In the 11th year of Qianlong (A.D. 1746), Emperor Qianlong designated the imperial treasures as twenty-five squares, and later called these twenty-five seals "twenty-five treasures". These 25 precious seals are also the only complete set of imperial treasures in existence.
Twenty-five jade seals are used, and the materials are diverse. Most of them are made of jade, others are made of gold, silver and a wooden seal.
The treasure of the Qing dynasty: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is made of white jade and panlong cattle, which shows the world that the emperor has a seal when he ascended the throne.
Treasure of Xian Di: The treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is decorated with seals, made of Jasper and Panlong New Zealand.
Heir of the Qing Dynasty, Tianzibao: The Treasure Spectrum of Jiaotaitang was made of gold, with a dragon buckle, which was used by the prince.
The emperor's two treasures: the emperor uses a seal, a jade seal and a wooden seal every day. Jade is a twisted dragon button, a wooden squat dragon button.
The treasure of the son of heaven: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall, used for offering sacrifices to the gods. It is made of white jade and given to the Dragon and Xinlong as sacrificial seals.
The treasure of the emperor's respect for relatives: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is used by the empress dowager, the empress dowager and the name of the hall. It is made of white jade and used for sacrifice. The treasure of the emperor: the treasure spectrum of the Jiaotai Hall, which is used to show the alliance of clansmen. Made of white jade, give it to Dragon and New Button as a sacrificial seal.
The treasure of the emperor: The treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall aims at offering tin coffins, using jasper as material, and making dragons and new buttons.
Xinbaodi: "Bao Pu of Jiao Tai Tang" is used for military service, made of white jade, with a dragon and a new button.
Tian Zi Xingbao: "Jiaotaitang Baopu" is made of jade, used by foreigners.
Tian Zi Xinbao: Jiaotaitang Baopu is designed for different purposes, made of sapphire, with a dragon and a new button.
Treasure to respect the people: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is used to mourn the diligent officials. It is made of white jade and used to pay tribute to the officials.
The treasure of patent making: The Treasure Manual of Jiaotai Hall is for officials' use, made of sapphire, with dragon and new buttons.
The treasure of life: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotaitang is the treasure, and the jade is the dragon.
The treasure of hanging practice: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall, which is used to publicize the national constitution, made by Jasper, and handed over to New Zealand as the seal for issuing laws and regulations.
Treasure of life and virtue: The Treasure Spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is used to reward loyalty. Sapphire is made and handed over to the dragon and the new button.
Qin Wenzhi's seal: "Jiaotaitang Baopu" attaches great importance to the use of culture and education, with jet as the material, making friends with dragons and making new ones.
The treasure of Zhang Shi: The treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is used to worship the ancient religion, made of jasper, and given to the dragon and the new button.
Treasures of the World: The Treasure Spectrum of Jiaotai Hall is used by the provincial side, made of sapphire and handed over to dragons.
Treasure to punish evil and protect the people: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotai Hall was used by Zhang Rong, made of sapphire, and given to Niu Long.
Six divisions make treasure control: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotaitang is used by the whole army, made of sapphire, and handed over to Dragon and New Button.
To be the treasure of all people: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotaitang is used by foreign countries, made of sapphire, and handed over to the Dragon and New Zealand.
Rectify everyone's treasures: the treasure spectrum of Jiaotaitang is used in all directions, and the sapphire Panlong New Year pictures.
Guang Yun's Treasure: The Treasure Spectrum of Jiaotaitang is for the purpose of sealing knowledge, taking jet as the material and giving it to Longxin.
Since the Qin dynasty, the emperor's seal has been named "Xi" and jade has been used as the seal. * * * There are six parties, namely "Emperor India", "Emperor India", "Emperor India", "Emperor India" and "Emperor India". Among the emperor's seals, there is "Guo Chuan Imperial Xi", also known as "Guo Chuan Xi", which was handed down by emperors after Qin Dynasty and engraved on the orders of Qin Shihuang. Its Fiona Fang is four inches, and it has five dragons in New Zealand. On the front, there are eight Chinese characters inscribed by Li Si, "Long live the order of heaven", as a token of "imperial power granted by God, orthodox and legal". Later, emperors of all dynasties took this seal as a symbol and regarded it as a rare treasure and a heavy weapon of the country. If you get it, it means that you are "destined to return". If you lose it, it means that your luck has run out. Anyone who ascended the throne without this seal was ridiculed as "Bai Di" and despised by the world as unconfident.
In the history of dynasties, Bao, the symbol of maintaining its feudal dictatorship, has been inherited or engraved from Qin Shihuang to Qing Dynasty. The treasure seal system founded by Qin Shihuang was completely inherited by Liu Bang, the emperor gaozu of Han Dynasty, and later became the so-called "Eight Seals System in Qin and Han Dynasties". This system also ran through the whole Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties and Sui Dynasty. They not only inherited the Eight Prints system in Qin and Han Dynasties, but also had no difference in specifications, names, new styles and characters. It was not until Wu Zetian proclaimed himself emperor in the Tang Dynasty that a seal of "Emperor Tianjing was virtuous and prosperous all his life" was added, and the eight printing was changed to nine printing, while the "seal" was changed to "treasure". Since then, all generations have called it "treasure". It increased to twelve treasures in the Northern Song Dynasty and seventeen treasures in the Southern Song Dynasty. In the Ming dynasty, it soared to twenty-four treasures, except for the twenty-five Jiaotai Hall in the Qing dynasty.
False seals also appeared from time to time in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Ming Xiaozong once received the so-called national seal, which Xiaozong thought was false at that time. In the early Qing Dynasty, there were thirty-nine imperial seals in the palace, one of which was considered as the official seal of the Qin Dynasty.
1746, emperor Qianlong decided that it was an imitation.