Šumuru

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Šumuru (Manchu: ᡧᡠᠮᡠᡵᡠ
ᡥᠠᠯᠠ
 ; Chinese: 舒穆祿氏) was one of the eight great clans of Manchu nobility. After the demise of the dynasty, some of its descendants sinicized their clan name to the Chinese surnames Shu (舒), Xu (徐) or Xiao (蕭).

Notable figures[]

Males[]

  • Yangguri (揚古利; 1572–1637), military figure and prince
    • Tatai (塔台)
      • Aixinga (d. 1664), Yangguri's grandson; coadjutor in the invasion of Burma
  • Tantai (譚泰), Yangguri's cousin
  • Fushan (富善), Aixinga's son, first-class duke
    • Haijin (海金), Fushan's son
      • Fengsheng'e (丰盛额), a first rank military official (都统) and held the title of first-class Yingcheng duke (一等英诚公)
        • Feng'an (丰安), held the title of first-class Yingcheng duke (一等英诚公)
  • Folun (佛倫; d. 1701), served as the Minister of Works from 1686–1687
  • Xu Yuanmeng (徐元夢; 1655–1741), scholar and politician
    • Xu Chengyi (徐诚意), served as an official (领催,pinyin: lingcui)
  • Lunbu (伦布)
  • Yuzhang (玉彰), served as fifth rank literary official (郎中)
Prince Consort
Date Prince Consort Princess
1758 Suyuan (素源) Yunqi's third daughter (1744–1777) by secondary consort (Xiang)

Females[]

Imperial Consort
Imperial Consort Emperor Sons Daughters
Noble Consort Tong (1817–1877) Daoguang Emperor 8. Princess Shouxi (1842–1866)
Noble Consort Mei Xianfeng Emperor Prince Min of the Second Rank
Princess Consorts
Princess Consort Prince Sons Daughters
Primary consort General Babuhai
Yong'en, Prince Ligong (禮恭) Zhaolian
Hongwang Yonglei

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

  • Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing (Qing Shi Gao) (in Chinese).


Retrieved from ""