The mother of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty was married and had children before she entered the palace. Why can she still enter the palace to serve Jingdi?
At that time, Wang Hao was not actually accepted by Qi as a concubine, but was sent to the palace of the prince as a maid of honor. As a maid-in-waiting, it is more clumsy work such as washing dishes and cleaning, which is not necessarily the requirement of girls. At that time, after Wang Hao was sent to the womb, he was much loved. After Wang Hao gave birth to three daughters to Liu Qi, she told Liu Qi that she dreamed that a sun entered her arms. Later, Wang Hao gave birth to a son to Liu Qi. This son is the later emperor Liu Che.
With the support of Wang Meiren, princess royal and Liu Pu often speak ill of Li Fei in front of Han Jing and praise Liu Che constantly. Gradually, Han Jing ignored Li Fei's mother and son, and slowly focused on Liu Che. With the help of princess royal and the constant death of Li Fei, Han Jing finally abolished the Crown Prince of Liu Rong, appointed Liu Che as the Crown Prince and appointed Wang Miao as the Queen. In this way, Wang Yi, the second married woman, took up her post.
The Han Dynasty should be a relatively open period in China's history, and it paid little attention to women's marriage history. Great-grandfather Liu Bang once took Wei's concubine as his concubine, and it was after the Song Dynasty that he really attached importance to women's chastity. What's more, Liu Qi was just a prince at that time and was only interested in playing with beautiful women. What about virgins?