Yongzheng was the father of Kangxi, and Chen Jinnan had nothing to do with Yongzheng or Qianlong, because Chen Jinnan had died during the reign of Kangxi.
1. Yongzheng:
Aixinjueluo Yinzhen, the fifth monarch of the Qing Dynasty and the third emperor after the capital was Beijing. The reign name is Yongzheng. Mongolians honor him as "Nairal Tutop Khan", and Tibetans call him "Emperor Manjusri". The fourth son of Emperor Kangxi, whose mother was Empress Xiao Gongren, was born in Yonghe Palace in the Forbidden City in Beijing.
2. Emperor Qianlong:
Aisin Gioro Hongli, the sixth emperor of the Qing Dynasty and the fourth emperor after the capital was Beijing. His father was Emperor Yongzheng, and his reign title was "Qianlong", which means "the way of heaven is prosperous". After reigning for sixty years, he continued to govern after the Zen throne, and actually exercised supreme power for sixty-three years and four months. He was the emperor who actually held the supreme power of the country for the longest time in Chinese history, and was also the longest-lived emperor.
3. Chen Jinnan:
Chen Jinnan once used his belief in Xuantian God as a cover to establish a secret organization, formed an alliance with different surnames, worshiped heaven as his father, worshiped the earth as his mother, and respected Wan Yunlong. Zheng Chenggong was the leading brother and engaged in anti-Qing and restoration actions. Later, he developed various different schools and became the secret social force - Tiandihui, which caused headaches for the Qing court.
In the thirteenth year of Kangxi's reign, he served as the general envoy to Dongning. Taking advantage of the rebellion of the three feudal lords, he was invited by Geng Jingzhong to lead an army to attack the Qing Dynasty. Chen Yonghua assisted his son-in-law Zheng Kezang to supervise the country and help manage Taiwan's government affairs. He was hated and excluded by Feng Xifan and Liu Guoxuan. In the 19th year of Kangxi's reign, he asked himself to be relieved of military power, and became ill from grief. He died of illness the following year.
Extended information:
In the early years of Qianlong's reign, Hongli admitted that he was "genuinely tolerant", but he also said that he should not be too lenient, but should be strict. Sometimes, he publicly said that "politics favor leniency" and that leniency is better than strictness.
Emperor Qianlong's poems in his later years also said that "politics should be lenient rather than violent", but in most cases, lenient and strict are always mentioned together, and the two are regarded as different from time to time and complementary to each other. , "Leanness is used to help the fierce, strictness is used to help the lenient, government is based on harmony", this is the only way to rule that Qianlong believed.
On the one hand, Emperor Qianlong adjusted various relationships within the ruling class and expanded his ruling base. On the other hand, Emperor Qianlong took steps to correct or abandon some erroneous policies and measures implemented by Emperor Yongzheng. In addition, Emperor Qianlong also adjusted the rather tense relationship between the central government and the local gentry that had been formed since the Yongzheng Dynasty.
Baidu Encyclopedia—Yongzheng
Baidu Encyclopedia—Emperor Qianlong
Baidu Encyclopedia—Chen Jinnan