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According to the History of Ming, the first five sons of Zhu Yuanzhang, Crown Prince Zhu Biao, Prince Zhu Shuang, Prince Zhu Gang, Emperor Yongle, and Prince Zhu Su, were all born to Empress Ma. According to the Ming Veritable Records, Emperor Yongle was born on April 17, 1360, and Prince Zhu Su was born on July 9, 1361. This situation has long ...
After joining the rebels, he went by the name Zhu Yuanzhang. His father, Zhu Wusi, lived in Nanjing but fled to the countryside to avoid tax collectors. His paternal grandfather was a gold miner, and his maternal grandfather was a fortune-teller and seer. In 1344, during a plague epidemic, Zhu Yuanzhang's parents and two brothers died.
Zhu Yuanzhang (朱元璋; Zhū Yuánzhāng) is an ambitious minor leader of the cult who eventually unites the rebel forces under his control and leads them to overthrow the Yuan dynasty. He betrays the cult later and becomes the founding emperor of the Ming dynasty .
The temple where Zhu Yuanzhang resided was burned in February 1352. He went to Haozhou in April and joined Guo Zixing’s command. Zhu quickly became a favorite of Guo Zixing and Guo's younger wife convinced him to wed his adopted daughter (the future Empress Ma) to Zhu, as he was attracted to her dexterity and mental clarity. [4]
The story revolves around the founding emperor Ming - Hongwu Zhu Yuanzhang and his wife Ma Xiuying (played by Ning Jing). Ma is the empress consort famous for her "big feet" because it was not bound like other women where foot binding was the beauty standard for women.
Zhu Gang (18 December 1358 – 30 March 1398) was an imperial prince of the Chinese Ming dynasty. He was the third son of the Hongwu Emperor , the founder of the Ming. Zhu Gang was born on 18 December 1358, as the third son of Zhu Yuanzhang and his first wife, Lady Ma . [ 1 ]
Zhu Shuang was born on 3 December 1356, as the second son of Zhu Yuanzhang and his first wife, Lady Ma. [2] At the time, Zhu Yuanzhang was a general of the Han Song dynasty, actively involved in the Red Turban Rebellion. In 1368, he ascended to the throne as the emperor of the Ming dynasty and successfully unified China under his rule.
In He Who Drowned the World, Zhu Chongba, now Zhu Yuanzhang, the Radiant King, is finally triumphant, happily married to a woman who knows the secret of her identity, and victorious, having liberated southern China from its Mongol masters. But her ambition is not yet satisfied: she means now to seize the throne and crown herself emperor.