Donggo
Donggo ({{lang-mnc|ᡩᠣᠩᡤᠣ}}, {{zh|c=董鄂|p=Dǒng'è}}) was a clan of Manchu nobility belonging to the Manchu Plain White Banner, one of the 3 upper banners of Eight Banner system. Several lineages were members of Manchu Plain Red Banner.
Donggo Hala was a branch of Irgen Gioro clan. The ancestral home of the Donggo Hala was located in Liaodong. After the demise of Qing dynasty, their descendants changed their surnames to Dong (董),Zhao (赵) and other.{{Cite book|last=Zhao|first=Li|title=Manchu clans today|publisher=Liaoning Public Typography|year=2012|pages=410}}
Notable figures
= Males =
- Hohori (何和礼; 1561–1624, pinyin: heheli) one of 5 founders of Later Jin dynasty and duke Yongqin (勇勤公, meaning "brave and diligent")
- Dulei (杜雷), a first rank military official (都统, pinyin: dutong) and held a title of second class count (二等伯)
- Dojili (多济理), a second rank military official (副都统, pinyin: fudutong){{Cite book|title=《八旗满洲氏族通谱》/"Genealogy of Manchu Eight Banner clans", book 8.}}
- Kajihai (喀济海), a head censor (长史){{Cite book|title=《星源集慶》/"Joy under the Star Fount"}}
- Yaxing'a (雅星阿), served a third rank military official (参领)
- Xindali (新达理){{Cite book|title=《八旗满洲氏族通谱》/"Genealogy of Manchu Eight Banner clans", book 8}}
- Xihan (席汉)
- Eshuo (鄂碩/鄂硕; d. 1657), served as a first rank military official, Grand Minister of Internal Affairs(內大臣)
- {{ill|Feiyanggu|zh|費揚古 (棟鄂氏)}} (费扬古, 1645–1701), participant of early Qing military campaigns, including fight against Revolt of the Three Feudatories, Battle of Ulan Butung, general of Xi'an and Shaanxi{{Cite web|date=2014-10-20|title=朝阳数字文化网|url=http://whfw.bjchy.gov.cn/whly/402883ef3e9195be013e9672f621043a.html|access-date=2020-11-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141020151610/http://whfw.bjchy.gov.cn/whly/402883ef3e9195be013e9672f621043a.html|archive-date=2014-10-20}}
- Badu (巴度), held a title of master commandant of light chariot (轻车都尉){{Cite book|title=《清列朝后妃傳稿》/"Biographies of Qing dynasty imperial consorts"}}
- Pengchun (彭春;d. 1699), an ambassador to Torghuts and signator of the Treaty of Nerchinsk.{{Cite book|last=Zhao|first=Erxun|title=《清史稿》卷280/ "Draft History of Qing"|year=1928|pages=67}}
- Tiebao (铁保), renowned Qianlong era artisan and painter, friend of Yongxing
; Prince Consorts
class="wikitable"
!Year !Prince Consort !Princess !Sons !Daughters |
1588
|Hohori |Nenzhe,{{Cite book|title=《满洲实录·卷二》/ "History of Manchuria", book 2}} Princess Duanzhuang of the First Rank (固伦端庄公主 嫩哲){{Cite book|title="满文老档·第十六函·第三十五册"/"A research of Manchurian documents. Part 16, book 35"}} |1.Dulei (杜雷) 2.Dojili (多济理) | |
1606
|Gumubei |Šurhaci's daughter | | |
= Females =
Imperial Consort
- Empress
- Empress Xiaoxian (1639–1660), the Shunzhi Emperor's imperial noble consort, the mother of Prince Rong (1657–1658)
- Consort
- Consort Zhen (d. 1661), the Shunzhi Emperor's concubine
- Consort Ningque (d. 1694), the Shunzhi Emperor's concubine, the mother of Fuquan (1653–1703)
Princess Consort
- Primary Consort
- Yunzhi's primary consort, the mother of Hongqing (1696–1701), Hongsheng (1698–1732), first daughter (1700–1701) and Princess (1701–1753)
- Yuntang's primary consort, the mother of fourth daughter (1705 – 1726 or 1727)
- Hongshi's primary consort (1703–1775), the mother of first daughter (1722–1727)
- Concubine
- Šurhaci's concubine, the mother of fifth daughter (b. 1593)
Gallery
File:鐵保.jpg|Tiebao, famous Qianlong era painter
File:董鄂妃《董鄂皇貴妃, 孝獻端敬皇后》.jpg|Empress Xiaoxian, Shunzhi Emperor's beloved consort