Zhu Yihai
Zhu Yihai (Chinese: 朱以海; pinyin: Zhū Yǐhǎi; 1618–1662), courtesy name Juchuan (巨川), art name Hengshan (恆山) and Changshizi (常石子), was a regent of the Southern Ming dynasty from 1645 to 1653.
Zhu Yihai 朱以海 | |||||||||
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Regent of the Southern Ming dynasty | |||||||||
Tenure | 7 September 1645 – March or April 1653 | ||||||||
Prince of Lu (魯) | |||||||||
Tenure | 1644–1662 | ||||||||
Predecessor | Zhu Yipai, Prince An | ||||||||
Successor | Zhu Honghuan | ||||||||
Born | Wanli 46, 15th day of the 5th month (萬曆四十六年五月十五日) Ziyang County, Yanzhou Prefecture, Shandong, Ming dynasty (present-day Yanzhou District, Jining, Shandong, China) | 6 July 1618||||||||
Died | 23 December 1662 44) Yongli 16, 13th day of the 11th month (永曆十六年十一月十三日) Kinmen Islands, Simingzhou, Kingdom of Tungning (present-day Kinmen, Fukien, Taiwan) | (aged||||||||
Burial | Prince of Lu's Tomb | ||||||||
Issue |
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House | Zhu | ||||||||
Dynasty | Southern Ming | ||||||||
Father | Zhu Shouyong, Prince Su of Lu | ||||||||
Mother | Lady Wang |
Early life
Zhu Yihai was born in 1618, during the 46th year of the reign of the Wanli Emperor of the Ming dynasty. A son of Zhu Shouyong, he was a ninth-generation descendant (the same generation as the Taichang Emperor) of Zhu Tan, Prince Huang of Lu, tenth son of the Hongwu Emperor.
The mansion of the Prince of Lu was located at Yanzhou. The Qing forces had attacked Yanzhou and destroyed the mansion. At that time, the peerage of Prince of Lu was succeeded by Zhu Yihai's eldest brother, Zhu Yipai. After the Qing invaded, Zhu Yipai committed suicide along with two of his brothers, Zhu Yixing (朱以洐) and Zhu Yijiang (朱以江).
After his brother's suicide, Zhu Yihai was enfeoffed as the 11th Prince of Lu by the Chongzhen Emperor. After four days he succeeded his peerage, Li Zicheng attacked Beijing and he fled to southern China.
Regency
The Prince of Lu was part of the resistance against the invading Qing dynasty forces. His primary consort, Lady Chen, committed suicide during the impending fall of the Ming. The location of her suicide can still be found on the island of Zhoushan.
In 1651 he fled to the island of Kinmen, which in 1663 was taken over by the invading force.[1] His grave was discovered on the island in 1959, which disproved the theory advanced by the 18th-century History of Ming that he was killed by Koxinga. His eighth son, Zhu Honghuan (朱弘桓), married the fourth daughter of Koxinga and went to live in the Kingdom of Tungning Taiwan under the protection of Zheng Jing, his brother-in-law and worked as a farmer.[2] Another Ming prince who accompanied Koxinga to Taiwan was Zhu Shugui, Prince of Ningjing.
After the surrender of the Kingdom of Tungning, the Qing sent the 17 Ming princes still living on Taiwan back to mainland China where they spent the rest of their lives.[3] Including Zhu Honghuan.
References
- Frederic Wakeman Jr. (1986). Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of the Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. p. 114. ISBN 0-520-04804-0.
- 張子文,郭啟傳,林偉洲 (2006). Brief Biographies of Historical Figures in Taiwan: From the Ming and Qing to the Japanese Occupation (臺灣歷史人物小傳—明清暨日據時期). National Library of Taiwan. p. 102. ISBN 9576784514.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Jonathan Manthorpe (2008). Forbidden Nation: A History of Taiwan. St. Martin's Publishing Group. p. 108. ISBN 978-0230614246.
Sources
- The Pacification of Taiwan by the Great Qing (大清台湾绥记).
- Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.