Difference between revisions of "Prince Mianning"

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== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==
Mianning was the crown prince of China at the time [[Temeraire]] and [[William Laurence]] visted there. The two of them helped stop a plot to overthrow Mianning and his father begun by [[Prince Yongxing]], Mianning's uncle.  
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'''Prince Mianning''' was the second-born and only surviving son of the [[Jiaqing Emperor]] and his first consort, Hitara (posthumously, the Empress Xiao Shu Rui). He was companion to a male [[Celestial]] dragon, [[Lung Tien Chuan]], who was Temeraire's twin brother.
  
Mianning was companion to a [[Celestial]] named [[Lung Tien Chuan]] who was Temeraire's identical twin.  
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In 1806, Mianning was known as the crown prince and the heir apparent to the imperial throne. [[Temeraire]] and [[William Laurence]] exposed and blocked an attempted coup by the emperor's brother [[Prince Yongxing]], who hoped to place Mianning's younger brother [[Prince Miankai]] on the throne and take control as imperial regent.
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==Deviations from history==
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Historically, the Jiaqing Emperor died without naming a successor. His widow, Niuhuru (Empress Xiao He Rui), used her authority as dowager empress to name her stepson the next emperor, bypassing her own two sons Miankai and Mianxin.
  
 
[[Category:A-Z|Mianning, Prince]]
 
[[Category:A-Z|Mianning, Prince]]

Revision as of 02:10, 9 September 2010

Character Profile

Name: Mianning
Date of Birth: September 16, 1782
Service:
Rank: Prince
Nationality: Chinese
Billets:


Biography

Prince Mianning was the second-born and only surviving son of the Jiaqing Emperor and his first consort, Hitara (posthumously, the Empress Xiao Shu Rui). He was companion to a male Celestial dragon, Lung Tien Chuan, who was Temeraire's twin brother.

In 1806, Mianning was known as the crown prince and the heir apparent to the imperial throne. Temeraire and William Laurence exposed and blocked an attempted coup by the emperor's brother Prince Yongxing, who hoped to place Mianning's younger brother Prince Miankai on the throne and take control as imperial regent.

Deviations from history

Historically, the Jiaqing Emperor died without naming a successor. His widow, Niuhuru (Empress Xiao He Rui), used her authority as dowager empress to name her stepson the next emperor, bypassing her own two sons Miankai and Mianxin.