cover of episode The Authoritarianism of Emperor Yongzheng

The Authoritarianism of Emperor Yongzheng

2022/7/7
logo of podcast The Master of Demon Gorge: A Chinese History Podcast

The Master of Demon Gorge: A Chinese History Podcast

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Shownotes Transcript

Two of the longest-reigning emperors in Chinese history ruled during the Qing Dynasty: Kangxi, who sat on the throne from 1662 until 1722, and his grandson Qianlong, who ruled from 1735 until 1799.The figure sandwiched between them was Emperor Yongzheng. Son of Kangxi and father of Qianlong and to some extent eclipsed by both, Yongzheng was in fact an important and highly competent ruler.His competence, though, was substantially dedicated to centralizing imperial authority around his own person. And the Yongzheng era came to be strongly associated with "wenziyu" or "language prison": the practice of imprisoning or executing individuals for writings that angered the emperor. The notorious "Lü Liuliang Case" was particularly egregious.In time, a number of myths grew up around Yongzheng reflecting popular discomfort with his role as the competent totalitarian. 

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