The final outcome of Kangxi's sons

Sons (35)

Prince: Cheng Rui, 2 years old, untitled.

Prince: Hu Cheng, two years old, unknown.

Prince: Cheng Qing, 1 year old, untitled.

Prince: Sai Yin Cha Hun, 2 years old, untitled.

Huang Changzi, formerly known as the county king, was later reduced to a reserve son.

Prince: Changhua, Xuanyi, untitled.

The second son of the emperor: Yin Yong, formerly known as Baocheng and Crown Prince, was later abolished. Shu Yue Mi is the prince of Li Mi.

Prince: Longevity, 2 years old, untitled.

Prince: Wan Fu, 4 years old, untitled.

The emperor's third son: Cheng County King, named Yin, is the county king.

The emperor's four sons: Yin Zhen, named Baylor in the thirty-seventh year of Kangxi, Prince Jinyong in the forty-eighth year of Kangxi, and acceded to the throne in the sixty-first year of Kangxi, namely Yong Zhengdi.

Prince: Yi Yin, 1 year old, untitled.

Emperor Wu: Prince Heng, in posthumous title, is a prince with constant temperature.

Liu Zi: Yin Zuo, a teenager.

Qin Shihuang's seven sons: Chun Yuchang and Chang Du.

The emperor's eight sons: Yin Gui and Prince Lian.

Huang Jiuzi: Yi Yin, Gushan Beizi.

Huang Shizi: Yin? When Feng Dunjun was king, the main circle of leather was banned during Yongzheng period. After emperor Qianlong ascended the throne, he was released and awarded the auxiliary national level.

Prince: Yin? , 1 year old, untitled.

The eleventh son of the emperor: Yin Yun, 1 year old, without posthumous title.

The twelve sons of the emperor: Prince Yin Geng and Prince Yi Yi.

The thirteen sons of the emperor: Andrew, Prince Yi, called Xian Xian, are Prince Yi Xian.

Fourteen sons of the emperor: Yin Gui, king of the county, and Qin Yue, king of the county.

Prince: Yin Rui, two months old, hasn't been named yet.

The fifteenth son of the emperor: Yin Yun, the king of Yu County, was named Ke, the king of Yu County.

The sixteen sons of the emperor: Yin Lu, succeeded to the throne as Prince Ze Shuosai, later renamed Zhuang, posthumous title Ke, and became Prince Zhuang.

Seventeen sons of the emperor: fruit prince Li Yin and fruit Delysia Yi.

Eighteen sons of the emperor: Quinn, 8 years old, without posthumous title.

Nineteen sons of the emperor: Yi Yin, three years old, without posthumous title.

The emperor's twenty sons: Yi Yin and Baylor, named Jian Jing, were Jian Jing Baylor.

Twenty-one sons of the emperor: Wang Yin, called Jingjing, was the king of Shenjing County.

The emperor's twenty-two sons: Yin Hu, Gong Baylor, and Baylor.

The son of twenty-three emperors: Yin Qi, a county king, became Baylor.

Twenty-four sons of the emperor: Yin Mi, cheating prince, called Ke, cheating prince.

Prince: Yin demon, who died on the day of birth, has no sequence of teeth.

Extended data:

Kangxi (1May 4, 654 ~1722 65438+February 20) ascended the throne at the age of eight and became emperor for 6 1 year. He was the longest reigning emperor in China. He gave birth to 35 sons at a time, but only 24 became adults because he ruled for a long time and had many sons.

The eldest son promised:

Born in the 11th year of Kangxi (1672). Born to Hui Fei Nalan. Hui Fei is not famous, but his brother Na Lanmingzhu is a celebrity. It is he who urged Wu Sangui to retreat to San Francisco and destroy it.

The second son, Emperor Wan Yun

Born in the 13th year of Kangxi (1674). Born to Empress Xiao Chengren, the eldest son. In the fourteenth year of Kangxi, when he was a baby over one year old, he was made a prince. However, it was abolished in September of the forty-ninth year of Kangxi; Forty-eight years, re-established; In October of fifty-one years, the prisoner was abolished; In the second year, Yongzheng died of illness, and the Prince of Li Fen and posthumous title were sealed.

Huang San Ziyunzhi

Born in the 16th year of Kangxi (1677). Rong Fei, the biological mother, is Rong Fei's fifth son (the first four are all dead). In the thirty-seventh year of Kangxi, 2 1 year old was the king of Fengcheng County.

Make friends with the prince, so he was later suppressed by Yongzheng; In the 48th year of Kangxi, he denounced the eldest son of the emperor, Prince Jincheng. Yin Zhi is a knowledgeable scholar. He's not very keen on the Crown Prince. He devoted himself to compiling books, especially calligraphy, and was ordered to write an inscription for Emperor Kangxi's Immortal Virtue in Jingling.

In the eighth year of Yongzheng, he was charged with eight crimes, was knighted, and was detained in Yong 'an Pavilion in Jingshan. Yongzheng died quietly in 10 and was buried with the ceremony of the county king. There are seven adult sons, and the seventh son, Hongjing, is a descendant.

Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia: Aisingiorro Michelle Ye