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  1. Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin (敬敏皇贵妃; ? – 20 August 1699), of the Manchu Bordered White Banner Janggiya clan, was a concubine of the Kangxi Emperor . Life. Family background. Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin's personal name was not recorded in history. Her family belong to the Bordered White Banner .

  2. Imperial Noble Consort ( Chinese: 皇貴妃, Vietnamese: hoàng quý phi, Korean : 황귀비) was the title of women who ranked second to the Empress in the imperial harem of China during most of the period spanning from 1457 to 1915. In Ming Dynasty, the rank of Imperial Noble Consort was only a highest honorary title of an imperial consort.

  3. Yinxiang's mother, Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin, was the daughter of the military commander Haikuan (海寬) from the Bordered White Banner. By the same birth mother, Yinxiang had two sisters, both of whom were younger than him.

  4. 7 de may. de 2020 · Introduction. Imperial Palace. Previous Generation. Ruling & Future Generations. Male Members of the Royal Family. Female Members of the Royal Family. Inner Palace/Imperial Harem (后宫 hòugóng) Tier 1: Empress. Tier 2: Consorts. Tier 3: Concubines. Daughters of the Emperor. Crown Prince and Wang’s Manor (东宫 dōnggōng/王府 wángfǔ) Tier 1: Main Wife.

  5. Mother. Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin (敬敏皇貴妃), from the Janggiya (章佳) clan. She was the daughter of a commander called Haikuan (海寬) from the Bordered Yellow Banner of the Eight Banners. Spouses: Primary spouses: Lady Zhaojia (兆佳氏), daughter of Imperial Secretary (尚書) Ma'erhan (馬爾漢). Lady Fuca (富察氏), daughter of zuoling (佐領) Sengge (僧格).

  6. Early life. Yinxiang was born in the Aisin Gioro clan as the 13th son of the Kangxi Emperor. The emperor had some 55 recorded consorts. Yinxiang's mother, Imperial Noble Consort Jingmin, was the daughter of the military commander Haikuan (海寬) from the Bordered White Banner.

  7. Los rangos de las consortes imperiales (後宮, ) han variado a lo largo de la historia de China, pero siguieron siendo importantes debido a su importancia en la gestión de la corte interior y en la sucesión imperial, que clasificaba a los herederos según la prominencia de sus madres además de su estricto orden de nacimiento.