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'''Emperor Hongli''' (18 March 1895 - 22 September 1948) was the twelfth and last emperor of the Qian dynasty to rule over [[Corumm]]. His reign lasted from 1938 to 1946, having succeeded his father Emperor Zhishun after the latters death. Ascending to the throne during the height of the [[Second Great War]], he continued his predecessors anti-Levantine policies and pushed for continued participation in the war. Corummese failure to achieve its major war goals, the rapidly deteriorating economic situation and the rising agitation of socialist forces caused the army led by general [[Dai Hanjian]] to carry out a coup in 1946. Dubbed the Glorious Revolt, it marked the end of the Qian dynasty and of the millenarian rule of Corumm by monarchs. Hongli was placed under house arrest until 1948 when he died of complications of diabetes; his teenage son and heir died soon after in unclear circumstances. Hongli's royal consort, Princess Keuto of [[Metzetta]] was allowed to depart back to her homeland with two of the emperor's daughters after renouncing any imperial pretenses on their behalf. Modern evaluations of Hongli see him as an ineffective leader too fixated in the war that dominated the early part of his reign, allowing internal events to spiral out of control and destroy the monarchy.
'''Emperor Hongli''' (18 March 1895 - 22 September 1948) was the twelfth and last emperor of the Qian dynasty to rule over [[Corumm]]. His reign lasted from 1938 to 1946, having succeeded his father Emperor Zhishun after the latters death. Ascending to the imperial throne during the height of the [[Second Great War]], he continued his predecessors anti-Levantine policies and pushed for continued participation in the war. Corummese failure to achieve its major war goals, the rapidly deteriorating economic situation and the rising agitation of socialist forces caused the army led by general [[Dai Hanjian]] to carry out a coup in 1946. Dubbed the Glorious Revolt, it marked the end of the Qian dynasty and of the millenarian rule of Corumm by monarchs. Hongli was placed under house arrest until 1948 when he died of complications of diabetes; his teenage son and heir died soon after in unclear circumstances. Hongli's royal consort, Princess Keuto of [[Metzetta]] was allowed to depart back to her homeland with two of the emperor's daughters after renouncing any imperial pretenses on their behalf. Modern evaluations of Hongli see him as an ineffective leader too fixated in the war that dominated the early part of his reign, allowing internal events to spiral out of control and destroy the monarchy.
 
==Early life==
==Reign==
==Deposition==
==Family==
[[Category:Corumm]]
[[Category:Corumm]]
[[category:events]]
[[category:events]]

Revision as of 13:30, 26 August 2022

Hongli
Emperor of the Heavenly Empire of Corumm
In office
1938–1946
Preceded byEmperor Zhishun
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Personal details
BornJune 12th 1895
Mirzak
DiedFebruary 18th 1948
Mirzak
Cause of deathDiabetes
Spouse(s)Princess Keuto

Emperor Hongli (18 March 1895 - 22 September 1948) was the twelfth and last emperor of the Qian dynasty to rule over Corumm. His reign lasted from 1938 to 1946, having succeeded his father Emperor Zhishun after the latters death. Ascending to the imperial throne during the height of the Second Great War, he continued his predecessors anti-Levantine policies and pushed for continued participation in the war. Corummese failure to achieve its major war goals, the rapidly deteriorating economic situation and the rising agitation of socialist forces caused the army led by general Dai Hanjian to carry out a coup in 1946. Dubbed the Glorious Revolt, it marked the end of the Qian dynasty and of the millenarian rule of Corumm by monarchs. Hongli was placed under house arrest until 1948 when he died of complications of diabetes; his teenage son and heir died soon after in unclear circumstances. Hongli's royal consort, Princess Keuto of Metzetta was allowed to depart back to her homeland with two of the emperor's daughters after renouncing any imperial pretenses on their behalf. Modern evaluations of Hongli see him as an ineffective leader too fixated in the war that dominated the early part of his reign, allowing internal events to spiral out of control and destroy the monarchy.

Early life

Reign

Deposition

Family