In A.D. 1 135, Song Huizong Emperor Evonne, who was taken hostage by the State of Jin, died at the age of 54.
In fact, with the signing of Shaoxing peace talks, the Jin people did encounter difficulties in returning the remains demanded by the Southern Song Dynasty, but the reason was not that their remains were burned into oil lamps, but that the Jin people were cremated and buried according to their own funeral customs. After Song Huizong died. There is such a record in the history of gold: real women are cremated, and the ashes enter the water, which is called "cooking". Because the people of Jin practiced the method of "cooking" on Song Huizong's body, they could no longer hand over his body. Another way of saying this is that the remains should be buried after cremation, but there are no seals and trees (there are no seals and trees on the ground as signs). There is no sign, so we can't find it anymore.
So the Jin people found a piece of wood and put it in the coffin, and sent it back to the Southern Song Dynasty. The coffin was not opened directly, but buried directly in You Yong Mausoleum in Shaoxing City, Zhejiang Province. After the establishment of the Yuan Dynasty, Yang, a Buddhist leader in the south of the Yangtze River, led a group of people to excavate the mausoleum of the Southern Song Emperor, and the mausoleum was not spared. At this time, people found that there was no body in Hui Zong's coffin, only a piece of rotten wood on him.
So it was boiled into lamp oil by Jin people. Why is the coffin returned by the Jin people intact? Everything happens for a reason.