Palace of Eternal Longevity

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Yongshou palace's gates

Palace of Eternal Longevity (Chinese: 永寿宫; Pinyin: Yongshougong) one of the Six Western Palaces in the Forbidden City. It was a residence of imperial concubines since 1420.

History[]

Yongshou Palace was built in 1420 as a part of Inner Court's western palaces and named "Palace of Eternal Pleasure" (长乐宫, pinyin: Changle gong). In 1535, Jiajing Emperor renamed the palace as "Palace of Embodying Morality" (毓德宫, pinyin: yudegong). In 1616, the palace obtained its current name. Yongshou palace was undergoing renovations in 1697 and 1897.[1] During Qianlong period, the palace was used as a place of wedding banquets for Princess Heke of the Second Rank in 1772[2] and Gurun Princess Hexiao in 1789.[3] During Daoguang era, rear halls of the palace became a storage of classified intelligence.

It is the closest palace to Yangxin hall, the residence of Qing dynasty emperors from 1722.

Residents[]

Ming dynasty[]

Year Emperor Imperial consort Note
1466-1475 Chenghua Empress Dowager Xiaomuji[4]
1638-1643 Chongzhen The palace was used as a shelter

from natural disasters

Qing dynasty[]

Date Emperor Imperial consort Note
25.10.1653 Shunzhi Erdeni Bumba Borjigit Erdeni Bumba was demoted to Consort Jing,

thus she moved from Kunning palace to Yongshou palace.

July 1657 – 1667 Consort Ke She was holding a title of Noble Lady

and was promoted to Consort in 1667[5]

28.12.1682-19.12.1694 Kangxi Noble Consort Wenxi
?-20.08.1699 Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin
1675-1711 Consort Liang
1735 Yongzheng Empress Xiaoshengxian She lived there shortly before moving

to Shoukang palace as Empress Dowager

January 1742-4.07.1777 Qianlong Consort Shu She moved there after being promoted

to concubine and supervised lesser-ranking consorts.

1757-29.05.1784 Concubine Cheng She died during southern tour in 1784
1766-1788 Noble Lady Shun She supervised younger consorts from 1777 to 1788
1766-1794 Consort Fang She moved out from palace in 1794[6]
1801-1821 Jiaqing Imperial Noble Consort Gongshun[7] She moved out to Shou'an palace in 1821

References[]

  1. ^ "永寿宫 - 故宫博物院". www.dpm.org.cn. Retrieved 2020-08-15.
  2. ^ "清會典".
  3. ^ Aisin Gioro, Zhaolian. "Continued Records of the Roaring Pavilion".
  4. ^ "History of Ming. Biographies of imperial consorts". Book 113.
  5. ^ "永平府志".
  6. ^ "乾隆至嘉慶年添減底檔"/"Archives of Qianlong and Jiaqing eras".
  7. ^ "Palace of Eternal Longevity (Yongshou gong)|The Palace Museum". en.dpm.org.cn. Retrieved 2020-08-15.
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