Consort Wan

Wan Guifei, or Imperial Noble Consort Wan (traditional Chinese: 萬皇貴妃; simplified Chinese: 万皇贵妃) (1428-1487), born Wan Zhen'er (Chinese: 萬貞兒; pinyin: Wàn Zhēn'ér), known formally as Imperial Noble Consort Gongsuduanshunrongjing (恭肅端順榮靖皇貴妃) was an imperial consort during the Ming Dynasty. She is sometimes known as Consort Wan or Lady Wan and was the favorite consort of the Chenghua Emperor.[1] She is not to be confused with the still more famous Yang Guifei or Consort Yang of the Tang dynasty.

Wan Zhen'er
Born1428 (1428)
Died1487 (aged 5859)
SpouseChenghua Emperor
Issue1st son of Chenghua Emperor (1466-1466)
Posthumous name
Gong Su Duan Shun Rongjing
FatherWan Gui

She was approximately fifteen to seventeen years older than the emperor.[1] Lady Wan had been a mother figure to young Chenghua, but Chenghua Emperor's feeling for her slowly transitioned from mother's love to romantic. Eventually she gave birth to a boy but he died at age of ten months old.[1] Consort Wan was deeply loved by Emperor, who regularly gave her a lot of presents. These signs of affection caused a lot of jealousy from other consorts who began spreading rumors about Consort Wan's evil doings.

In fiction

Played by Tavia Yeung, a fictionalized version of Consort Wan was portrayed in 2011 Hong Kong's TVB television series, The Emperor's Harem(后宫). In the 2011 wuxia film Flying Swords of Dragon Gate, she is played Zhang Xinyu. The villainess Consort Man, played by Stephanie Che, from the 2001 TVB sitcom Virtues of Harmony is loosely based on her. In 2015 Consort Wan is played by Akina Hong in TVB series "The Executioner "

Notes

  1. Weatherford, Jack (2010). The secret history of the Mongol queens : how the daughters of Genghis Khan rescued his empire (1st ed.). New York: Crown Publishers. pp. 169–170. ISBN 9780307407153. OCLC 354817523.
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