Although Zhen Xuan in Empresses in the Palace is fictional, when it was adapted into a TV series, the author Wu arranged her story on a real figure in history-the road to the filial piety queen. The real filial piety queen was born in the 31st year of Kangxi (1692), and is the daughter of Zhu Ling, a Manchu four-courtesy official decorated with yellow ornaments. At the age of thirteen, he was selected by the draft, assigned to serve in Yonghe Palace, and married Yin Zhen, Prince of Yong, to become a princess. In the eighth year of Yongzheng, Jin Guifei. After emperor Qianlong ascended the throne, he was honored as the Queen Mother of Notre Dame, with the emblem of Chongqing, and lived in Cining Palace. Qianlong died on the 23rd of the first month in the 42nd year.
During the Yongzheng period, the real filial queen mother was the imperial concubine and the biological mother of Emperor Qianlong. Historically, as early as the first year of Yongzheng, the emperor had decided to make her son Li Hong the Crown Prince. She is a long and happy old lady. Li Hong didn't experience a brutal court struggle for power, and Yongzheng attached great importance to his position. The only competitor, Hongshi, was hacked to death by Yongzheng himself, just because she had some signs of seizing power. Therefore, after Li Hong ascended the throne, he attached great importance to family ties, pardoned all the guilt from Dourgen to the descendants of the eight lords, and restored several princes who were deprived of their ancestral home because of the failure to seize the office, including Hong, who was more filial to his mother and claimed to "raise the world". The old lady not only lavished herself on her birthday every year, but also lived to the age of eighty-five.