Chongzhen Emperor

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Court portrait of the Chongzhen Emperor
Chongzhen Emperor
Birth and death: 6 February 161125 April 1644
Family name: Zhu (朱)
Given name: Youjian (由檢)
Dates of reign: 2 October 162725 April 1644
Dynasty: Ming (明)
Era name: Chongzhen (崇禎)
Era dates: 5 February 162825 April 1644
Temple name: Sizong¹ (思宗)
Posthumous name:
(short) 
Emperor Zhuanglie² (莊烈帝)
Posthumous name:
(full) 
Emperor Zhuanglie Min
莊烈愍皇帝
General note: Dates given here are in the Gregorian calendar.
They are not in the Julian calendar that was in use in England
until 1752.
———
1. Temple name given in 1644 by the prince of Fu
(福王), the
new self-proclaimed emperor of the Southern Ming. This is the
temple name most often found in history books, despite the fact
that the Southern Ming soon changed the temple name into
Yizong
(毅宗), and later Weizong (威宗). As for the new rulers of
the Qing Dynasty, they officially conferred on the late Chongzhen
Emperor the temple name Huaizong
(懷宗), a rare gesture for the
last emperor of an overthrown dynasty. The Qing rulers were thus
trying to accommodate the hard feelings of their new subjects.

2. This final version of the posthumous name (short and full)
was given by Emperor Shunzhi of the Qing in 1660.
Traditional location that Emperor Chongzhen committed suicide at the Coal Hill in Beijing.
Traditional location that Emperor Chongzhen committed suicide at the Coal Hill in Beijing.
The tree branch on which Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself.
The tree branch on which Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself.

The Chongzhen Emperor (pinyin: Chóngzhēn; WG: Ch'ung-chen) (February 6, 1611 - April 25, 1644) was the 16th and last emperor of the Ming dynasty in China between 1627 and 1644. Born Zhu Youjian, he was emperor Taichang's son.

Chongzhen grew up in a relatively quiet environment because as the younger son of the Taichang emperor, he was not a part of the power struggle his elder brother Tianqi had endured. He succeeded his brother to the throne at the age of 17 and eliminated the eunuch Wei Zhongxian and Madam Ke. Unlike his brother Tianqi, Chongzhen tried to rule by himself and did his best to salvage the dynasty. However, years of internal corruptions and an empty treasury made it almost impossible to appoint capable ministers to fill important government posts. And when he did have able ministers, Chongzhen tended to be suspicious of them and imposed harsh penalties if he suspected them of disloyalty. In 1630, merely three years after pledging his full support, Chongzhen even executed Yuan Chonghuan, a capable marshal who had been very successful at keeping the Manchus in the northeastern frontier at bay. This injustice caused a public uproar and created an atmosphere of distrust and fear of reprisal amongst his ministers. It also sealed the fate of the Ming dynasty, as there were no other capable generals to fend off the Manchus.

In the 1630s and '40s the Ming dynasty was fading quickly and its Mandate of Heaven had all but expired. Constant popular uprisings broke out throughout the country. Intensified attacks from the Manchus further aggravated the situation. In April 1644, the popular army led by rebel Li Zicheng finally broke through the Ming defenses and occupied Beijing. Meanwhile, General Wu Sangui threw open the gates of the Shanhai Pass and invited the Manchus into China. Chongzhen gathered the entire imperial household and ordered them (except for his sons) to commit suicide rather than surrender. Hopeless and fearful for their lives, many did as they were told, including the Empress, who hanged herself. One of his daughters, Princess Chang Ping, refused to commit suicide. In a fit of rage, Chongzhen had her left arm severed. Chongzhen, still wearing his imperial attire, fled to the nearby Jingshan Park with eunuch Wang Cheng'en (王承恩)[citation needed]. Distraught by the countless officials who had since abandoned him, Chongzhen lamented, "I should not be the emperor of a subjugated nation, but you, my subjects, must be resigned to such a fate. I have never mistreated any of the officials in my service; yet on this day, why does nary a single one remain by my side?" (吾非亡国之君,汝皆亡国之臣。吾待士亦不薄,今日至此,群臣何无一人相从?) He then hanged himself, with the help of Wang Cheng'en, on the Guilty Chinese Scholartree, putting an end to the Ming dynasty.

Chongzhen's tenure as emperor effectively ended the Ming dynasty. He has been blamed for being narrow-minded, quick to judgement, and prone to suspicion and paranoia. Though the Ming dynasty had been in decline for many decades prior to his reign, Chongzhen would expect quick results. If they were not to his satisfaction, he would quickly administer punitive actions. This resulted in the expulsion of the remaining handful of capable and loyal Ming ministers which ultimately hastened the downfall of the Ming dynasty.

Chongzhen Emperor
Born: 6 February 1611 Died: 25 April 1644
Regnal titles
Preceded by
The Tianqi Emperor
Emperor of the Ming Dynasty
1627-1644
Succeeded by
The Hongguang Emperor
Preceded by
The Tianqi Emperor
Emperor of China
1627-1644
Succeeded by
The Shunzhi Emperor
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