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  1. Yehe Nara Jingfen (靜芬; 28 January 1868 – 22 February 1913), of the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner Yehe Nara clan, was the wife and empress consort of Zaitian, the Guangxu Emperor. She was empress consort of Qing from 1889 until her husband's death in 1908, after which she was honoured as Empress Dowager Longyu. She was posthumously ...

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    Lady Yehenara was chosen as the Empress Consort because her aunt, the Empress Dowager Cixiwanted to strengthen the power of her own family. She married the Guangxu Emperor on February 26, 1889, and became his Empress directly after the wedding ceremony. Yehenara was detested and ignored by the Guangxu Emperor, who favored the Imperial Consort Zhen ...

    The Emperor remained under house arrest until his death. Empress Yehenara would frequently spy on the Emperor and report his every action to Empress Dowager Cixi. In 1908, when both the Guangxu Emperor and Cixi died within three days, Empress Yehenara was made Empress Dowager with the same honorable titles Long Yu,meaning "Auspicious and Prosperous...

    Within a few months after the fall of the Qing Dynasty, Long Yu died in Beijing following an illness. She was 46 years old, and she was the only Empress of China whose coffin was transported from the Forbidden Cityto her tomb by train. On her funeral, the President of the Republic of China, Li Yuanhong, praised Long Yu as the "most excellent among ...

    Lynch argues that by accepting abdication, rather than the only other option, which would have been removal by force, Longyu at least preserved what remained of the imperial families' dignity. He points out, though, that while on the one hand the Republic government claimed to have inherited the traditional Mandate of Heaven, on the other it introd...

    Bauley, John Paul. China in the Twentieth Century, 2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Limited, 2001. ISBN 978-0631203285.
    Lynch, Michael. Mao. London: Routledge, 2004. ISBN 978-0415215787.
    Rawski, Evelyn S. The Last Emperors: A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions. Berkely, CA: University of California Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0520228375.
  2. Within a few months after the fall of the Qing dynasty, on 22 February 1913, Empress Dowager Longyu died in Beijing after an illness. She was 45 years old, and was the only Chinese empress whose coffin was transported from the Forbidden City to her tomb by train.

  3. Yehe Nara Jingfen ( 靜芬; 28 January 1868 – 22 February 1913), of the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner Yehe Nara clan, was the wife and empress consort of Zaitian, the Guangxu Emperor. She was empress consort of Qing from 1889 until her husband's death in 1908, after which she was honoured as Empress Dowager Longyu.

  4. Also known as. Lung-yü, Empress dowager of China, Lung-yü, Dowager Empress of China, Longyu huang tai hou, Xiaoding jing huang hou, Lung-yü huang t`ai hou, Hsiao-ting ching huang hou. Date of birth. 1868. Date of death.

  5. Empress Dowager Longyu Yehe Nara Jingfen (靜芬; 28 January 1868 – 22 February 1913), of the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner Yehe Nara clan, was the wife and empress consort of Zaitian, the Guangxu Emperor.

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  7. Empress Dowager Longyu Yehe Nara Jingfen (叶赫那拉氏, 靜芬; 28 January 1868 – 22 February 1913), of the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner Yehe Nara clan, was the wife and empress consort of Zaitian, the Guangxu Emperor.

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