a deaf ear to Wanrong. At the same time, Wanrong's actions were closely monitored and restricted by the Japanese, which made Wanrong's body and spirit on the verge of collapse. So Wanrong indulged herself more and more, she was manic and irritable, she was addicted to drugs, and even had an affair with the guards around Puyi. In short, Wanrong tried her best to anger Puyi. Finally, she began to live in the cold palace for 10 years, which made her change from a beautiful and quiet beauty to a wooden madman. At 1946, with the surrender of the Japanese army, a large group of royalty and relatives were left behind, and the son Puyi also fled hastily. Lonely Wanrong was transferred to the prison in Yanji, Jilin with * * *, and finally lost her fragrance with the wind and turned into a pile of loess, ending her once enviable, resentful, pitiful and sighing life. Wanrong has a rough life. She is a noble queen. Why did she end up miserable? Guo does not fall? Wanrong, 1905, was born in Rongyuan House, Minister of the Interior. Her real name is Mu Hong and her real name is Zhilian. 1922, Wanrong, who has reached the age of 16, comes out dignified and beautiful, fresh and refined, with fine eyebrows, and is a natural beauty embryo. And the piano, chess, calligraphy and painting are quite famous among the nobles. In the same year, she was elected to the palace, became the wife of Pu Yi, the grandson of the Qing Dynasty, and became the last queen.
Wanrong and Puyi took a photo of Zhang Zhengui. Wanrong received a good education since childhood, and her father invited an English teacher. Influenced by western culture, Wanrong gradually influenced Puyi. They left precious memories, riding bicycles, taking photos and so on, and their married life was very sweet.
1924, Wanrong followed Puyi to live in Bird, wearing cheongsam and high heels, which made her look more free, not as stiff as in the palace, and became a "modern woman" in the concession for a period of time.
The good times didn't last long. Until 193 1, Shu Fei Wenxiu divorced Puyi. This is because of Puyi's own reasons and various factors that led to the disagreement between Wanrong and Wen Xiu, which made Puyi more and more indifferent to Wanrong. She learned to smoke in her depressed heart. Puyi knew there was something wrong with her manners, and sent a eunuch named Zhao Rongsheng to wait on the queen to smoke.
In his autobiography, Puyi wrote the fact that Empress Wanrong was attacked by a Japanese officer and gave birth to an illegitimate child. 1935 Pu Yi, who learned the truth, immediately threw the child into the stove and burned it, but told Wanrong that the child was raised by her brother and kept the cause of death secret. 1945, Manchukuo fell, Wanrong fled with Puyi, and was detained until 1946, when she died and was hastily buried. The exact location is nowhere to be found. She was only 40 years old that year.
Note: Original articles decrypted by anecdotes are not allowed to be reproduced without permission (the pictures are from the Internet, and the copyright belongs to the author).
How did Wanrong die? Wanrong, who stayed in Yanji prison, spent the last ten days of her miserable life alone, without any relatives or members of the royal family. There are many rumors about her death in her family and society, among which the more influential ones can be summarized into the following three types:
First, Puyi's statement: Puyi talked about Wanrong's death twice before and after: the first time was when Fushun War Criminals Management Office wrote the first draft of My First Half Life. He wrote: "Eight? After the Tenth Five-Year Plan, although she was really liberated physically and mentally like the people in Northeast China, she was immersed in cure a disease and finally died in Harbin, ending her extremely unfortunate life. " Wanrong has never been to Harbin in her life, nor can she die in Harbin. The second time was in the early 1960s, and my first half life was officially published. The book revised the above paragraph and changed it to: "'Eight? When she broke up with me after the first five-year plan, she was already very addicted to cigarettes and was ill and weak. She died in Jilin the following year. "If the word' Jilin' includes the scope of a province, that's not bad, but it doesn't point out the specific location. If it only refers to Jilin City, it is undoubtedly wrong. Second, Ji Ehao's statement: In the book "The Wandering Princess", Ji Ehao said that after they left Yanji, the troops "sent Wanrong to Tumen City on the border between China and North Korea" and "Wanrong Queen was there, and she died alone". Because the army was afraid of bumps on the road, it left Grace behind, refused to let her go to Jiamusi with * * * *, and certainly wouldn't send her to Tumen. Besides, Yanji and Tumen are only two hours away, so there is no transfer significance. Iii. Li's statement: Li described in detail the process of breaking up with Wanrong in his memoirs, and then talked about a rumor about Wanrong's place to go. She wrote: "When the troops retreated from Changchun, the poor last queen of China had to follow the troops. At that time, Chiang Kai-shek launched a civil war, and the troops were fighting for the liberation of China. It is extremely inconvenient to take her. In addition, she was seriously ill and could not take care of herself. When the troops arrived in Yanji, they had to leave her there. Later, they heard that she died in Dunhua. "The rumor of' dying in Dunhua' comes from a report of * * * Central News Agency. The content is as follows: Wan Rong died in Dunhua Fake Generation-Puyi testified that Qiu Hong's soul returned to Taixu [Central News Agency] on Tokyo Day. It is widely rumored that Qiu Hong died after the Puppet Manchus in Dunhua. During the invasion of Changchun by the * * * army, Iraq once returned from Tonghua. Gouan was on holiday for fourteen years, and many days later, before the commander of the * * * army retreated, Iraq was forced to Yongji and exhibited in Yongji police station. Xuan was taken to Dunhua and transferred to Yanji. At present, Yanji was sent to Dunhua, where he died of poverty and illness, and his entourage had already dispersed, and he died in Dunhua in late August. Dunhua is an old area in Jilin Province, and the army of * * * has never been here, and the author also stated that it was written according to "rumors", so its reliability is obviously limited. It has been found out that the above three statements are unfounded rumors and all are mistakes. According to a living witness, Wanrong died in Yanji. The witness's name is Guo. During the period of 1985 1 1, he was hospitalized due to illness and became a patient friend with Park Heng-dao, a cadre in linkou county, Heilongjiang Province. They talked about the book The Last Queen and the Imperial Lady. Guo said that the death of Wanrong in the book was wrong, so he talked about his experience as a witness. At that time, Guo was seventy-four years old. He was the first soldier who rushed into the Puppet Manchuria Palace when * * * invaded Changchun. His army was called the "Railway Army" at that time, and it was the task of the army to escort and guard the captured puppet Manchuria. It is said that the combat knives given to Puyi by the Japanese were carried by Guo from Changchun to Yanji. 1On March 20th, 986, Comrade Park Heng-dao wrote a letter to the author of The Last Queen and Empress, reflecting the new evidence provided by Lao Guo Man about her elegant death. The letter wrote: "According to him, Wanrong did die in Yanji Jiangbei Prison. Because she was "seriously ill" as mentioned in the book, and the living conditions and medical conditions at that time were extremely poor, she finally died in prison. After his death, they (Guo et al.) swept Lao Kang and threw it on the northern mountain. Because he is a queen, unlike a mortal, he remembers the plot, date and year very clearly. " Later, three comrades, Chen, Yu Nai and Yu, investigated the place and time of Wanrong's death. They "read some original materials that may be seen at present, and visited some old comrades who were exposed to this situation at that time, including those who took photos of Wanrong's body", thus obtaining accurate and reliable evidence. On this basis, the process and background of Wan Rong's evacuation from Changchun until his death (May 3, 65438+June 20, 0946) are summarized as follows: As many recalled articles introduced, Wan Rong was temporarily detained in the detention center of Jilin Public Security Bureau when he was transferred from Changchun to Jilin City. At that time, she was seriously ill, sometimes delirious, unable to take care of herself, and relied entirely on her attendants to serve her. In order to maintain her life, she needs to be supplied with a proper amount of opium every day. As for her being transferred to Jilin City, it was not because she was a queen, let alone regarded her as a political prisoner. Because her relatives in Changchun refused to take her back to raise her, democracy had to be transferred with her under the extremely difficult conditions caused by the war. Shortly after Wanrong moved to Jilin City, the * * * army occupied Changchun and approached Jilin City. In this case, on the night of May 23rd, 1946, she was carried on the train again, transferred to Yanji City, and placed in Yanji Prison (the former site is now Yanji Art Theatre). When 10 decided again in June that she was with Aisingiorro? Hao, Pu Jian and other six people transferred to Mudanjiang and then sent Jiamusi, because she was terminally ill and couldn't make it because of the bumpy journey. Had to go to Essien Giro? Hao and other five people were sent to Jiamusi and were soon allowed to move freely and go their separate ways. In Eisingiro? On June 20th, after Hao left 10, the last queen in the history of China finally passed away. After death, he was buried in Nanshan, Yanji City. In a well-preserved original registration form, the exact time of her death was clearly recorded: "She died at 5 o'clock before noon on June 20th". The findings of Chen et al. are generally consistent with the evidence provided by Lao. At this point, it can be concluded that Wanrong died: she did die in Yanji Prison, which has now been converted into Yanji Art Theatre, then known as "Jiangbei Prison". As for the burial place, Guo said it was "swept with an old kang and thrown on the north mountain", while Chen and others said it was "buried in the south mountain of Yanji City". Under the circumstances at that time, we can only simply deal with the aftermath, take pictures of the remains, archive the bodies, and then find a suitable ravine to bury them without leaving a grave. The difference between "North Mountain" and "South Mountain" is probably caused by Guo's speech according to the location where he lived in that year. It is said that it is buried in the mountains, and the official title should be "Nanshan in Yanji City". As a graceful queen, why do you say that her life is very bitter? In the eyes of ordinary people, you can be a concubine in the palace and be happy all your life. Because the emperor is a favored son of heaven, being able to serve him can definitely touch the light. Therefore, women in ancient times were so crowded that they all wanted to enter the palace, hoping to be liked by the emperor and chosen by him. Will they be happy after they really become the emperor's favorite concubines? Actually, not necessarily.
The grace of Qing Dynasty is a good example. When the Qing Dynasty was on the verge of collapse, Wanrong's life was not very good, even as a queen favored by the emperor. Her full name is Guo Buluo Wanrong, the wife of Puyi in Qing Dynasty, and the last empress of Qing Dynasty and China, and later she was the empress of the puppet Manchukuo. In fact, Wanrong's background is very unusual. Her father was Guo Buluo Rongyuan, then Minister of the Interior. His father has always advocated equality between men and women and believed that girls should receive education. So in addition to teaching Wan Rong to read, practice calligraphy and play the piano and draw, he also asked the teacher to teach Wan Rong to learn English. As a young lady of a large family, Wanrong has a rich living environment and a prominent family status.
/kloc-Wanrong, 0/6 years old, became the last queen in history of qing dynasty after being elected to the palace because of her dignified and beautiful appearance and her mastery of piano, chess, calligraphy and painting. At that time, Puyi loved her very much when she first entered the palace, and invited an English teacher for her. However, due to Puyi's physical reasons, they never had children after marriage. Because of Puyi's physical problems, they didn't sleep in separate rooms. Every night, they are elegant and lonely in the dark. Later, they got into the habit of sleeping with the door open. At that time, Wanrong was still young, which was really pitiful.
Later, Wanrong was reunited with Puyi under the leadership of the Japanese, but Wanrong's everything had to be arranged by the Japanese, and she dared not even step out of the door, so she lost her personal freedom.
In the part describing the period of Manchu emperor, Puyi wrote: "Earlier, on the way from Tianjin to Dalian, the queen's brother sold her sister to a Japanese officer in the same trade for some benefits. I didn't know this fact until late." On 1935, Emperor Puyi learned that the Queen had an illegitimate child, expressing great anger and humiliation. At the same time, he was worried that Japan would learn this fact and use it politically, so he immediately threw it into the stove and burned it after the Queen gave birth. He also wrote that Wanrong believed that she entrusted her children to her brother for support and gave her brother support every month. It is reported that the relationship between Emperor Puyi and Wanrong, who suffered from mental disorder after taking drugs, is not good, and the relationship between husband and wife is actually nominal. Wanrong, the last queen, thought that her illegitimate child was secretly raised by her brother until her death. For the world, the whereabouts of this child has always been a historical mystery. A few days ago, Popular Publishing House was shocked: "Wanrong's illegitimate child was born and was thrown into the boiler by the last emperor Puyi." In the book, Pu Yi described it like this: "1935, I found the problem because she was pregnant and giving birth. I was in an indescribable mood. I was angry and didn't want the Japanese to know. The only way is to vent my anger on her and behave gracefully. Maybe I still have a dream when I die, dreaming that her child is still alive. She didn't know that the child was put into the boiler and melted at birth. All she knows is that her brother is raising her children outside, and he has to take a raising fee from her every month. She broke up with me after the' August 15 th', and she was very addicted to cigarettes and was very ill. She died in Jilin the next year. " [Transferred from Tiexue Community: //bbs.tiexue/] There is also an inside story about Wanrong's drug abuse and adultery: "In fact, she took drugs because of her father and brother's idea, and even on the issue of adultery, she was influenced by her brother. I learned very late that as early as on her way from Tianjin to Dalian, her brother sold her sister to a Japanese officer in the same trade for some benefits. " Share with:
Wanrong is really beautiful. Why does Puyi like grace and grace? In today's society, she doesn't need makeup or plastic surgery. She must be a beautiful woman. Unfortunately, Puyi had no fertility, which led to Wanrong having an affair with the bodyguard and getting pregnant. After Pu Yi knew it, she threw her daughter into the boiler, and since then, she has absorbed opium gracefully, and since then, she has embarked on a road of no return from a former beauty. This is also the sorrow of her life, but Puyi still loves her. Unfortunately, they were born at the wrong time, a hundred years earlier.
Introduction to Wanrong How did the last Wanrong die? Wanrong, Guo Bouroche, Daur, Zhengbaiqi, 1905 was born in Rongyuan House, Minister of the Interior Office. 1922, Wan Rong, who has reached the age of 17, is famous among the nobles for her dignified and beautiful appearance, fresh and refined, and her piano, chess and calligraphy are pervasive. In the same year, she was elected to the palace and became the last queen in history of qing dynasty. However, Wanrong was elected not because of her beauty and versatility, but because Emperor Puyi drew a circle on her photo and delineated Wanrong's tragic life. Wen Xiu, another girl, was also selected with Wanrong. However, Wenxiu's family power is not as great as Wanrong's, so Wenxiu came second and became the imperial concubine. However, Wan Rong's lucky election seems to be the beginning of her unfortunate fate. In the days of living in the Forbidden City, Wanrong lived comfortably because of the glory of the mother instrument and the joy of the newlyweds. Her gentleness and liveliness also brought a lot of happiness to Puyi, and her extensive knowledge made Puyi regard her as a confidant. However, Wanrong also has the narrow-mindedness and jealousy that most women have, so the existence of Wen Xiu makes her and Puyi somewhat uncoordinated.
/kloc-at the end of 0/924, Puyi was driven out of the Forbidden City, and the honorific title of the emperor became the history of China. He lives in Jingyuan, Tianjin. He is graceful and can embroider. With the passage of time, the weakness of Puyi's personality gradually exposed, and the physical defects eventually led Wen Xiu to file for divorce. Puyi, on the other hand, blamed Wan Rong for all the faults that the "Princess Knife Revolution" brought him great shame. Puyi fled to Changchun and became a puppet of Manchukuo, turning a deaf ear to Wanrong. At the same time, Wanrong's actions were closely monitored and restricted by the Japanese, which made Wanrong's body and spirit on the verge of collapse. So Wanrong indulged herself more and more, she was manic and irritable, she was addicted to drugs, and even had an affair with the guards around Puyi. In short, Wanrong tried her best to anger Puyi. Finally, she began to live in the cold palace for 10 years, which made her change from a beautiful and quiet beauty to a wooden madman. At 1946, with the surrender of the Japanese army, a large group of royalty and relatives were left behind, and the son Puyi also fled hastily. Lonely Wanrong was transferred to the prison in Yanji, Jilin with * * *, and finally lost her fragrance with the wind and turned into a pile of loess, ending her once enviable, resentful, pitiful and sighing life. Wanrong died in Yanji. The witness's name is Guo. During the period of 1985 1 1, he was hospitalized due to illness and became a patient friend with Park Heng-dao, a cadre in linkou county, Heilongjiang Province. They talked about the book The Last Queen and the Imperial Lady. Guo said that the death of Wanrong in the book was wrong, so he talked about his experience as a witness. At that time, Guo was seventy-four years old. He was the first soldier who rushed into the Puppet Manchuria Palace when * * * invaded Changchun. His army was called the "Railway Army" at that time, and it was the task of the army to escort and guard the captured puppet Manchuria. It is said that the combat knives given to Puyi by the Japanese were carried by Guo from Changchun to Yanji. 1On March 20th, 986, Comrade Park Heng-dao wrote a letter to the author of The Last Queen and Empress, reflecting the new evidence provided by Lao Guo Man about her elegant death. The letter wrote: "According to him, Wanrong did die in Yanji Jiangbei Prison. Because she was "seriously ill" as mentioned in the book, and the living conditions and medical conditions at that time were extremely poor, she finally died in prison. After his death, they (Guo et al.) swept Lao Kang and threw it on the northern mountain. Because he is a queen, unlike a mortal, he remembers the plot, date and year very clearly. " Later, Chen, Yu Tianzhen and Yu investigated the place and time of Wanrong's death. They "read some original materials that may be seen at present, and visited some old comrades who were exposed to this situation at that time, including those who took photos of Wanrong's body", thus obtaining accurate and reliable evidence. On this basis, the process and background of Wan Rong's evacuation from Changchun until his death (May 3, 65438+June 20, 0946) are summarized as follows: As many recalled articles introduced, Wan Rong was temporarily detained in the detention center of Jilin Public Security Bureau when he was transferred from Changchun to Jilin City. At that time, she was seriously ill, sometimes delirious, unable to take care of herself, and relied entirely on her attendants to serve her. In order to maintain her life, she needs to be supplied with a proper amount of opium every day. As for her being transferred to Jilin City, it was not because she was a queen, let alone regarded her as a political prisoner. Because her relatives in Changchun refused to take her back to raise her, democracy had to be transferred with her under the extremely difficult conditions caused by the war. Shortly after Wanrong moved to Jilin City, the * * * army occupied Changchun and approached Jilin City. In this case, on the night of May 23rd, 1946, she was carried on the train again, transferred to Yanji City, and placed in Yanji Prison (the former site is now Yanji Art Theatre). When 10 decided again in June that she was with Aisingiorro? Hao, Pu Jian and other six people transferred to Mudanjiang and then sent Jiamusi, because she was terminally ill and couldn't make it because of the bumpy journey. Had to go to Essien Giro? Hao and other five people were sent to Jiamusi and were soon allowed to move freely and go their separate ways. In Eisingiro? On June 20th, after Hao left 10, the last queen in the history of China finally passed away. After death, he was buried in Nanshan, Yanji City. In a well-preserved original registration form, the exact time of her death was clearly recorded: "She died at 5 o'clock before noon on June 20th". The findings of Chen et al. are generally consistent with the evidence provided by Lao. At this point, it can be concluded that Wanrong died: she did die in Yanji Prison, which has now been converted into Yanji Art Theatre, then known as "Jiangbei Prison". As for the burial place, Guo said it was "swept with an old kang and thrown on the north mountain", while Chen and others said it was "buried in the south mountain of Yanji City". Under the circumstances at that time, we can only simply deal with the aftermath, take pictures of the remains, archive the bodies, and then find a suitable ravine to bury them without leaving a grave. The difference between "North Mountain" and "South Mountain" is probably caused by Guo's speech according to the location where he lived in that year. It is said that it is buried in the mountains, and the official title should be "Nanshan in Yanji City". Qing (422) Wanrong (8)