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Consort Li (Zhenzong)

Consort Li
Lichenfei 1814.jpg
An illustration from a 1814 print of the novel Sequel to Great Song's Generals of the Yang Family: The First Tale of the Literary and Martial Stars Lord Bao and Di Qing (後續大宋楊家將文武曲星包公狄青初傳)
Born 987
Hangzhou, Song Empire
(modern Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China)
Died 1032
Kaifeng, Song Empire
(modern Kaifeng, Henan, China)
Burial Yongding Mausoleum (永定陵)
Spouse Emperor Zhenzong of Song
Issue
Posthumous name
  • Empress Dowager Zhuāngyì ()
  • Empress Dowager Zhāngyì ()
Father Li Rende (李仁德)
Posthumous name
  • Empress Dowager Zhuāngyì ()
  • Empress Dowager Zhāngyì ()

Consort Li, imperial consort rank Chenfei (李宸妃) (987 – 1032), was an imperial consort of the Song dynasty of China. She was a concubine of Emperor Zhenzong and the mother of Emperor Renzong. She was posthumously honored as Empress Dowager Zhangyi (章懿皇太后), after Emperor Renzong discovered that she was his real mother.

Born in Hangzhou, the future Consort Li first became an imperial maid for Consort Liu. She caught the eye of Emperor Zhenzong and bore him a boy and a daughter (who died). The boy was claimed by Consort Liu who successfully became the empress. Even after the boy became Emperor Renzong, the real mother still kept her silence. In the 11th year of her son's reign (also overseen by Empress Liu), she became ill and was given the consort rank Chenfei shortly before she died.

A year later, after Empress Liu also died, Prince Zhao Yuanyan told the emperor the truth, and also suggested that Consort Li had been murdered. Shocked with grief, Emperor Renzong visited the coffin with tears, ordered the construction of Jingling Palace for her memorial and gave her the posthumous title Empress Zhangyi. However, as Empress Liu had treated Consort Li's corpse with great respect, Emperor Renzong refused to believe that she would murder his biological mother.

A Yuan Dynasty play (in the form of zaju) called Chen Lin Carrying the Box at Gold Water Bridge (金水橋陳琳抱妝盒) told the story of how Consort Li and her baby son were victimized by a jealous Consort Liu. This story, which probably borrowed elements from the play The Orphan of Zhao that is more historically plausible, became incredibly popular and saw many different versions in later periods, including the Qing Dynasty novel The Seven Heroes and Five Gallants, where it is referred to as The Wild Cat for Crown Prince.


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Wikipedia

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