-
Zaiyuan (16
October 1816 – 8
November 1861),
formally known as
Prince Yi, was a
Manchu prince of the Qing dynasty. He was one of the
eight regents appointed...
- also
known as Dze Nyoe Fu in
Shanghainese or Fu
Zaiyuan in
Mandarin (Chinese: 傅在源; pinyin: Fù
Zàiyuán; July 5, 1919 –
August 26, 2011) was a Chinese-****anese...
-
distinct factions — one led by the
senior official Sushun and the
princes Zaiyuan and Duanhua, and the
other led by
Noble Consort Yi, who was
supported by...
- of the
Xianfeng Emperor in 1861, Sushun, his
elder brother Duanhua, and
Zaiyuan,
along with five
other prominent people in the Qing
imperial court, were...
- (Tongzhi Emperor) in
governing the empire. The
eight regents, Sushun,
Zaiyuan, Duanhua,
Jingshou (景壽), Muyin,
Kuang Yuan (匡源), Du Han (杜翰) and Jiao Youying...
- (兵部尚書) and
other positions. In 1860,
during the
Second Opium War, he and
Zaiyuan (Prince Yi) made the
Imperial Commissioners in
charge of
peace negotiations...
- for the emperor, with one
faction led by Sushun, and
princes Duanhua and
Zaiyuan, and
another faction led by Yixuan's
sixth brother,
Prince Gong, as well...
- He
summoned eight of his most
prestigious ministers,
headed by Sushun,
Zaiyuan and Duanhua, and
named them the "Eight
Regent Ministers" to
direct and...
- the
Daoguang Emperor became critically ill, he
summoned Zaiquan (載銓),
Zaiyuan, Duanhua,
Sengge Rinchen, Mujangga, He
Rulin (何汝霖), Chen Fu'en (陳孚恩) and...
- (1861)
Muyin (1861)
Kuang Yuan (1861) Du Han (1861) Jiao
Youying (1861)
Zaiyuan (1861)
Duanhua (1861)
Sushun (1861)
Empress Dowager Ci'an (1861–1875) Empress...