- Yuyan
Infobox_pretender
English name = HH Prince Imperial Yùyán
birth_date = 1918
birthplace =
death_date = 1997
deathplace =
regnal =
title =
throne =
pretend from =October 17 ,1967 – 1997
year = 1912
king = Xuāntǒng (Pǔyí)
relationship = Cousin
house = Qīng
father = Prince Pu-cheng
mother = Ching-kuei
spouse =
children =
predecessor = Xuāntǒng (Pǔyí)
successor =Hengzhen
footnotes =Aisin-Gioro Yùyán (Chinese: _zh. 爱新觉罗·毓喦) (1918-1997) was a
prince of theManchu Aisin Gioro clan in China and appointed heir to the Imperial throne of China byPuyi the last Emperor.Early life
Yùyán was born in the
Prince Dun Mansion inBeijing . He was the second son of PrincePucheng (1873-1932) and Ching-kuei, a lady from theManchu clan of Fuca. His grandfather wasZailian (d.1917), the disgraced eldest son of Yicong. Yùyán's great-grandfather Yicong, 2nd Prince Dun (奕誴) (1831-1889), fifth son of theDaoguang Emperor and elder brother ofYixuan, 1st Prince Chun , Puyi's grandfather.In 1936 Prince Yùyán was summoned by his cousin
Puyi , who had been enthroned as Emperor ofManchukuo in 1934, to join his court inChangchun (Hsinking). In the Manchu court he was very close to the Emperor and was known as Little Rui. His elder brother, Prince Yutai, born in 1894, died without issue in the 1940s.After the Communist takeover
After the fall of the
Manchukuo Empire, Yùyán was arrested by the Russians and imprisoned nearKhabarovsk (Boli) in theUSSR 's Far East Region (1945-1950) along with Puyi, and later sent to China, where he was incarcerated in theFushun War Criminals Management Centre in Manchuria (1950-1957).In the summer of 1950, during their detention in the USSR, Yùyán was appointed as heir of the
Qing dynasty by Puyi, who had no issue, following the imperial tradition which prescribed that a childless Emperor should choose as heir a member of one of the next generations of the family. This choice passed some eligible heirs, as his own nephews (sons of Puren), and Puyi chose Yùyán because he's "reliable" and "loyal" ("From Emperor to Citizen" by Puyi).After his release from Fushun, Yùyán worked as a teacher of Chinese, and later at a haberdashery factory. He was arrested in 1959 and sent for hard labour at a public security detention centre near
Beijing . When he was released, Yùyán did not enjoy his freedom for long, because he was arrested again in 1966, when theCultural Revolution started, and sent to hard labour again in theShanxi province. He was not released until 1979, when he was able to return toBeijing and found work as a road sweeper.After years in prison
He was a talented calligrapher and poet, and in 1987 he was appointed a consultant to the state on the restoration of the
Prince Gong Mansion inBeijing .Prince Yùyán is the main character of the book "" (1993), by the British journalist
Tony Scotland where he looks for the heir to Imperial throne of China.Family
In 1943, Yùyán married
Chinglan , a lady from the Manchu clan ofMagiya , who bore him two sons:
*Hengzhen (恒镇), born in 1944, MarriedTu Yanling and has one son.
**Chinsin (Born 1977)
*Hengkai , born in 1945, MarriedLiu Hsiuchüan has one son.
**Chinying Hui (Born 1980)Princess Ching-lan died in 1948 inTianjin while her husband was aprisoner of war inSiberia . Years later, he married Chang Yun-fang, who bore him an only son,
*Aisin Gioro Hengchun , (Born 1966)External links
* [http://www.pressnet.co.jp/aixin/Japanese/sakusya/ikugan.htm 愛新覚羅 毓嵒] – Japanese site with colour photograph
* [http://www.4dw.net/royalark/China/manchu12.htm Genealogy of Prince Yùyán]
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