The Draft History of Qing is a draft of the official history of the Qing dynasty compiled and written by a team of over 100 historians led by Zhao Erxun who were hired by the Beiyang government of the Republic of China. When he died, his title was granted "iron-cap" status and became perpetually inheritable, one of the only twelve such princes in Qing dynasty history. The massive book was started in 1914, … As the group arrived at Hangzhou, the Step Empress cut her hair, and was ordered by the emperor to return to the capital. The Draft History of Qing (Chinese: 清史稿; pinyin: Qīng Shǐ Gǎo) is a draft of the official history of the Qing dynasty compiled and written by a team of over 100 historians led by Zhao Erxun who were hired by the Beiyang government of the Republic of China. The Draft History of Qing (Chinese: 清史稿; pinyin: Qīng Shǐ Gǎo) is a draft of the official history of the Qing dynasty compiled and written by a team of over 100 historians led by Zhao Erxun who were hired by the Beiyang government of the Republic of China. The draft was published in 1928, but the Chinese Civil War caused a lack of funding for the project and it was put to an end in 1930. Draft History of the Qing Dynasty, sometimes listed as number 25 or 26 of the 24 dynastic histories 二十四史[Èr shí sì Shǐ], compiled under Zhao Erxun 趙爾巽|赵尔巽[Zhào Ěr xùn] in 1927 during the Northern Warlords period, 536 scrolls According to the Draft History of Qing, in 1765, during the 30th year of Qianlong's reign, the Step Empress accompanied the emperor on a tour to Southern China. The Draft History of Qing is a draft of the official history of the Qing dynasty compiled and written by a team of over 100 historians led by Zhao Erxun who were hired by the Beiyang government of the Republic of China.
Draft History of Qing Chen Kuilong (62 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article penultimate Viceroy of Zhili serving from January 23, … [3] Yikuang ( Manchu : ᡳᡴᡠᠸᠠᠩ I-kuwang ; 16 November 1838 - 28 January 1917), formally known as Prince Qing (or Prince Ch'ing ), was a Manchu noble and politician of the Qing dynasty.
The Qing court had long established a Bureau of State Historiography and precompiled its own dynastic history.