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Heshen (Manchu: ᡥᡝᡧᡝᠨ, Möllendorff: Hešen; Chinese: 和珅; pinyin: Héshēn; Wade–Giles: Ho2-shen1; 1 July 1750 – 22 February 1799) of the Manchu Niohuru clan, was an official of the Qing dynasty favored by the Qianlong Emperor and called the most corrupt official in Chinese history. After the death of Qianlong, the Jiaqing Emperor confiscated Heshen's wealth and forced him to commit suicide. As an official, he acquired an estimated at 1.1 billion taels of silver, equal to roughly US$270 billion. Heshen is remembered as one of the richest men in history.
Heshen | |
---|---|
Chief Grand Councillor | |
In office 1797–1799 | |
Monarch | Jiaqing Emperor |
Preceded by | Agui |
Succeeded by | Yongxing |
Grand Councillor | |
In office 1776 – 1799 (as the Chief Grand Councillor since 1797) | |
Monarchs | Qianlong Emperor Jiaqing Emperor |
Grand Secretary of the Wenhua Hall | |
In office 11 September 1786 – 2 February 1799 | |
Monarchs | Qianlong Emperor Jiaqing Emperor |
Preceded by | Cai Xin |
Succeeded by | Dong Gao |
Minister of Personnel | |
In office 4 September 1784 – 16 September 1786 Serving with Liu Yong | |
Monarch | Qianlong Emperor |
Preceded by | Umitai |
Succeeded by | Fuk'anggan |
Minister of Revenue | |
In office 26 April 1780 – 4 September 1784 Serving with Liang Guozhi | |
Monarch | Qianlong Emperor |
Preceded by | Feng Yinglian |
Succeeded by | Fuk'anggan |
Personal details | |
Born | Shanbao (善保) 1 July 1750 Beijing, Qing Empire |
Died | 22 February 1799 Zhizhai, Beijing, Qing Empire | (aged 48)
Cause of death | Forced suicide by hanging |
Spouse | Feng Jiwen |
Domestic partner | Lady Chang |
Relations | Gurun Princess Hexiao (daughter-in-law) Helin (brother) |
Children | Fengšeninde 1 son 3 daughters |
Occupation | Official |
Noble titles | 1st class baron→3rd class earl→1st class duke |
Born Shanbao (Shan-pao; 善保), his name was later changed to Heshen. His courtesy name was Zhizhai (Chih-chai; 致齋). He was a member of the Plain Red Banner.
Ascendance
editHeshen was the son of a Manchu military officer and studied at a school for Manchu aristocratic boys. He lost his mother when he was young and it was said he and his younger brother had a hard life under his stepmother. However, Heshen was an excellent student, knowing Middle Mandarin, Manchu, Mongolian and Tibetan. In 1772, he began work in the Imperial Palace, assigned as an imperial bodyguard stationed at the gates to the Forbidden City.
Within a year of his initial employment, Heshen was promoted to vice-president of the Ministry of Revenue. Two months later, he was made a Grand Councilor. Within three months, he was promoted even further to the Minister of the Imperial Household Department, a post usually filled with the most meritorious officials. In 1777, at the age of 27, Heshen was given the privilege of riding a horse within the Forbidden City, a prestigious privilege given only to high-ranking officials of elderly age. It was not long before Heshen was given control of both the Ministry of Revenue and the Civil Council, allowing him to control the revenue of the entire empire and appoint his own henchmen to important posts within the officials.
The Salar Jahriyya Sufi revolt was put down by Fuk'anggan along with Agui and Li Shiyao Gansu in 1784,[1][2] but Heshen was recalled for his failure during the revolt.[3]
Heshen's hold on the Qianlong Emperor was further strengthened when in 1790, his own son was married to the emperor's tenth and favorite daughter, Hexiao. Once secure of the Qianlong Emperor's favor and approbation, Heshen enjoyed great freedom of action. He became openly corrupt and practiced extortion on a grand scale. His supporters within the imperial system followed his lead, and his military associates prolonged campaigns in order to continue the benefits of additional funds. He abrogated powers and official posts, including that of Grand Councilor, and regularly stole public funds and tax revenue. Taxes were raised again and again, and this led to the suffering of the people. Unfortunately, their suffering was compounded by severe floods of the Yellow River - an indirect result of the corruption where officials pocketed funds that were meant for the upkeep of canals and dams. Rising prices of rice led to many that simply starved to death. This widespread corruption and nepotism was the start of a century that led to the downfall of the Qing dynasty.
In 1793, Heshen was responsible for hosting the Macartney Embassy to the imperial court.
Fall
editAfter the Qianlong Emperor abdicated in February 1796, the range and damage of Heshen's corruption was now clear. However, Qianlong continued to rule China behind the scenes under the grand title of Taishang Huang (Retired Emperor). It was not until Qianlong's death on 7 February 1799 that his successor, the Jiaqing Emperor, was able to prosecute Heshen. Just five days later, Heshen was arrested along with Minister Du Daozhao.[citation needed] Declared guilty by an imperial edict, he was condemned to slow slicing. The Jiaqing Emperor spared Heshen this dishonorable death out of respect for his daughter-in-law Gurun Princess Hexiao, and instead ordered him to commit suicide by hanging. He carried out the sentence with a rope of golden silk in his home on 22 February.
In the 24 years that Heshen enjoyed the Emperor's attention and favor he amassed a fortune. In the Jiaqing Emperor's confiscation of Heshen's property, his estate included:
2,790 rooms in his estates and mansions, 12,000 acres (49 km2) of land, 10 bank branches, 10 pawnbroker branches, 58,000 taels of pure gold, 100 large ingots of pure gold, (1,000 taels each), 56,600 medium silver ingots, (100 taels each), 5,830,000 small silver ingots, (10 taels each), 58,000 foreign silver dollars, 1,500,000 copper coins, 300 kilograms of top-quality Jilin ginseng, 1,200 jade charms, 230 pearl bracelets, 10 large pearls, 10 large rubies, and dozens of place settings in solid gold or silver.[4] He also had 14,300 bolts of fine silk, 20,000 sheets of fine sheep-fur wool, 550 fox hides, 850 raccoon dog hides, 56,000 sheep and cattle hides of varying thickness, 7,000 sets of fine clothing (for all four seasons), 361,000 bronze and tin vases and vessels, 100,000 porcelain vessels made by famous masters, 24 highly decorative solid-gold beds (each with eight different types of inlaid gemstones), and 460 high quality European clocks.[citation needed]
His total property was ultimately estimated at 1,100 million taels of silver, reputed to be equivalent to the imperial revenue of the Qing government for 15 years. Treasures discovered in his chief butler Liu Quan's quarter included 240,000 silver taels. The Jiaqing Emperor charged Heshen with 20 crimes, including various abuses of power, disrespecting imperial prerogatives, and hoarding wealth.[5]
Heshen exemplified the widespread corruption of the civil bureaucracy and military under the Qing dynasty. Bannermen developed habits that made them useless as a military force. The Chinese Green Standard Army was beset with irregular practice and had lost much of its fighting spirit shown in the early Qing dynasty. The Qianlong Emperor's Ten Great Campaigns were completed at the cost of 120 million taels against an annual revenue of some 40 million taels, depressed by embezzling from officials such as Heshen. These massive government spendings contributed to financial instability during the later part of the Qing dynasty.
In popular culture
editFor more than two hundred years Heshen has been a stock villain role, and continues to appear in theatrical, film and television productions. Chinese actors Wang Gang and Chen Rui have portrayed Heshen on screen: the former gave the character of Heshen a comical touch with his plump figure;[citation needed] the latter, who played Heshen in the 2003 television series Qianlong Dynasty, was said to resemble the historical Heshen more closely as compared to Wang Gang.[citation needed]
Hong Kong actor Ruco Chan played Heshen in the 2018 TVB series Succession War, a fictional depiction of the final 28 days of his life. In the 1988 TVB drama The Formidable Lady from Shaolin, Lau Kong portrayed Heshen as a corrupt, blood thirsty official who was ultimately executed.
Alternative views
editIt could be argued that Heshen's wealth was largely from gifts of the Qianlong Emperor, not from corrupt actions. The view of Heshen as a corrupt official originated after his death and from documents in Qing dynasty historical archives. Only the emperor had the authority to determine what content was to be kept in those archives, which raises the possibility of bias against Heshen. Heshen, as a powerful official, threatened the authority of the Jiaqing Emperor. Officials during the Qianlong Emperor's reign may have feared or been jealous of his power. The Jiaqing Emperor could have used legal pretexts to legitimize these feelings and condemn Heshen to a death sentence.
Former residence
editSeveral decades after Heshen's death, his former residence was given to Prince Gong as his official residence. The estate, known as the Prince Gong Mansion, is now preserved as a museum and a tourist attraction. It is located at 17 Qianhai Road West in Beijing.
Family
edit- Maternal great-grandfather
- Alana (阿喇納), Deputy General, Count of the Third Rank (副將軍三等伯)
- Maternal grandfather
- Umitai (伍彌泰) (1713–1786), a Mongol of the Plain Yellow Banner
- Maternal grandmother
- Lady Liugiya (劉佳氏)
- Father
- Changbao (常保), Banner vice-commander of Fujian (福建副都統)
- Mother
- Lady Umi (伍彌氏)
- Younger brother
- Helin (和琳) (26 August 1753 – 28 September 1796), father of Fengšenimiyan and two daughters
- Younger sister-in-law
- Lady Tatara (他他拉氏), daughter of Suringga (蘇凌阿), mother of Fengšenimiyan
- Nephew
- Fengšenimiyan (豐紳宜綿) (1775–1813)
- Nieces
- Two daughters of Helin
- Wife
- Feng Jiwen (馮霽雯), granddaughter of Feng Yinglian (馮英廉); mother of Fengšenyende, Heshen's second son, and Heshen's three daughters
- Concubine
- Lady Chang (長氏)
- Sons
- Fengšenyende (豐紳殷德) (18 February 1775 – May 1810), married Gurun Princess Hexiao (固倫和孝公主)
- second son (1794–?)
- Daughters
- Three daughters, including Primary consort of Yongyun (Prince Chun (淳) peerage)
Genealogic tree
editNamutai | |||||||||||||||
Eluo'ershan | |||||||||||||||
Changbao | |||||||||||||||
Akechangba | |||||||||||||||
Daughter of Akechangba | |||||||||||||||
Heshen | |||||||||||||||
Alana | |||||||||||||||
Umitai | |||||||||||||||
Lady Umi (伍彌) | |||||||||||||||
Baidali | |||||||||||||||
Lady Liugiya | |||||||||||||||
References
edit- ^ Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
- ^ Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
- ^ Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
- ^ Pei-Kai Cheng; Michael Lestz; Jonathan D. Spence (1998). The Search for Modern China: A Documentary Collection. New York, N.Y.: W. W. Norton & Co. pp. 89–91. ISBN 0-393-97372-7.
- ^ Pei-Kai Cheng; Michael Lestz; Jonathan D. Spence (1998). The Search for Modern China: A Documentary Collection. New York, N.Y.: W. W. Norton & Co. pp. 87–99. ISBN 0-393-97372-7.
External links
edit- The Qing Dynasty at All Empires
- Immanuel Hsü (1990). The Rise of Modern China. Oxford Press. ISBN 0-19-512504-5.