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  1. In China: The Self-Strengthening Movement. …Cixi and another empress dowager, Ci’an, in the palace and by Prince Gong and Wen Xiang, with the Zongli Yamen as their base of operation. The core of their foreign policy was expressed by Prince Gong as “overt peace with the Western nations in order to gain time for recovering….

  2. Early Life (1835–1861) Empress Dowager Cixi. Cixi was born to a Manchu family on November 29, 1835 in Beijing, at a time when the Qing empire (1644–1912) still seemed to have a lot of strength. When she was 16, she was sent to be a concubine. This means that she had sex with the emperor at his request.

  3. Dowager empress of China (1837-1881) This page was last edited on 9 November 2023, at 15:00. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  4. 14. Juni 2023 · English: Empress Dowager Ci'an (1837–1881), and officially known posthumously Empress Xiao Zhen Xian — Chinese empress (1852-1861) of the Qing Dynasty. After widowed by death of the Xianfeng Emperor in 1861, she was commonly known as the East Dowager Empress. She was co-de facto ruler of China with Empress Dowager Cixi for 20 years.

  5. 15. Apr. 2022 · The decision was therefore made by the Cixi and Ci’an. Zaitian (later the Guangxu Emperor), the four-year-old nephew of Cixi, was chosen to succeed Tongzhi to the throne. In April, 1881, Cixi’s co-Empress Dowager Ci’an died of a stroke. It was rumored that Cixi had a hand in Ci’an’s death. However, that was unlikely as Cixi herself ...

  6. 2. Nov. 2022 · So it was in November of 1861, when the Empress Dowager Cixi (慈禧太后 Cíxǐ tàihòu) engineered a coup that brought her to the head of the Qing dynasty — and saving it, in many ways. To say China was in crisis in 1861 puts it too gently. The Taiping rebels were at their strongest, claiming half of China from their capital in Nanjing.

  7. Empress Dowager Cixi was interred amidst the Eastern Qing Tombs (Chinese: 清東陵), 125 km (75 miles) east of Beijing, in the Dong Dingling (Chinese: 東定陵), along with Empress Dowager Ci'an. More precisely, Empress Dowager Ci'an lies in the Pu Xiang Yu Ding Dong Ling (Chinese: 普祥峪定東陵) (literally: the "Tomb East of the Ding ...