Crown Prince of the Ming dynasty
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Crown Prince of the Ming dynasty | |||||||||||||
Tenure | 1630–1644 | ||||||||||||
Predecessor | Crown Prince Zhu Changluo | ||||||||||||
Successor | Crown Prince Zhu Cixuan (Southern Ming Yongli Emperor's Crown Prince) | ||||||||||||
Prince of Song (Shun dynasty) | |||||||||||||
Tenure | 1644 | ||||||||||||
Born |
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Died |
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Burial | Unknown | ||||||||||||
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House | Zhu | ||||||||||||
Father | Chongzhen Emperor | ||||||||||||
Mother | Empress Xiaojielie |
Zhu Cilang (Chinese: 朱慈烺; pinyin: Zhū Cílǎng; Wade–Giles: Chu Tz'ǔ-lang; 26 February 1629 – June 1644) was a crown prince of the Ming dynasty. He was the eldest son of the Chongzhen Emperor and Lady Zhou, Empress Xiaojielie, and he was made the crown prince in 1630.
Biography
Attempts to move south
Peasant rebellions were ravaging northern China and threatening the Ming capital of Beijing. In February 1644, rebel leader Li Zicheng founded the Shun dynasty in Xi'an and proclaimed himself king. In March, his armies captured the important city of Taiyuan in Shanxi. The capture of Taiyuan by Li Zicheng's forces gave his campaign additional momentum; garrisons began to surrender to him without a fight. Through February and March 1644, the Chongzhen Emperor and the court discussed proposals to move the court south to Nanjing. Officials Li Mingrui and Li Banghua proposed that the Chongzhen Emperor retreat south and set up an alternative Southern Ming regime in Nanjing while the crown prince be left behind in Beijing as jianguo (監國; regent) to protect the northern capital and guard the imperial altars. This proposal was rejected by the emperor.
An alternative proposal was made when Li Banghua submitted a secret memorial to the emperor that the role be reversed, proposing that the emperor stay behind in Beijing to lead the Ming defense while the crown prince would be sent south. Chongzhen secretly wanted to retreat south himself, but not wanting to appear weak to the court and faced with oppositions of the majority of the capital officials, he angrily rejected the suggestion and all further discussions to move the court. On 9 April, the general Li Jiantai brought up the proposal to transfer the court to the south one last time with the crown prince leading ahead and then the emperor following behind. However, this was also rejected after one official Guang Shiheng accused the proponents of plotting to force the emperor to abdicate and installing the crown prince as new emperor as was done with Emperor Suzong of Tang during the An Lushan Rebellion.
In April 1644, the army of the rebel Li Zicheng were approaching the capital through Juyong Pass. On 23 April, the Chongzhen Emperor held his last audience with his ministers. Li Zicheng offered Chongzhen the opportunity to surrender, but the emperor refused. The following day, the rebel army attacked the capital. The Chongzhen Emperor ordered the crown prince and his two brothers: Zhu Cijiong (朱慈炯) and Zhu Cizhao (朱慈炤) to hide in the home of relatives, and summoned the rest of his family. Rather than let them be captured by the rebels, the emperor started killing the female members of his family, concubines and consorts. Using his sword, he killed Consort Yuan and Princess Kunyi, and severed the arm of Princess Changping. Empress Zhou committed suicide by hanging herself in her palace in the Forbidden City. The emperor was said to have walked to Meishan, a small hill in present-day Jingshan Park, where he hanged himself on a tree.
The easy transition between the Ming and Qing dynasties has been ascribed to the Chongzhen Emperor's refusal to move southward when his capital had been under rebel threat. This allowed the Qing dynasty to capture an entire corps of qualified civil servants to administer the country, and also ensured that the Southern Ming pretenders would suffer from infighting due to their weak claims on the throne. A large émigré elite of northerners in the south would also have increased the probability of an aggressive policy of reconquest to regain their northern homelands.
Final fate
Upon taking Beijing on 25 April, Li Zicheng took the crown prince and his brothers as hostages. In their meeting, Li asked Zhu what caused his family to lose the Mandate of Heaven. The crown prince replied, "Because we made the mistake of employing treacherous ministers like Zhou Yanru." Li would keep Zhu alive during his occupation of the city and created him Prince of Song (宋王). Zhu would be held in Li's camp before his defeat by the Manchu Qing under Prince-Regent Dorgon and former Ming general Wu Sangui at the Battle of Shanhai Pass on 27 May 1644.
After the battle, Zhu fell into the hands of Wu Sangui who wanted to restore him to the throne, but Dorgon rejected this idea and was determined to claim the Mandate of Heaven for the Qing. News of Li's defeat reached Beijing and the residents including the former Ming bureaucrats optimistically expected to receive Wu's army and the Ming crown prince. Instead, they were greeted by the forces of Dorgon entering the city's gate. Dorgon would establish his nephew Shunzhi Emperor on the Chinese throne. Wu Sangui took the prince to Shanxi, where he was charged with subduing the last Shun remnants. Zhu Cilang died in Ningjiawan, Shaanxi in June 1644.
Zhu Cilang was posthumously created Crown Prince Xianmin (獻愍太子) meaning the "Dedicated" and "Commiserated" Crown Prince by the Hongguang Emperor of the Southern Ming dynasty and later Emperor Dao (悼皇帝) meaning the "mournful" emperor by the Prince of Lu.
Family
Zhu Cilang's crown princess was Ning Hong's (寧浤) daughter, Consort Ning (寧妃) who died at 19.
Ancestry
Longqing Emperor (1537–1572) | |||||||||||||||||||
Wanli Emperor (1563–1620) | |||||||||||||||||||
Empress Dowager Xiaoding (1545–1614) | |||||||||||||||||||
Taichang Emperor (1582–1620) | |||||||||||||||||||
Wang Chaocai | |||||||||||||||||||
Empress Dowager Xiaojing (1565–1611) | |||||||||||||||||||
Lady Ge | |||||||||||||||||||
Chongzhen Emperor (1611–1644) | |||||||||||||||||||
Liu Tingchen | |||||||||||||||||||
Liu Yingyuan (1533–1588) | |||||||||||||||||||
Lady Jia | |||||||||||||||||||
Empress Dowager Xiaochun (1588–1615) | |||||||||||||||||||
Lady Xu | |||||||||||||||||||
Zhu Cilang (1629–1644) | |||||||||||||||||||
Zhou Kui | |||||||||||||||||||
Empress Xiaojielie (1611–1644) | |||||||||||||||||||
Lady Ding | |||||||||||||||||||
Notes
- The Taichang Emperor originally planned on 4 October 1620 to create his eldest son, Zhu Youxiao (the Tianqi Emperor), as the crown prince. On 26 September, after the Taichang Emperor died, Zhu Youxiao inherited but did not become the crown prince. Three crown princes of the Tianqi Emperor were all named posthumously, and the last official crown prince was Zhu Changluo.
- This posthumous name was conferred by the Hongguang Emperor of the Southern Ming dynasty
- This posthumous name was conferred by the Regent Prince of Lu
References
- ^ 钱海岳《南明史》卷二十六·列传第二:“弘光元年……尋諡慈烺曰獻愍。……鲁王监国,追尊慈烺谥曰悼皇帝。”
- 錢海岳.《南明史·列傳第二》:「悼皇帝慈烺,崇禎二年二月四日生……」
- ^ Wakeman, Frederic E. (1985). "The Fall of Beijing". The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 225–413. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
- ^ Central Asiatic Journal. O. Harrassowitz. 2002. p. 118.
- Forges, Roger V. Des (2020). The Mythistorical Chinese Scholar-Rebel-Advisor Li Yan: A Global Perspective, 1606-2018. BRILL. p. 165. ISBN 978-90-04-42106-6.
- Struve, Lynn A. (1993). Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm: China in Tigers' Jaws. Yale University Press. pp. 18–20. ISBN 978-0-300-07553-3.
- Theobald, Ulrich. "Names of persons and titles of rulers (www.chinaknowledge.de)". www.chinaknowledge.de. Retrieved 11 September 2023.