Prince Rui (瑞)

Prince Rui of the First Rank
Traditional Chinese 和碩瑞親王
Simplified Chinese 和硕瑞亲王
Prince Duan of the Second Rank
Traditional Chinese 多羅端郡王
Simplified Chinese 多罗端郡王
Zaiyi (1856–1922), the third in the Prince Rui line
Zaixun (1885–1949), the fourth in the Prince Rui line

Prince Rui of the First Rank, or simply Prince Rui, was the title of a princely peerage used in China during the Manchu-led Qing dynasty (1644–1912). As the Prince Rui peerage was not awarded "iron-cap" status, this meant that each successive bearer of the title would normally start off with a title downgraded by one rank vis-à-vis that held by his predecessor. However, the title would generally not be downgraded to any lower than a feng'en fuguo gong except under special circumstances.

The first bearer of the title was Mianxin (綿忻; 1805–1828), the Jiaqing Emperor's fourth son, who was made "Prince Rui of the First Rank" in 1819. It was briefly renamed to Prince Duan of the Second Rank (Prince Duan) between 1894 and 1900 when Zaiyi inherited the title. The title was passed down over three generations and held by four persons.

Members of the Prince Rui peerage

Family tree

adoption
Yongyan
顒琰
(1760–1820)
Jiaqing Emperor
嘉慶帝
(1796–1820)
Minning
旻寧
(1782–1850)
Daoguang Emperor
道光帝
(1820–1850)
Mianxin
綿忻
(1805–1828)
Prince Ruihuai of the First Rank
瑞懷親王
(1819–1828)
Yicong
奕誴
(1831–1889)
Prince Dunqin of the First Rank
惇勤親王
(1864–1889)
Yixuan
奕譞
(1840–1891)
Prince Chunxian of the First Rank
醇賢親王
(1872–1891)
Yizhi
奕誌
(1827–1850)
Prince Ruimin of the Second Rank
瑞敏郡王
(1828–1850)
Zaiyi
載漪
(1856–1922)
Prince Duan of the Second Rank
端郡王
(1894–1900)
Zaixun
載洵
(1885–1949)
Beile and Acting Junwang
郡王銜貝勒
(1908–1949)

See also

References

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