What works about posthumous title are there in ancient books?

Posthumous title. In addition to Xuan Tong, there were posthumous title in the twelve dynasties of the Qing Dynasty. What is posthumous title? There is an explanation about posthumous title in Ci Hai, which says: "After the death of emperors, nobles, ministers and literati, they are awarded titles according to their deeds before their death." Is to give him an evaluation after death, give him a title, called posthumous title. Posthumous title has strict rules. Posthumous title, Taizu Nurhachi, first called "Wu", then called "Gao", posthumous title, the second emperor Taizong and Huang Taiji, the third, posthumous title, Shunzhi, the fourth, posthumous title, Kangxi, the fifth, posthumous title, Yongzheng, the sixth, posthumous title and the seventh. Take the Qing emperor Nurhachi for example. His full name is 29 words, and his full name is like this: "Mao inherited great fortune from heaven, made great achievements, made great achievements in virtue, made great achievements in Zhao Ji and made great achievements in benevolence and filial piety." Twenty-nine words, these twenty-nine words should not be wrong when writing his book, his birthday and memorial day, and when offering sacrifices in the temple. If wrong, officials will be punished or dismissed, or even cut off. These twenty-nine words are the most in the whole Qing Dynasty, and there are twenty-seven other words and so on. Then these 29 words are hard to remember. The key to Nurhachi is five words, that is, "Taizu Gao", which actually belongs to him. Because everyone has those two words, Nuhachi's "Taizu Gao" belongs to him alone, that is, his temple name is "Taizu" and posthumous title is "Gao", which is the characteristic that distinguishes him from anyone else. This "high".