Difference between revisions of "Prince Yongxing"

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{{People|name=Yongxing|dob=|service=Empire of China|rank=Prince|nationality=Chinese|billets=}}
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[[Image:Toj 02 learning chinese 72dpi.jpg|thumb|200px|Yongxing teaching Temeraire Chinese. (c) Anke Eissmann]]
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{{People|name=Yongxing|dob=1752? died in 1806|service=Empire of China|rank=Prince|nationality=Chinese|billets=}}
  
 
== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==
Yongxing was a brother of the Chinese Emperor. He believed very strongly that [[Celestial]]s should be kept in the royal family, enough to take on [[Lung Tien Lien]] even though it was believed she was cursed. [[Liu Bao]] stated that if he had not taken her as a companion he might have become The Emperor himself. He had very strong anti-western sentiments also. For these two reasons he was strongly against [[Temeraire]] serving in the [[Aerial Corps]]. He planned to use [[Temeraire]] in his plot to overthrow the Emperor and set up a government more in line with his thinking. Yongxing wanted to convince Temeraire to accept prince Miankai as his new companion, so that after Emperor's death Miankai could take the throne, replacing prince Mianning who was the rightful heir at that time.
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'''Prince Yongxing''' was the older brother of the [[Jiaqing Emperor]]. If he had wife and children of his own, nothing was heard of them by [[William Laurence]].
  
Yongxing was the first person to criticize the treatment of dragons in Britain. Moreover, he did not support the British presence in China because he felt that the British were disrespectful towards the Emperor. For the obvious reasons, he disapproved of opium smugglers. However, he was equally disapproving of the Christian missionaries, who tried to convert the Chinese to Christianity.
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===Cultural stance===
 +
Yongxing was strongly opposed to allowing Europeans to enter China. His attitude towards Western nations, although perhaps extreme, was not atypical of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qing_Dynasty Qing government] in China. He viewed Britain as a lesser nation, comparable to China's other tributary nations and owing "threefold gratitude and submission to the Emperor."
  
Yongxing attempted to have [[William Laurence]] murdered several times, which was ultimately his downfall. [[Temeraire]] was so enraged that he started a fight with Lien and Yongxing was accidentally killed in the ensuing chaos.  
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Yongxing told Laurence that China was sufficient unto itself and did not need Britain's "trinkets, your clockworks and lamps and guns." Yongxing's equation of Christian missionaries with opium smugglers baffled Laurence, who thought that allowing Western merchants into China would bring "the benefits of free and open trade to both parties". However, Laurence may have been unaware of the pervasiveness of the [[#Historical context|opium trade by the British East India Company]].
  
{{expand}}
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Yongxing also insisted that companionship with [[Celestial]] dragons should be limited to the Chinese imperial family. When the albino [[Lung Tien Lien]] was hatched, there was a proposal to send her to a prince in Mongolia; Yongxing took her as his own companion, even though this ended his own chance of becoming Emperor.
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Based on the same moral principle and his anti-Western views, he also opposed sending away the second-born egg of [[Lung Tien Qian]] to [[Napoleon Bonaparte]]. Even for proponents of this plan, the rank of the "Emperor of France" was less important than simply avoiding the creation of rival claimants to the Chinese throne. Yongxing was unable to prevent the egg from being sent away, but before it could reach Napoleon, it was captured by the British [[Royal Navy]] and hatched at sea. The dragonet chose Captain [[William Laurence]] as its companion and allowed him to name it [[Temeraire]].
 +
 
 +
Yongxing's stance was apparently vindicated by the news that the Celestial hatchling had been paired to a "common soldier" to enter active service in the British [[Aerial Corps]], both of which were unthinkable for Celestials in China.
 +
 
 +
===Chinese Embassy===
 +
A [[Chinese Embassy]] delegation was sent to retrieve Temeraire (whom they named Lung Tien Xiang). Yongxing led the delegation, which also included [[Liu Bao]] and [[Sun Kai]]. They travelled to Great Britain on four merchant ships belonging to the East India Company. The ships initially demanded payment, but were confiscated by Imperial edict. The ships' crews were incensed, as were other British personnel who learned of it, but the British government was anxious to avoid offending the embassy and tried to keep the confiscations secret.
 +
 
 +
The embassy attempted to persuade Temeraire to come back to China, but he refused to leave Laurence. When voluntary separation proved impossible, the British government ordered Laurence and his crew of [[aviators]] to accompany Temeraire, the British envoy [[Arthur Hammond]], and Yongxing's embassy back to China on the ''[[HMS Allegiance]]''.
 +
 
 +
On the return voyage, Yongxing tried to win Temeraire's trust by teaching him Chinese characters and literature, as well as describing the lifestyle of dragons in China. Temeraire was eager to learn these things, but rejected Yongxing's suggestion that in China, he might have a companion more "worthy" than Laurence.
 +
 
 +
Since Yongxing could not separate Temeraire from Laurence, he tried to separate Laurence from Temeraire. These attempts included outright commands, cajolery that life in China would be better for Temeraire, and the open offer of 10,000 taels (almost 900 pounds in weight) of silver for Laurence and general trade advantages for Britain. After all of these failed, Yongxing's servant [[Feng Li]] twice tried to kill Laurence before being washed overboard in a storm.
 +
 
 +
===Return to China===
 +
On reaching China, Yongxing and Lien were affectionately reunited.
 +
 
 +
Yongxing continued to apply pressure to both Temeraire and Laurence. He brought his nephew [[Prince Miankai]] for an incognito introduction to Temeraire. ([[Emily Roland]] and [[Peter Dyer]] had enough Chinese to learn the boy's name and identity while playing with him.) Perhaps knowing that Temeraire would spend the night with [[Lung Qin Mei]], Yongxing may have arranged a ''hunhun'' attack on the British delegation to take advantage of Temeraire's absence.
 +
 
 +
At a theatrical performance in Peking, Roland pointed out Miankai beside his older brother Crown Prince [[Mianning]] and their uncle Prince Yongxing. Hammond and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Thomas_Staunton George Staunton] quickly deduced that Yongxing wanted Temeraire to accept Miankai, then place the boy on the throne as a puppet; Yongxing would then take actual power as Imperial Regent and sever all ties with the West. This gave Yongxing a motive for killing Laurence.
 +
 
 +
Temeraire heard Hammond and Staunton, which intensified his existing desire to kill Yongxing. As the theatrical performance continued, another attacker disguised himself as an actor and hurled a knife into Laurence's shoulder. Temeraire promptly killed the attacker and turned on Yongxing. In the ensuing duel between Temeraire and Lien, Yongxing was accidentally killed by flying debris.
 +
 
 +
===Aftermath===
 +
Prince Miankai confirmed that his late uncle had promised him his own Celestial and asked if he would like to be Emperor. Yongxing's supporters were cast into disgrace, leaving Mianning ascendant at the court. 
 +
 
 +
Hammond arranged to have Laurence adopted as a son by the Emperor, a technicality that allowed Temeraire to confirm his choice of companion in the traditional vein. Laurence was also granted an estate in the capital, which would be occupied in his absence by Hammond and the other British diplomats.
 +
 
 +
Lien, mourning Yongxing deeply, was persuaded by the French ambassador [[De Guignes]] to revenge herself on Temeraire and Laurence by travelling to France to assist Napoleon.
 +
 
 +
==Historical context==
 +
During this historical period, the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_East_India_Company#Opium_trade British East India Company] was smuggling hundreds of tons of opium into China each year.  This went on despite the fact that opium had been illegal in China since 1729 and that the [[Jiaqing Emperor]] had reaffirmed the opium import ban in 1799. 
 +
 
 +
There was far more demand for Chinese tea, porcelain and silks in Britain than for British goods in China.  Britain's trade deficit was compounded by the disparity in monetary policies between Britain's gold standard and China's silver standard.  Britain was thus forced to buy silver from other European nations in order to trade to China for goods.
 +
 
 +
In order to address the British trade deficit, the East India Company pursued an opium monopoly in Bengal.  By 1773, they had obtained it.  Opium produced in Bengal was sold by the Company to various agents and traffickers in Calcutta with the understanding that it would end up in China.  The proceeds from illegal sales of opium in China were then paid into the Company's factory at Canton, where they were used to purchase tea and other Chinese goods. 
 +
 
 +
To understand Yongxing's attitude towards Britain, one need only imagine what would happen if a small 21st century nation attempted to balance its trade deficit with a larger and more powerful one - the United States, for example - by smuggling heroin or cocaine into the larger nation.
 +
 
 +
===Deviations from History===
 +
Historically, Yongxing (Prince Cheng; 1752-1823) was the eleventh son of the Qianlong Emperor. From a young age, he excelled in calligraphy, even arousing the admiration of the emperor himself. During his father’s reign, he was appointed one of the chiefs in charge of editing the ‘Collectanea of imperial books’. He led an enjoyable artistic life dedicated to the study of calligraphy and poetry, except for a year or so, during his brother Jiaqing’s reign in 1799, when he temporarily undertook two positions as acting minister for the Board of Revenue and as minister of the Board of Civil Office.
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 +
See Wikipedia article ''Prince Cheng of the First Rank'' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Cheng_of_the_First_Rank)
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 +
==References==
 +
[http://www.chinaheritagequarterly.org/features.php?searchterm=012_PrinceChunMansion.inc&issue=012  The Vicissitudes of Prince Chun's Mansion] : sections "The Villa of Mingju" and "Transforming a Mansion into a Princely Residence".
 +
 
 +
Rhoads, Edward JM. ''Manchus & Han: Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China, 1861-1928'', [http://books.google.com/books?id=QiM2pF5PDR8C&pg=PA78&lpg=PA78&dq=yongxing+cheng+prince+1752&source=bl&ots=xUF3-GJPlB&sig=sTOtXQCinLbpJsfTUdT_A1Htul0&hl=en&ei=ljmJTIPnOYqKtgPMpYWSBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBQQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=yongxing%20cheng%20prince%201752&f=false, p78]. University of Washington Press. 2001.
 
[[Category:A-Z|Yongxing, Prince]]
 
[[Category:A-Z|Yongxing, Prince]]
 
[[Category:Chinese|Yongxing, Prince]]
 
[[Category:Chinese|Yongxing, Prince]]
 
[[Category:People|Yongxing, Prince]]
 
[[Category:People|Yongxing, Prince]]

Latest revision as of 16:30, 9 March 2017

Yongxing teaching Temeraire Chinese. (c) Anke Eissmann

Character Profile[edit]

Name: Yongxing
Date of Birth: 1752? died in 1806
Service: Empire of China
Rank: Prince
Nationality: Chinese
Billets:


Biography[edit]

Prince Yongxing was the older brother of the Jiaqing Emperor. If he had wife and children of his own, nothing was heard of them by William Laurence.

Cultural stance[edit]

Yongxing was strongly opposed to allowing Europeans to enter China. His attitude towards Western nations, although perhaps extreme, was not atypical of the Qing government in China. He viewed Britain as a lesser nation, comparable to China's other tributary nations and owing "threefold gratitude and submission to the Emperor."

Yongxing told Laurence that China was sufficient unto itself and did not need Britain's "trinkets, your clockworks and lamps and guns." Yongxing's equation of Christian missionaries with opium smugglers baffled Laurence, who thought that allowing Western merchants into China would bring "the benefits of free and open trade to both parties". However, Laurence may have been unaware of the pervasiveness of the opium trade by the British East India Company.

Yongxing also insisted that companionship with Celestial dragons should be limited to the Chinese imperial family. When the albino Lung Tien Lien was hatched, there was a proposal to send her to a prince in Mongolia; Yongxing took her as his own companion, even though this ended his own chance of becoming Emperor.

Based on the same moral principle and his anti-Western views, he also opposed sending away the second-born egg of Lung Tien Qian to Napoleon Bonaparte. Even for proponents of this plan, the rank of the "Emperor of France" was less important than simply avoiding the creation of rival claimants to the Chinese throne. Yongxing was unable to prevent the egg from being sent away, but before it could reach Napoleon, it was captured by the British Royal Navy and hatched at sea. The dragonet chose Captain William Laurence as its companion and allowed him to name it Temeraire.

Yongxing's stance was apparently vindicated by the news that the Celestial hatchling had been paired to a "common soldier" to enter active service in the British Aerial Corps, both of which were unthinkable for Celestials in China.

Chinese Embassy[edit]

A Chinese Embassy delegation was sent to retrieve Temeraire (whom they named Lung Tien Xiang). Yongxing led the delegation, which also included Liu Bao and Sun Kai. They travelled to Great Britain on four merchant ships belonging to the East India Company. The ships initially demanded payment, but were confiscated by Imperial edict. The ships' crews were incensed, as were other British personnel who learned of it, but the British government was anxious to avoid offending the embassy and tried to keep the confiscations secret.

The embassy attempted to persuade Temeraire to come back to China, but he refused to leave Laurence. When voluntary separation proved impossible, the British government ordered Laurence and his crew of aviators to accompany Temeraire, the British envoy Arthur Hammond, and Yongxing's embassy back to China on the HMS Allegiance.

On the return voyage, Yongxing tried to win Temeraire's trust by teaching him Chinese characters and literature, as well as describing the lifestyle of dragons in China. Temeraire was eager to learn these things, but rejected Yongxing's suggestion that in China, he might have a companion more "worthy" than Laurence.

Since Yongxing could not separate Temeraire from Laurence, he tried to separate Laurence from Temeraire. These attempts included outright commands, cajolery that life in China would be better for Temeraire, and the open offer of 10,000 taels (almost 900 pounds in weight) of silver for Laurence and general trade advantages for Britain. After all of these failed, Yongxing's servant Feng Li twice tried to kill Laurence before being washed overboard in a storm.

Return to China[edit]

On reaching China, Yongxing and Lien were affectionately reunited.

Yongxing continued to apply pressure to both Temeraire and Laurence. He brought his nephew Prince Miankai for an incognito introduction to Temeraire. (Emily Roland and Peter Dyer had enough Chinese to learn the boy's name and identity while playing with him.) Perhaps knowing that Temeraire would spend the night with Lung Qin Mei, Yongxing may have arranged a hunhun attack on the British delegation to take advantage of Temeraire's absence.

At a theatrical performance in Peking, Roland pointed out Miankai beside his older brother Crown Prince Mianning and their uncle Prince Yongxing. Hammond and George Staunton quickly deduced that Yongxing wanted Temeraire to accept Miankai, then place the boy on the throne as a puppet; Yongxing would then take actual power as Imperial Regent and sever all ties with the West. This gave Yongxing a motive for killing Laurence.

Temeraire heard Hammond and Staunton, which intensified his existing desire to kill Yongxing. As the theatrical performance continued, another attacker disguised himself as an actor and hurled a knife into Laurence's shoulder. Temeraire promptly killed the attacker and turned on Yongxing. In the ensuing duel between Temeraire and Lien, Yongxing was accidentally killed by flying debris.

Aftermath[edit]

Prince Miankai confirmed that his late uncle had promised him his own Celestial and asked if he would like to be Emperor. Yongxing's supporters were cast into disgrace, leaving Mianning ascendant at the court.

Hammond arranged to have Laurence adopted as a son by the Emperor, a technicality that allowed Temeraire to confirm his choice of companion in the traditional vein. Laurence was also granted an estate in the capital, which would be occupied in his absence by Hammond and the other British diplomats.

Lien, mourning Yongxing deeply, was persuaded by the French ambassador De Guignes to revenge herself on Temeraire and Laurence by travelling to France to assist Napoleon.

Historical context[edit]

During this historical period, the British East India Company was smuggling hundreds of tons of opium into China each year. This went on despite the fact that opium had been illegal in China since 1729 and that the Jiaqing Emperor had reaffirmed the opium import ban in 1799.

There was far more demand for Chinese tea, porcelain and silks in Britain than for British goods in China. Britain's trade deficit was compounded by the disparity in monetary policies between Britain's gold standard and China's silver standard. Britain was thus forced to buy silver from other European nations in order to trade to China for goods.

In order to address the British trade deficit, the East India Company pursued an opium monopoly in Bengal. By 1773, they had obtained it. Opium produced in Bengal was sold by the Company to various agents and traffickers in Calcutta with the understanding that it would end up in China. The proceeds from illegal sales of opium in China were then paid into the Company's factory at Canton, where they were used to purchase tea and other Chinese goods.

To understand Yongxing's attitude towards Britain, one need only imagine what would happen if a small 21st century nation attempted to balance its trade deficit with a larger and more powerful one - the United States, for example - by smuggling heroin or cocaine into the larger nation.

Deviations from History[edit]

Historically, Yongxing (Prince Cheng; 1752-1823) was the eleventh son of the Qianlong Emperor. From a young age, he excelled in calligraphy, even arousing the admiration of the emperor himself. During his father’s reign, he was appointed one of the chiefs in charge of editing the ‘Collectanea of imperial books’. He led an enjoyable artistic life dedicated to the study of calligraphy and poetry, except for a year or so, during his brother Jiaqing’s reign in 1799, when he temporarily undertook two positions as acting minister for the Board of Revenue and as minister of the Board of Civil Office.

See Wikipedia article Prince Cheng of the First Rank (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Cheng_of_the_First_Rank)

References[edit]

The Vicissitudes of Prince Chun's Mansion : sections "The Villa of Mingju" and "Transforming a Mansion into a Princely Residence".

Rhoads, Edward JM. Manchus & Han: Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China, 1861-1928, p78. University of Washington Press. 2001.