Yunti | |||||||||
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Prince Xun of the Second Rank (多羅恂郡王) | |||||||||
Head of the House of Prince Xun peerage | |||||||||
Tenure | 1748–1755 | ||||||||
Predecessor | peerage created | ||||||||
Successor | Hongming | ||||||||
Born | Aisin Gioro Yunti (愛新覺羅·胤禎) 10 February 1688 Beijing, China | ||||||||
Died | 16 February 1755 Beijing, China | (aged 67)||||||||
Consorts | Lady Wanyan | ||||||||
Issue | Hongchun Hongming Hongying Hongkai Princess of the Third Rank Lady of the Second Rank Lady of the Second Rank Princess of the Third Rank Princess of the Fourth Rank | ||||||||
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House | Aisin Gioro | ||||||||
Father | Kangxi Emperor | ||||||||
Mother | Empress Xiaogongren |
Yunti, Prince Xun | |||||||||
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Chinese | 允禵 | ||||||||
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Yinti | |||||||||
Chinese | 胤禵 | ||||||||
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Yunti (10 February 1688 – 16 February 1755), born Yinzhen and also known as Yinti before 1722, formally known as Prince Xun, was a Manchu prince and military general of the Qing dynasty. He was trusted by his father, the emperor Kangxi, to lead the imperial forces against the dynasty's greatest threat of the time, the Dzungar Khanate. He proved a successful and popular military leader. He was later imprisoned by the new emperor, who was his full-blood brother – Yongzheng. Yongzheng suppressed the evidences of Yinti's accomplishments and also possible evidences of his right to the throne.[1][2]