Mingliang
Mingliang | |
---|---|
Grand Councillor | |
In office 1776 | |
Grand Secretary of the Wuying Hall | |
In office 1817–1821 | |
Assistant Grand Secretary | |
In office 1814–1817 | |
In office 1810–1811 | |
Minister of War | |
In office 26 September 1814 – 15 July 1817 Serving with Chu Pengling (until 1815), Wu Jing (1815–1817), Lu Yinpu (since 1817) | |
Preceded by | Hūturi |
Succeeded by | Hening |
In office 16 December 1813 – 12 May 1814 Serving with Liu Xuanzhi | |
Preceded by | Fuking |
Succeeded by | Hening |
In office 17 July 1804 – 25 July 1811 Serving with Liu Quanzhi (until 1805; 1807–1811), Chen Dawen (1805), Zou Bingtai (1805–1807), Liu Xuanzhi (since 1811) | |
Preceded by | Changlin |
Succeeded by | Gūnggala |
General of Ili | |
In office 1798–1799 | |
Preceded by | Baoning |
Succeeded by | Baoning |
In office June – July 1784 | |
Preceded by | Iletu |
Succeeded by | Hailu |
General of Heilongjiang | |
In office 1791–1794 | |
Preceded by | Du'erjia |
Succeeded by | Shuliang |
Minister of Justice | |
In office 30 September 1790 – 20 January 1791 Serving with Hu Jitang | |
Preceded by | Kaning'a |
Succeeded by | Suringga |
Personal details | |
Born | 1736 |
Died | 1822 (aged 85–86) Beijing |
Relations | Empress Xiaoxianchun (aunt) Fuheng (uncle) Fucing (uncle) Kuilin (brother) Mingrui (cousin) Yuntao, Prince Lü (father-in-law), Yongfu, Prince of the Fourth Rank (son-in-law) |
Education | xiucai degree in the Imperial Examination |
Clan name | Fuca |
Courtesy name | Yinzhai (寅齋) |
Posthumous name | Wenxiang (文襄) |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Qing dynasty |
Branch/service | Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner |
Years of service | 17?–1821 |
Rank | General |
Battles/wars | Jinchuan campaigns White Lotus Rebellion Miao Rebellion (1795–1806) |
Mingliang (Chinese: 明亮, Manchu: ᠮᡳᠩᠯᡳᠶᠠᠩ mingliyang, 1736–1822), courtesy name Yinzhai (寅齋), born in Fuca clan, was a Qing dynasty official and general from the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner.[1]
Mingliang was a nephew of Empress Xiaoxianchun. He married a daughter of Yuntao, the Prince Lü of the First Rank[2] in 1753. He had served as deputy lieutenant-general of the Han Chinese Plain White Banner (正白旗漢軍副都統), deputy lieutenant-general of Jilin (吉林副都統), deputy lieutenant-general of Ningguta, Commander of the Guards Division (護軍統領), General of Guangzhou (廣州將軍), deputy commander of the imperial bodyguard (內大臣), General of Chengdu, lieutenant-general of Ürümchi (烏魯木齊都統), Ili Ministerial Attache (伊犁參贊大臣), Uqturpan Ministerial Attache, Kashgar Ministerial Attache, General of Heilongjiang, General of Ili, lieutenant-general of the Han Chinese Plain Red Banner (正紅旗漢軍都統), lieutenant-general of the Manchu Bordered Blue Banner (鑲藍旗滿洲都統), General of Xi'an, Minister of War and other position.[3][2] As a general, he participated in putting down the rebellion of Jinchuan Hill Peoples, the White Lotus Rebellion, and the Miao Rebellion (1795–1806).[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
- ^ a b Works related to 清史稿/卷330 at Wikisource (Draft History of Qing Volume 330)
- ^ "(富察)明亮".