Western Qing tombs
The Western Qing tombs are located some southwest of Beijing in Yi County, Hebei Province. They constitute a necropolis that incorporates four royal mausoleums where seventy-eight royal members are buried. These include four emperors of the Qing dynasty and their empresses, imperial concubines, princes and princesses, as well as other royal servants.
History
Construction of the Western Qing tombs was initiated by the Yongzheng Emperor who broke with tradition and refused to be buried in the Eastern Qing tombs. Some have speculated, though not proven, that as Yongzheng had illegally usurped the throne by eliminating his brothers, his motive to relocate his tomb to the Western Qing tombs was that he did not wish to be buried alongside his father the Kangxi Emperor. Later on his son, the Qianlong Emperor, decided that he should be buried in the Eastern Qing tombs and dictated that thereafter burials should alternate between the eastern and western sites, although this was not followed consistently.The first tomb, the Tailing, was completed in 1737, two years after the end of the Yongzheng reign. The last imperial interment was in 1913, when the Guangxu Emperor was entombed in the Chongling. Chongling was looted by grave robbers in 1938, and its burial chamber is now open to the public.
Main tombs
Image:Xiling2.jpg|thumb|Chongling, mausoleum of the Guangxu EmperorThe four tombs in Western Qing Tombs are:
- Tailing
- * For the Yongzheng Emperor
- Changling
- * For the Jiaqing Emperor
- Muling
- * For the Daoguang Emperor
- Chongling
- * For the Guangxu Emperor
- * Empress Dowager Longyu was also buried in the tomb
- * The tomb was looted in 1938, ten years after the looting of the [Eastern Mausoleum]