Prince Qin

Qing dynasty princely peer

Prince Qin of the Second Rank (勤郡王) was a Qing dynasty princely peerage. The peerage was created in 1684 for Yunduan, Nurhaci's great-grandson and son of Prince An of the Second Rank Yolo. As Prince Qin of the Second Rank peerage was not given iron-cap status, each successive bearer of the title would hold diminished ranks vis-a-vis his predecessor.[1]

Members of Prince Qin peerage

  • 1684-1698: Yunduan . He was granted a title of Prince of the Second Rank under the name "Qin". In 1690, he was demoted to prince of the Fourth Rank and stripped of his titles in 1698.[2][3]

Family tree

Prince Qin peerage is marked with purple

References

  1. ^ Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing. Imperial Princes, Chart 2.
  2. ^ Tong/佟, Jiajiang/佳江. "Correction of the "Draft History of Qing" ". Jilin University press.
  3. ^ Liu, Xiaomeng (2009). 正说清朝十二王/"Qing dynasty 12 princes". Beijing Book Co. Inc.
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Qing dynasty junwangs (second-rank princes)
Non-downgrading peerages
("iron-cap" princes)
  • Prince Keqin ** Prince Ping ** Prince Yanxi
  • Prince Shuncheng
Promoted and non-downgrading peerages
  • Prince Xin
Promoted but downgrading peerages
  • Prince Raoyu
  • Prince Wuying
  • Prince Guo
Downgrading peerages
  • Prince Min
  • Prince Qian
  • Prince Xi
  • Prince Qin
  • Prince Wen
  • Prince Hui
  • Prince Zhi
  • Prince Cheng
  • Prince Dun
  • Prince Ning
  • Prince Xun (恂)
  • Prince Tai
  • Prince Yu
  • Prince Shen (Prince Zhi)
  • Prince Xun (循)
  • Prince Yinzhi
  • Prince Zhong
  • Prince Fu
Posthumous titles
  • Prince Wugong
  • Prince Huizhe
  • Prince Xuanxian
  • Prince Tongda
  • Prince Mu
  • Prince Shun
  • Prince Hui
  • Prince Min