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Is Qianlong really the son of the Han people?

It turns out that the bloodline complex is at play

Whether it is the "Summer Resort Theory" or the "Tiaobao Theory", there is the same intriguing "heroine" in it, which is worth exploring. That is the biological mother of Qianlong in the legend. She is generally denied to be the Hulu family of Gegeniu recorded in the "Jade Certificate", but a Han woman born in the south. In "The Story of the Summer Resort", the daughter of a skilled craftsman from the south of the Yangtze River is very ugly and has a very humble status. But after all, the son born to this "humble" woman is the child of a Manchu emperor. In this story The Qianlong Emperor Hongli had half Han blood and half Manchu blood flowing in his body, which was relatively moderate. In "Tiao Bao Shuo", Qianlong's biological mother was a very noble Han mother. The difference is that in this story, Hongli no longer has a drop of Manchu blood in his body. A so-called Manchu The emperor has 100% Han blood flowing through his body, and this situation was caused by the Manchus themselves. This move is really cruel.

Obviously, these stories are mixed with the concept of "bloodline theory", so whether it is the "summer resort theory" or the "transfer theory", it is actually the traditional Chinese bloodline complex that is at work.

When the Manchus overthrew the number one Han emperor in the Ming Dynasty, the Han people could no longer accept it emotionally. Of course, they had to find ways to vent their resentment, openly, secretly, and justly. , low-class people, they don’t seem to care about anything. If you search carefully, you will find that these legends and stories actually began to be fabricated as soon as the Manchu Emperor Shunzhi came to power. According to some books, Emperor Shunzhi was the result of an affair between a concubine of Emperor Taizong of the Qing Dynasty and a hunter named Wang Gao from Guandong; Emperor Yongzheng was the result of Kangxi taking a fancy to the wife of a fat man named Wei during a private visit in disguise, and forcibly conscripted her into the palace. She was a concubine, but she didn't know that Wei's concubine was already pregnant with Liujia, and the Yinzhen who was born later was hidden in Wei's belly and brought into the palace. In this way, the Manchu royal family had already been quietly revolutionized by the Han people, and during the reign of Emperor Yongzheng, it was already completely dominated by the Han people. By the time of Qianlong, it was nothing more than a further consolidation of the country and the change of national power. A special form of "concession system" was inadvertently formed here, which is really unpleasant.

"A Brief Theory of Chinese Patriarchal System" says: Ever since Qin Shihuang won power and used Lu Buwei's bloodline to pretend to be the emperor, such bloodline jokes under the patriarchal system have been performed frequently in the palace and among the people. It is common for harems to accept folk babies and pretend to be dragons, and for wealthy wives and concubines to pretend to be pregnant and pass off other people's children as blood yin. Blood relationship is also a weapon to balance the psychology of spiritual victory. According to folklore, Emperor Qianlong had his daughter and the son of the Chen family in Haining, Zhejiang, swapped out by Yongzheng. It is said that even Qianlong himself later learned this secret, so he was lucky enough to be in Jiangnan. I visited the Anlan Garden of the Chen family in Haining four times, and inscribed plaques such as "Love Day Hall" and "Chunhui Hall" on the Chen family, implying the meaning of "Who knows that the heart of an inch of grass will be rewarded with three rays of spring light". So much. It turns out that the Qing Dynasty of the Manchu people was already dominated by the sons of the Han people. The theory of blood is actually a good medicine to soothe the national trauma.

Going back and looking up the legendary plaques conferring "Airi Hall", "Chunhui Hall", and "Shuangqing Thatched Cottage" from the emperor, I found out that the "Airi Hall" plaque was the name of Kangxi, Qianlong's grandfather. The emperor gave it to Chen Yuanlong. "Chunhui Hall" is not on the plaque of Chen Yuanlong's family, but on the hall of Chen Yuanlong's nephew Chen Bangyan. Chen Bangyan's father passed away very early, and his mother, Mrs. Huang, worked hard to raise Bangyan. In order to repay his mother's kindness, Chen Bangyan planned to The name of this hall. Emperor Kangxi gave it an imperial title in the fifty-fourth year of his reign (1715). "Shuangqing Thatched Cottage" is the nickname of Chen Yuanlong's study. It was named after the two podocarpus trees in front of the study. The words on the plaque were written by Chen Yuanlong's cousin, the famous calligrapher Chen Yixi. As for Qianlong's poems and wordless tablets, they are just shadows. The construction of the Tanah Lot Temple is even more nonsense. The main building of the Tanah Lot Temple still stands in the city and was built in the eighth year of the Yongzheng reign (1730). It is not surprising that Qianlong wore Han clothes and a Han hat. To this day, there are many handed down portraits of Qianlong in Han clothes hidden in the Forbidden City.

Therefore, upon closer inspection, although "Emperor Qianlong is the son of Haining Chen Ge Lao" is widely known, to the Han people with true national integrity, it is such a despicable and gloomy politics. What a joke, it has almost brought disgrace to the Han nation