(Not Double Clean) Transmigrated into the Qing Dynasty and became concubine Xu, favored by Emperor Kangxi. Xu Lejin was shocked. She had lived for fifty years with only one man, and now her reputat...
Xu Manjin didn't have a deep impression of Xu Lejin, who was given the titles of Consort Yu, Imperial Concubine Yu, Noble Consort Yu, and even Empress Xiaoshuren's elder sister.
In the eighteenth year of the Kangxi Emperor's reign, Consort Yu, Xu Lejin, became pregnant and conceived the emperor's child.
That year, Ms. Xie also became pregnant.
A banquet was held in the palace, and Xu Manjin accompanied Xie to the banquet. When Empress Dowager Xiaozhuang learned that Xie was pregnant again at the age of forty, she suddenly decided to arrange a marriage between Xu Manjin and her youngest sister Xu Zijin when they grew up.
Because of the Empress Dowager's words, a few years later, Xu Manjin and her younger sister Xu Zijin were betrothed to the legitimate sons born to the third wife of Prince An.
After Xu Manjin married Marhun, the fifteenth son of Prince An, she gave birth to two sets of twins, a boy and a girl.
However, perhaps due to various considerations, Prince An did not pass the title to Xu Manjin's husband, Marhou, nor to Xu Zijin's husband.
The other two sons of the third wife, Lady Hesheli, inherited the title of Prince An after being demoted.
However, things took a turn for the better. After Emperor Kangxi abdicated and Emperor Yonghe ascended the throne, he bestowed the title of Doruo Prince upon Marhui and Jingxi, and Xu Manjin and Xu Zijin became the primary consorts of the Doruo Prince.
Their descendants also inherited the title.
7. Xu Zijin
Xu Zijin, following the imperial decree of the Empress Dowager, married into the Prince An's mansion along with her elder sister Xu Manjin. She became the wife of Prince An's seventeenth son, Jingxi, and gave birth to three sons and four daughters.
8. Ababa, the only illegitimate daughter of the Xu family's eldest branch. I won't go into too much detail about the illegitimate sons and daughters of the second branch.
Some of them married well. For example, at the beginning, because they had no sons, they flattered and relied on the daughters of Concubine Chun and Concubine Qin of the Xie family. Although they did not marry into a high-ranking family, they were still considered legitimate wives.
Those concubines who resisted by relying on their sons mostly became concubines themselves, or married into humble families, where they were tormented and mistreated by the principal wife and mother-in-law.