Su Si Tai Hao, part 1, "The Mother of the Prince of the Heir."
- Speaking of the most powerful women in late Qing Dynasty Chinese history, it is inevitable that "Su Si Tai Hao," who changed his role from an ordinary pine to a power holder behind a curtain over the land of dragons for nearly half a century.
- She stepped into the palace as a "Xiu Wi," or a beautiful woman, and was named "Gui Rin," a sixth of eight levels, which was considered not noble at first, in 1852.
At that time she was called "Grandson Guiren," or Pine Lan.
- There is a legend that she did not win the Emperor Feng's heart just with her face, but with "music," where she often went to sing in the royal park at the point where she knew that the Emperor would pass, and often called the Emperor to serve.
- What made her superior to other concubines was the birth of Prince Tsai Quan, later Emperor Tongzhi, the only surviving son of Emperor Sianfeng - this immediately changed her status from "last mistress" to "mother of the heir," and that was the beginning of a 47-year-long dominance.
























































































