In the first year of Shunzhi in Qing Dynasty, Xigun Wang entered the customs from the Dragon. In the fourth year of Shunzhi, Xigun Wang was sealed in Yaoshan, Baoding, southwest of Beijing, occupying a lot of land in surrounding counties. Later, Xigun Wang used fiefs to develop agriculture, collect land rent, set up manors, run oil mills, set up soy sauce gardens and set up business houses. Wang's descendants, generations of elites, continued to painstakingly manage, vigorously develop, founded families, engaged in agriculture and commerce, accumulated huge wealth, and continued to build manors extensively, providing strong financial resources for the construction of manors. In its heyday, the Wangjia Manor in Yaoshan, Baoding was a castle surrounded by high walls, with more than 50 sets of houses and more than 500 houses of various types, covering an area of nearly 300 mu. At that time, the scope of rent collection reached Dingzhou, Mancheng, Lixian, Levin, Boye and other places in Baoding, and the firms were all over Baoding, Beijing, Tianjin, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and other places. From the fourth year of Shunzhi (A.D. 1647) to 1948 before the land reform, no matter how the vicissitudes of 300 years changed, Yaoshan Wangjia Manor has always been the home of the local rich.
Wangjia Manor in Yaoshan, Baoding is the largest and best preserved mansion of generals and rich people in Qing Dynasty in China, and now it is a national key cultural relic protection unit.