Princess is the title of imperial daughter and imperial concubine in ancient China, and the princess and imperial daughter are not the same.
Princess is a title for royal women in China's ancient feudal society, and it is the abbreviation of princess princess.
County magistrate is the title of royal woman. Generally, the princess has the title of Qingping or Qixia, which is the abbreviation of princess. During the Eastern Han Dynasty, princesses were named after counties, so they were called county princesses.
Xiang Jun is a general term for women in ancient China.
Extended data:
Princess:
Since the Qin Dynasty, it is very common for a princess to divorce or remarry after her husband's death. As a symbol of imperial power, she can even have a face. For example, princesses in the Tang Dynasty had a certain degree of freedom of marriage, and many princesses remarried.
For the first time in the Sui Dynasty, a decree forbidding widows from remarrying appeared. In the 16th year of Emperor Wendi (596), "Nine products have been married, and five products have been married, so they can't remarry. Emperor Taizong issued a decree allowing women to remarry and widows to remarry, but not forbidding widows to remarry.
Emperor Taizong wrote, "After the system of bereavement, the widow's service discipline has been removed, so it is necessary to apply for marriage to make her get along well." "A widower is 60 years old and a widow is 50 years old. Although there are still few women, there are men and women, who are loyal, chaste and free to marry."
Princess:
The word "princess" originated from Shi Shuo Xin Yu Yuan Xian compiled by Liu Yiqing, the king of Linchuan in the Southern Song Dynasty, in which "Huan Xuan Wu (referring to Huan Wen) Pingshu took Li Shimei as his concubine", and Liu Xiao of Liang Dynasty quoted Jealousy: "Uncle Huan Pingshu took Li Shimei as his concubine, and the princess (the princess of Nankang) was fierce and jealous."
The princess here refers to her daughter Sima Xingnan, which is the abbreviation of the county king.
County owner:
Jin dynasty: the daughter of the prince is the monarch; At the same time, the imperial daughter also took the county name as the title, called the princess of the county (not equal to the princess of the prince's daughter), such as the story of the Eastern Han Dynasty, which named 30 counties as the title of the imperial daughter.
The titles of imperial women in Jin Dynasty: Le 'an, Qingping, Penglai, Rong 'an, Qixia, Shouguang, Lingxian, Shouyang, Zhongxiu, Huihe, Yongning, Qingyun, Jingle, Fushan, Longping, Deping, Wen 'an, Fuchang, Shun 'an, Leshou, Jing 'an, Lingshou, Daning, Wenxi and Xiurong.
Xiang Jun:
In the Qing Dynasty, those who were eligible to add the title of Xiang Jun were: Zhen Guogong, the first daughter of Fu Guogong, the concubine of Dorobel, and the great-granddaughter of the prince.
According to the regulations, Xiang Jun's annual salary is 420 yuan and 40 yuan every year.
At the same time, the Qing Dynasty had detailed regulations on Xiang Jun's wedding:
Bride's gift: two horses, two saddles, sixteen tables, sixteen bottles of wine, fourteen sheep and sixteen barrels of tea.
Na Cai: Two horses and seven sheep, no banquet.
Dowry: two maids.
The tea and rice needed for the banquet are prepared by Guanglu Temple, and the sheep and wine are the responsibility of the husband-in-law. At the same time, add five more horses when you get married.
During the Qianlong period, it was decided that the daughter of the king of princes and counties, regardless of official position, would be named the township king once she was married to a relative of Mongolia's foreign vassal according to the order.
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