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  1. Imperial Noble Consort Shujia (14 September 1713 – 17 December 1755), of the Korean Gingiya clan which was placed into the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner after her death, was a consort of the Qianlong Emperor. She was two years his junior. Imperial Noble Consort Shujia was also the Qing dynasty's only imperial concubine of ethnic ...

  2. Imperial Noble Consort ( Chinese: 皇貴妃, Vietnamese: hoàng quý phi, Korean : 황귀비) was the title of women who ranked second to the Empress in the imperial harem of China during most of the period spanning from 1457 to 1915. In Ming Dynasty, the rank of Imperial Noble Consort was only a highest honorary title of an imperial consort.

  3. Imperial Noble Consort Gao died and was posthumously named Virtuous and Wise Imperial Noble Consort. Simultaneously, Xianfei was promoted to Xian Noble Consort, Pure Noble Consort to Pure Xian Noble Consort, and Yufei was titled as Yufei.

  4. Imperial Noble Consort Shujia (14 September 1713 – 17 December 1755), of the Korean Gingiya clan which was placed into the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner after her death, was a consort of the Qianlong Emperor. She was two years his junior.

  5. Noble Consorte Imperial Shujia (Jia): Una tributo coreana de Joseon que fue la verdadera mente maestra en la primera mitad de la historia. Ella y su asistente personal Zhenshu hicieron de Gao Xiyue y Fuca Langhua sus marionetas.

  6. Historical Domain Character: A fictionalised version of Imperial Noble Consort Shujia. Laser-Guided Karma: After everything she’s done, she gets a fitting end that resonates with her crimes. To wit: She causes two women to miscarry, and (by proxy) spreads the pox to Yongcong (who was born weak).

  7. Imperial Noble Consort Shujia (14 September 1713 – 17 December 1755), of the Korean Gingiya clan which was placed into the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner after her death, was a consort of the Qianlong Emperor.