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Which emperors were buried in Dongling, Qing Dynasty?

The five emperors of the Qing Dynasty, namely, the emperor shunzhi, Kangxi, Qianlong, Xianfeng and Tongzhi, were all buried in the Dongling of the Qing Dynasty. Others are tombs of some queens and tombs of princesses and brothers.

Qing Dongling is located in the west of Malanyu Town, zunhua city City, Hebei Province, with its back against Changrui Mountain. It is said that when the emperor shunzhi came here, he was shocked by the excellent feng shui pattern here and immediately praised: "I must be buried here after I die!"

Since then, the descendants of Shunzhi have been buried in the Qing Dongling. However, there was a small accident: Yong Zhengdi had to be buried in the Qing Dongling. So when he went to Dongling before he died, he saw something different from his grandfather. He thinks that the geomantic omen he chose is not good, and it is really unlucky to call it "sand cave soil". Therefore, he gave up Dongling and chose Dongling instead.

Dongling in Qing Dynasty began in 166 1 year and lasted for 247 years. A total of 2 17 palaces and memorial archways were built, forming 15 cemeteries of different sizes. The length of the mausoleum is125km, and the width from north to south is 20km. It is the largest existing imperial mausoleum group with the most complete system and reasonable layout in China.

The layout of the Eastern Qing Mausoleum is centered on the Xiaoling Mausoleum in the emperor shunzhi, and the tombs of other emperors are arranged in a fan shape on the east and west sides of the Xiaoling Mausoleum. The stone archway at the southernmost tip of the mausoleum extends northward to Xiaoling Baoding and runs through Shinto. Along the way, there are Dahongmen, Dabei Building, Stone Life, Longfengmen, Qikong Bridge, Xiaobei Building, Longgenmen, Longgen Temple and Fangchengming.

Among them, Fangcheng Minglou is the tallest building in all cemeteries, with a stone tablet on which the name of the owner of the tomb is written in Chinese, Manchu and Mongolian. Behind the Ming building is the "Baoding", and below is the "underground palace" where the coffin is parked.