"Ruyi's Biography" Jiagui Concubine Jin Yuyan, where is the noble daughter of the North Kingdom Yu family?

Jiagui Concubine Jin Yuyan, who appears in the play as a descendant of the nobles of the North Kingdom. In the palace, she often showed a spoiled and arrogant temperament by virtue of her noble background. People feel that she is arrogant and domineering and outspoken, which makes some concubines not very vigilant about her, and she is provoked by her words without knowing it. In addition, he and the Yu clan of Northland are also dependent on each other. Bei Guo is her mother family, and provides her with treasures to win over ministers. She has also counted the loyalty of the Northern Kingdom to the Qing Dynasty in exchange for the peace of Yu's family and her stable position in the palace. However, is this Beiguo tribute girl really noble?

North Kingdom Yu, set as Lee Chosun in the novel. Since the Yuan Dynasty, they have been offering beauties to China. Because when China was in the prosperous age of reunification, trade needed to be carried out with tributary countries in a "tribute" manner, so these beauties were named tribute girls.

North Korea had the largest number of tribute girls in the Yuan Dynasty. The Korean tribute girls are not necessarily beautiful, but they are "tributes." The officials and nobles all compare with each other on the number of Korean female slaves. Therefore, the number of tribute girls demanded by the Yuan Dynasty increased. Later, marriages in junior high schools had to be banned many times in order to select tribute girls.

In the Ming Dynasty, it is rumored that the birth mother of Ming Chengzu Zhu Di was a concubine from Korea (North Korea). I don't know if it is because of blood relationship, she especially loves Korean women. As well as his grandson Xuanzong Zhu Zhanji, also favored North Korean beauty.

In the Qing Dynasty, North Korea surrendered to the Qing Dynasty. Dorgon once asked for beautiful women from the Joseon royal family. His step-consort Lee is a Korean tribute girl. However, since Shunzhi in the Qing Dynasty, the concubines were all elected from the nobles of the Three Banners from Manchuria, elected by the Mongolian Army and the Han Army, and the Korean tribute girl never became the emperor's concubine.

As for the imperial concubine of Emperor Qianlong Shujia, she has been away from North Korea for a long time.

The imperial concubine Shujia is the younger sister of Jin Jian, the great-grandson of Zheng Huang Qi-coated Jin Sanda Li. Jin Sandali and his brothers Xindali, Yindali, and Jidali were all from Yiju, North Korea. The four brothers returned to Houjin and merged into the Manchu when Jin invaded North Korea in 1627. The father of these four brothers, Jin Jian's great grandfather, was called Jin Deyun. After the Jin Jian brothers and sisters made their fortune, Emperor Qianlong also asked North Korea to repair Jin Deyun's tomb.

Therefore, if according to the setting in the play, she was directly presented to the upper court by her mother's clan, and she could only be regarded as a "tribute" instead of having her status as a nobleman in her home country. When the lady said, she was the only one who was obsessed with it. She was originally a beautiful and intelligent woman, but it was a pity that she failed the original good life for the sake of her son. As she said at the end of the book, "If there is an afterlife, I will choose a beloved Arirang. I won’t have to fight or fight for the rest of my life. I must be the most respected wife in the family. I can have many children. In the New Year, Let's play rice cakes and dance the spring dance..."