Still working to recover. Please don't edit quite yet.
Pretenders to the Chinese throne
An article on this subject was deleted on Wikipedia: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/ Pretenders to the Chinese throne WP administrators can restore the edit history of this page upon request |
WP+ DEL |
Deleted, deleted, and possibly deleted some more
Notes to make an article out of. Deleted in really sneaky ways and more may yet be deleted on WP, like the WP:PROD (WP)process on Hengzhen's article which just means no one showed up at that page to contest it for a week, and Jin Yinghui, Deleted without nomination or discussion, just...deleted. On the strength of that, there is little to keep article the Hengkai article up, and so on, potentially.
The whole mess pretty much begins where WP history ends, at the abdication of Pu Yi in 1912. There is quite a bit more to it, most of which is covered in a scattered way, until you get to the pretenders. There, it fragments completely and is being gradually whittled away.
I find the pretenders fascinating because they show exactly what royalty consists of: a regular person, and imagination. Wikipedia in general, left or right, likes to believe that there is something fundamental about society and rule, so they hate anything that shows it up. And pretenders don't tend to get a lot of press, cause of course the press needs those imaginary things to justify its information as newsworthy, also.
There is another succession line, through Pu Yi still, but the ones he later named. They are not less worthy, or anything, I just have not got around to them yet because they are not Endangered on WP.
Contents
Line of succession to the Chinese throne
Wikipedia:Line of succession to the Chinese throne
According to Line of Qing succession Monarchy Revival:
"The Monarchy of China was abolished in 1912 when the QÄ«ng Dynasty was overthrown and the Republic of China was declared. Since 1997, the current pretender to the Chinese throne is HH Prince Hengzhen (born 1944) who is the son of Prince Yuyan (born 1918, died 1997) who was the appointed heir of the XuÄntÇ’ng Emperor (better known as "PÇ”yÃ"), the last Emperor of China. The law of succession used is male-line Agnatic Primogeniture." - Line of Qing succession, Monarchy Revival[1]
So, current pretender, #Hengzhen, thereafter (in the list below) called Hêng Chen, followed by
"
- The Noble Prince Chinsin (born 1977), son of Prince Hêng Chen
- The Noble Prince Hêng-k'ai (born 1945), first brother of Prince Hêng Chen
- The Noble Prince Chin-ying Hui (born 1980), son of Prince Hêng-k'ai
- The Noble Prince Hêng-chün (born 1966), second brother of Prince Hêng Chen
" - Line of Qing succession, Monarchy Revival[1]
Also Known As (because there seems to be an unwritten law that a single Chinese name listed in two places has to be typed two different ways. There are some really good reasons for this, but one of them isn't that everyone picks a standard and sticks to it)
- #Hengzhen current pretender, succeeded by
- #Jin Xing
- #Hengkai
- #Jin Yinghui
- #Hêng-chün
Pu Yi
- Wikipedia:The Last Emperor. There's more to it, of course, but a good start.
- Wikipedia:Pu Yi
Yuyan
Wikipedia:Yuyan The last emperor appointed him his successor. Pu Yi later claimed the appointment was under duress.
Yuyuan has the Templates for geneology tree but his own tree ends at him
Yuyuan's sons
- #Hengzhen Wikipedia:Hengzhen(deleted) [2]
- #Hengkai (afd) born 1945[1][2]
- #Hêng-chün born 1966 red-linked as Hengjun
Hengzhen
See #Deletions no AfD
He is called Hêng Chen by the Monarchy Revival site born 1944[1] Two sons? Similar names, and "Hengkai's son Chin-ying Hui" from somewhere
- #Jin Xing Wikipedia:Jin Xing (Aisin Gioro) also Hengxing or Chinsin[1]
- #Jin Yinghui Deleted without nomination or discussion
Jin Xing
JÄ«n XÄ«ng (c=金星|p=JÄ«n XÄ«ng; born 1977; also Chin-hsin or HéngxÄ«ng (æ†æ˜Ÿ) or Heng Hsin) is a descendant of the Dà oguÄng Emperor (é“å…‰). He is the eldest son of the current head, Wikipedia:Aisin Gioro Hengzhen (爱新觉罗·æ’镇)[1] and was educated in Wikipedia:Beijing.
Hengkai
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Hengkai
The nobleman HéngkÇŽi (s=æ’é“ |t=æ†éŽ§|p=HéngkÇŽi; born 1945 in Tien Cheng) is a descendant of the Dà oguÄng Emperor and thus a member of the Wikipedia:Aisin Gioro clan. He is the brother of Wikipedia:Hengzhen, the current head of the QÄ«ng Dynasty, who is thus Wikipedia:pretender to the Chinese Throne.[1]
Hengkai works as an Wikipedia:electrician at an agricultural Wikipedia:hospital in Wikipedia:Hebei province. He is married to Liu Xiujuan (劉秀娟), a Wikipedia:teacher, with whom he has one son, the Noble #Jin Yinghui Wikipedia:Jin Yinghui (金英è¼), born 1980.
Jin Yinghui
See #Deletions
Son of #Hengkai, born 1980
Hêng-chün
born 1966 second brother of #Hengzhen
Deletions
- Hengzhen
Deleted without AfD nomination or discussion
- 23:13, 27 January 2011 Nakon (talk | contribs) deleted "Hengzhen" ‎ (Expired PROD)
- Jin Yinghui
Deleted without nomination or discussion
- 03:39, 5 January 2010 NuclearWarfare (talk | contribs) deleted "Jin Yinghui" ‎ (Mass removal of pages added by Leonopteryx)
See Also
- Wikipedia:Qing Dynasty House of QÄ«ng (does not actually show Yuyuan etc)
- Wikipedia:Jin Xing (Aisin Gioro)
- Wikipedia:Line of succession to the Chinese throne
- Wikipedia:Jin Yinghui
- Wikipedia:Chinese emperors family tree (late) (Redirected from Qing dynasty family tree)
- Wikipedia:List of Chinese monarchs info about succession & privileges of token rule . mentions Pu-Yi non-ruling emperor between February 12, 1912 and November 5, 1924, which Pu-Yi's own article does not.
Reference
Line of Qing succession Monarchy Revival