The Qing Dynasty was the last feudal dynasty in China and a dynasty ruled by ethnic minorities.
The Qing Dynasty still implemented the system of baronships of princes and princes, and also followed the system of The Jin Dynasty's emperor Yu Jingshi. The king of the clan is not in the place of the clan, there is no lordship. Qing Dynasty titles were divided into clan titles, titles of meritorious servants with different surnames, and Mongolian titles. The titles of the clan are divided into twelve classes, each of which has several grades. The twelfth grade can be roughly divided into super product, grade: super product: prince, county king, baylor, shell, gong, general. Mongol titles are generally in accordance with the rules of the clan title, while retaining the original Mongolian title, and sometimes the hereditary replacement of the Khan above the prince.
Of course, the title of meritorious servant with a different surname is given to a meritorious person with a different surname. Gong, Hou, Uncle, Son, and Male are some of them. The titles of meritorious men with different surnames are divided into nine classes. It can be seen that for the highest title of a hero of the opposite sex, it is also a gong, and the Han people belonged to the opposite sex at that time, and it was difficult to be crowned king than to go to Qingtian. However, in the early Days of the Manchu Qing Dynasty, there were still a few people who were crowned kings, not as many as five.
1. Wu Sangui, King of Pingxi
Needless to say, everyone is more familiar with this, this Han man with the Guanning iron horse, took the lead in surrendering to the Qing Dynasty, ceded the world's first Guanshan Customs to the Qing Dynasty, so that the Qing Dynasty could drive straight in, and finally he led his troops as a vanguard to attack the southern Ming and rebels everywhere, and finally killed the Southern Ming Emperor and was crowned by the Manchu Qing Dynasty as the King of Pingxi. Of course, in the end, he chose to betray the Qing Dynasty, and was the most powerful in the San Francisco Rebellion.
Wu Sangui
2. Geng Zhongming, King of Jingnan
In the thirty-second year of the Ming Dynasty (1604), he was born in Gaizhou Wei, Liaodong Province, and Chongzhen was initially a staff general of Dengzhou, the former department of Mao Wenlong.
Yuan Chonghuan oversaw Ji Liao, killed Mao Wenlong, and Geng Zhongming was transferred to shandong under sun Yuanhua. In the fifth year of Chongzhen (1632), he captured Dengzhou for Kong Youde Neiying and declared himself the chief soldier. In the spring of the seventh year of Tiancong (1633), he crossed the sea with Kong Youde and landed in Houjin.
In the first year of Chongde (1636), he was named the King of Huaishun by the Qing Dynasty, under the Yellow Banner of the Han Army; in the first year of Shunzhi (1644), after entering the Customs with the Qing army, he suppressed the peasant rebellion; in the sixth year of Shunzhi (1649), he was renamed the King of Jingnan, and together with Wu Sangui and Shang Kexi, he was called the Three Domains of the Early Qing Dynasty. His grandson Geng Jingzhong eventually rebelled against the Qing Dynasty.
Geng Zhongming
3. The King of Pingnan is still gratifying
Ziyuan Ji (Chinese: 元吉; pinyin: Zhāng ji gīng yīng īng ìīng Yì Đồng Shang Kexi fought horses all his life, experienced hundreds of battles, turned tens of thousands of miles, made great contributions to the establishment and consolidation of the Qing Dynasty, and wrote a strong stroke in the history of the Qing Dynasty. During the Kangxi Dynasty, Jin was made the Prince of Pingnan. On October 29, the fifteenth year of the Kangxi Dynasty, Shang Kexi, the Prince of Pingnan, died in Guangzhou at the age of 73. The Kangxi Emperor gave him the title of "Jing". His eldest son, Shang Zhixin, launched a mutiny and put him under house arrest during the "San Fan Rebellion", and coordinated with Wu Sangui to oppose the Qing, and later surrendered to Qing, attacked the Prince of Pingnan, crowned the Crown Prince Taibao, obeyed the orders of the central government, and suppressed the thieves in the south, basically sweeping away the remnants of Wu Sangui in liangguang. In 1680, the Kangxi Emperor, citing Shang Zhixin as a cruel and capricious man, could not be left behind, causing him to commit suicide at the age of 52.
Not bad
4. Dingnan King Kong Youde
Zi Ruitu, a native of Gaizhou Wei in Eastern Liaoning (present-day Gai County, Liaoning Province), was originally from Shandong and a general in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties.
Originally a general of Mao Wenlong's army, after Mao Wenlong's death, Yu Chongzhen launched the Wuqiao Mutiny in the fourth year of Chongzhen (1631), and soon surrendered to Houjin. In the ninth year of Chongzhen (1636), he was named king of Gongshun and went on expeditions to Korea, Jinzhou, Songshan and other places. When the Eight Banners Han Army was established, it was incorporated into the Zhenghong Banner of the Han Army. After entering the customs, he accompanied the Prince of Yu Duo duo to pursue and suppress the peasant rebel army and suppressed the anti-Qing struggle in various parts of Jiangnan. In the sixth year of Shunzhi (1649), he changed his title to Dingnan Wang and went out to guangxi. In the ninth year of Shunzhi (1652), Kong Youde was defeated by the Southern Ming general Li Dingguo and trapped in Guilin, where the Qing court buried him and posthumously honored him as Wu Zhuang. Of course, there are film and television dramas in which his daughter Kong Sizhen is more famous.
Kong Youde
5. The righteous king Sun Kewang
In 1630 AD, Zhang Xianzhong rebelled in northern Shaanxi, and Sun Kewang, who was born in poverty, joined the rebel army and was adopted by Zhang Xianzhong as an adopted son and changed his surname to Zhang. As an adult, brave and cunning, whenever he encountered an enemy, he led his troops to sink into the strain, and was called "a wall" by the army. Because he was literate and clever, he was very much valued by Zhang Xianzhong and was the eldest of Zhang Xianzhong's four adopted sons. In August 1644 (the seventeenth year of Chongzhen), Zhang Xianzhong established the Daxi regime in Chengdu (present-day Chengdu, Sichuan), and Sun Kewang was ranked first among the generals, with the general Of Pingdong and the supervision of the army to control the wen and martial arts. After Zhang Xianzhong died in northern Sichuan, Sun Kewang, Li Dingguo and others led the remnants of the Great Western Army to the south to attack and occupy the Yungui area and persist in resisting the Qing. Later, he switched to the Yongli regime and used force to hold the Yongli imperial court hostage. Sun Kewang, in order to crown the King of Qin, killed thirty scholars of the Southern Ming Dynasty and disagreed with the general Li Dingguo, resulting in infighting. In 1657 (the eleventh year of the Yong calendar, the fourteenth year of Shunzhi), Sun Kewang drew troops from Guizhou into Yunnan and attacked Li Dingguo, because the general defected and was unable to defeat Li Dingguo. Sun Ke looked forward to the surrender of the Qing army, and led the Qing army into Sichuan and Guizhou, under the Han army Zhengbai Banner, and later he was poisoned by the Qing army.
Sun Kewang
It can be seen that the five people and four people are the original generals of the Ming Dynasty, and one is from the peasant uprising, and finally surrendered to the Qing Dynasty for his own reasons and was crowned as a prince, which is only a stopgap measure of the Qing Dynasty