2011年12月16日星期五

Yang Yuhuan—one of the Four Great Beauties in Ancient China

Yang Yuhuan was the daughter of a census official in Sichuan. An only child who lost her father early in life, Yang Yuhuan was raised in the household of her uncle. In the twenty-second year of the Kaiyuan reign, Yang Yuhuan was chosen to enter the imperial harem.
When Emperor Xuanzong had firmly established a strong empire with a cosmopolitan capital in Xi'an and a brilliant Court, he ordered a search throughout the land to find China's greatest beauty. One day, at Huaqing Hot Springs, Yang Yuhuan, the 18-year-old concubine of one of the emperor's many sons, caught Xuanzong's eye. Amidst protestations from his son, Xuanzong took Yang to be his own concubine, and she grew to wield enormous influence over the emperor, who began neglecting matters of state to spend time with her. He renamed her Yang Guifei (high-ranked imperial concubine).
Tang-Dynasty paintings indicate that -- like other beauties of the time -- Yang Guifei was a plump woman. Taking great pains to please her, the emperor had the palace at Huaqing Hot Springs enlarged, and she spent many languorous hours bathing there to keep her skin fresh. Fresh lychees, her favorite fruit, were brought by pony express from Guangzhou every week. Many of her relatives took positions at Court, with her cousin becoming Prime Minister, and her sisters were all appointed to nobility.
Emperor Xuanzong, wallowing in the pleasures of the flesh, neglected his court and politics. Yuan Guifei even adopted An Lushan, a general of Turkic origin, as her son and helped him win power at court. In 755, An Lushan seized the opportunity to stage a rebellion and marched into the capital. Emperor Xuanzong fled towards the southwest, taking Yang Guifei with him.
Years of neglect had weakened the imperial army, and its remaining soldiers were determined to remove Yang Guifei, the cause of its decline. When stopping to change horses at Mawei village, the soldiers mutinied, killing the Prime Minister, and demanding the death of Yang Guifei. Emperor Xuanzong had no choice but to watch Yang Guifei kill herself strangling in the courtyard of a small Buddhist temple at the slopes of Mawei village.
The An Lushan rebellion dragged on for several years, but was eventually crushed. The emperor, however, never recovered from his loss of Yang Guifei, and died a broken man a few years later. The Tang Dynasty survived nominally, but a steady decline had set in, and its former glory was never to be regained.
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