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Your Princess Wei Jiashi is the third queen of Emperor Qianlong. How old did she live?
Guifei, whose real name is Wei, is 49 years old and was born on September 9, the fifth year of Yongzheng. When Emperor Qianlong ascended the throne, she entered the palace as a noble. Awarded by Qianlong for ten years, 19 years old, the younger one in the deep palace. Thirty years after Qianlong, the princess was promoted to the imperial concubine, ranking second only to Queen Nora. After Queen Nora abdicated, Emperor Qianlong often gave birth to imperial concubines, so that she gave birth to fourteen sons Lu Yong, fifteen sons Yan Yong (later Emperor Jiaqing), sixteen sons (unnamed), seventeen sons Lin Yong, and seven daughters and nine daughters, so the imperial concubine was also the one with the most children among imperial concubines.

On the 29th day of the first month of the 40th year of Qianlong, Wei Guifei died at the age of 49 and was named "Yi Guifei". After emperor Jiaqing ascended the throne, he posthumously awarded the imperial concubine as the filial piety queen. Your princess is really blessed. She was deeply loved by Emperor Qianlong before her death, and there are still blessings after her death. In fact, Qing Tai, the father of Queen Xiaoyi, is the next leader of the coating department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Ethnically speaking, her ancestor's surname is Wei, belonging to the Han nationality, and later to the Manchu nationality. So she made Emperor Jiaqing, like Emperor Kangxi, be of China descent (Kangxi's mother's surname was Tong, and her ancestors were also Han).

Your concubine entered the palace as a nobleman. She is of China descent. There are no wild desires. She abides by the family law best. It never occurred to her that her eldest son would later attack the Great Unification, because he ranked third from the bottom among the emperor's seventeen sons. What surprised her even more was that her youngest son, Wang Qing's grandson (the seventeenth son of the emperor), later got involved with Yuan Shikai, which made a mess of the politics of the late Qing Dynasty and finally sold the land of the Qing Dynasty for 2 million silver dollars in 267.