Consort Ji (Hong Taiji)

Consort Ji (繼妃 烏拉那拉氏) of the Ula Nara clan was the second primary consort of Hong Taiji.

Consort Ji
繼妃
Jì Fēi
BornManchuria
SpouseHong Taiji
Issue Hooge
Loge
Princess Aohan of the First Rank
Posthumous name
Consort Ji (繼妃)
House Ula Nara (烏拉那拉氏) (by birth)
Aisin Gioro
(by marriage)
FatherBokdo (博客多)

Family

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  • Father: Bokdo - held the title of beile[Note 1] (博克多[Note 2];?-1607)
    • Grandfather: Buyan, Tailan's son; first beile and founder of the Ula state.

Her father and uncle were beheaded during Battle of Wujieyan, part of Nurhachi 's war to conquer the Jurchen tribes.

Wanli era

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The exact date of birth of Lady Ula Nara is unknown. Her father died in the thirty-fifth year of Wanli of the Ming Dynasty.

It is unknown whether Lady Nara became Huang Taiji 's wife afterwards due to the defeat of the Ula tribe.[1][2]

In the thirty-seventh year of Wanli era (1609), on March 13, she gave birth to his eldest son, Hooge. In the thirty-ninth year of Wanli, she gave birth his second son, who would die prematurely in 1621. On 3 April 1621, she gave birth to his eldest daughter, Princess Aohan of the First Rank.[3]

The date of Lady Nara's death is unknown, though it is possible that she died before Huang Taiji inherited the throne of Later Jin Dynasty in August in the eleventh year of Destiny.[4] Lady Nara has never been posthumously conferred a title of Empress.

Titles

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  • During the reign of Wanli Emperor of the Ming dynast (1563 – 1620)
    • Lady Ula Nara (拉那拉氏; from Unknown Date)
    • Primary Consort (嫡福晋; from Unknown Date)
  • During the reign of Hong Taiji of the Qing dynasty (1626 – 1643):
    • Consort Ji (繼妃; After 1626)

Issue

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As a primary consort:

  • Hooge, Prince Suwu of the First Rank (肅武親王 豪格; 16 April 1609 – 4 May 1648), The Emperor's first son
  • Loge (洛格; 1611 – November/December 1621), the Emperor's second son
  • Princess Aohan of the First Rank (敖漢固倫公主; 3 April 1621 – February/March 1654), the Emperor's first daughter[5]

References

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  • " Manuscripts of Qing History · Biography 1" Empress
  • "The Genealogy of Aixinjueluo · 星源集庆"(页二七)
  1. ^ Zhao Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing. Vol. Biography I: Concubine of Qing Taizong.
  2. ^ In Draft of the Qing Dynasty mentions the following consorts: Concubine Yuan of the Niohuru clan, who gave birth to Lobohoi and Consort Ji of the Ulanara clan to two sons and one daughter.
  3. ^ 爱新觉罗宗谱·星源集庆,(页二七)
  4. ^ 满文老档
  5. ^ Draft of the Qing Dynasty: Biography I (Empress)
  1. ^ meaning "lord", "prince"
  2. ^ meaning "sagacious" in Manchu