Definitely not
After reading different records, the order is also different
I think it should be
Leap year 1126 AD At the end of November, the Jin soldiers went south again and captured Bianjing on December 15. The Jin Emperor deposed Song Huizong and his son Zhao Huan as common people.
In April 1127 AD, Huizong and Empress Zheng went to Yanjing under the supervision of Zong Wang. Then go all the way north until Five Kingdoms City.
On the third day after Huizong arrived at Five Kingdoms City, Empress Zheng died of illness.
Empress Zheng and Huizong's wife experienced many ups and downs together and had a deep relationship, which had a great impact on Huizong's spirit. After Huizong cried for Zheng, he washed his face with tears all day long, sat there during the day, and crouched on the straw mat at night. Later, the other eye also became blind.
Later, Huizong cut his clothes into strips and hung himself from a beam. He was rescued by Qinzong. The father and son cried in each other's arms and were whipped by the Jinren.
Huizong was seriously ill and could not be treated. When Qinzong came back from working in the fields, Huizong had been dead for a long time, and then the Jinren burned his body!
However, some people say that Emperor Huizong died in Tibet. There was once a very shocking legend in the famous Sakya Monastery in Tibet, saying that Song Huizong was somehow transported to Sakya Monastery to practice. , and later died there.
I guess the Jin people just treated him so "kindly".
But the above are all evidence from Jingkang's history, groans, records of prisoners of the Song Dynasty, and the Northern League of the Three Dynasties.
It said that "the north is still very cold, Huizong, Qin, etc." The clothes of the second emperor Zong and the two empresses Zheng and Zhu were very thin. They were often too cold to sleep at night, so they had to find some firewood and thatch to burn for warmth. They slept on the ground at night. It was wet and damp, and the broken house was drafty on all sides. They looked like prisoners. The same thing. The Jin soldiers only provided them with food and water once a day, and the rice was moldy dry cakes and bean cakes. "The emperor's concubines were driven into an earthen room and were given two bowls of wheat rice and several slices of rotten meat every day. "A few straw mats" and so on were written by people from the Song Dynasty. It is unknown whether they exaggerated the abuse Huizong suffered in the Jin Dynasty.
Anyway, Empress Zheng didn’t even have a coffin when she died. How pitiful!