Magiya

Summary

Magiya Hala (Manchu: ᠮᠠᡤᡳᠶᠠ ᡥᠠᠯᠠ; Chinese: 馬佳氏) was one of the Manchu Great Eight Clans. Originated from Giyaliku Magiya area, named by the place.

After the demise of the dynasty, some of its descendants sinicized their clan name to the Chinese surnames Ma (馬) or Jin (金).

Notable figures edit

Males edit

  • Tuhai (图海), a grand tutor of crown prince, a grand secretary of Zhonghe hall and first class Zhongda duke (一等忠达公), later enshrined in Imperial Ancestral Temple under the name Wenxiang (文襄)
    • Nuomin (诺敏), a Minister of Rites
      • Ma'ersai (马尔塞)
  • Gaishan (盖山), an examiner (员外郎,pinyin:yuanwailang)
  • Santai (三台)
  • Santian (三忝)
  • Hengguang (恒广)
  • Shengjin (昇寅)
    • Baoxun (宝询), a supervisor of the Manor of Charitable Heaven (奉天府尹) and General Shengjing (盛京将军)
    • Baolin, a supervisor of the Manor of Stable Knowledge (定知府)
      • Shaoying (绍英), a Minister of Revenue in 1911
        • Shijie (世杰) & Shiliang (世良)[1]
Prince Consort
Date Prince Consort Princess
1745 Mabao (瑪寶) Yunhu's first daughter (1730–1775) by primary consort (Irgen Gioro)
1757 Tetongte'e (特通特額) Yunbi's sixth daughter (b. 1743) by primary consort (Uya)

Females edit

Imperial Consort

  • Consort
    • Consort Rong (d. 1727), the Kangxi Emperor's consort, the mother of Chengrui (1667–1670), Saiyinchahun (1672–1674), Princess Rongxian (1673–1728), Changhua (1674), Changsheng (1675–1677) and Yunzhi (1677–1732)

Princess Consort

  • Concubine
    • Yunki's concubine, the mother of Princess (1699–1743), Lady (1703–1724) and Lady (1705–1784)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "绍英日记中的清末民初史事_副刊频道_新华网". 2012-08-21. Archived from the original on 2012-08-21. Retrieved 2020-09-03.