One month before the wedding, the emperor ordered the prime minister of the dynasty to go to the west corridor of the back hall to see the princess's dowry items: pearls, nine colorful golden pheasants, four rockhoppers, a gorgeous dress embroidered with pheasants, a pair of pearls and Yu Pei, a gold leather belt, a jade dragon crown, a jade bracelet and a comb ring with flowers on the north pearl crown.
On the wedding day, Mr. Xu wore casual clothes and a jade belt and rode a horse to Heningmen. Put on official clothes there, go to Donghuamen, use geese, coins and silks as dowry, and personally go to the princess mansion to marry the bride. At this time, the princess, dressed in a wedding dress of Kyubi no Youko pheasant and light tea, sat in a barrier-free sedan chair and set off for the Xu family under the guidance of Xu.
In front of the bride's sedan chair are: civil servants, dowry items and servants who should be equipped according to the princess's status, 20 pairs of candles and lanterns, corresponding envoys, eight teenagers with their heads inserted in the hairpin, four square fans, four round fans, ten pots of flowers for attracting obstacles, and twenty lanterns for walking and sitting obstacles. The queen saw me off in person, sitting in a Kowloon sedan chair and the crown prince riding a horse. The princess is surrounded by a double fence. Behind the princess are the main officials of the Temple (the official department in charge of royal affairs), Zhao Herui (my brother, the princess's uncle), his wife and the wives of other dignitaries.