CMC时空档案
Puyi

Puyi

溥仪

1906–1967

  • Xuantong Emperor, Qing Dynasty (1908–1912)
  • Kangde Emperor, Manchukuo (1934–1945)

Biography

Last Emperor of Qing

Aisin-Gioro Puyi was born on 7 February 1906 in the Prince Chun Mansion in Beijing, nephew of the Guangxu Emperor. In December 1908, at the age of two and a half, he was rushed to the Forbidden City and enthroned as the Xuantong Emperor following the near-simultaneous deaths of the Guangxu Emperor and Empress Dowager Cixi. His regency was held by his father, Prince Chun (Zaifeng), and his childhood in the Forbidden City was one of elaborate ritual isolation, tended by eunuchs and court ladies who indulged his every whim. The Xinhai Revolution of 1911 ended Qing rule; on 12 February 1912, the six-year-old emperor signed the abdication edict drafted by Yuan Shikai, ending over two thousand years of imperial rule in China. Under the Articles of Favourable Treatment, he was permitted to remain in the Forbidden City with his imperial titles and a government stipend.

Expulsion and Japanese Cultivation

Puyi remained in the Forbidden City until 1924, when warlord Feng Yuxiang's forces expelled him. He moved first to the Japanese concession in Tianjin, where Japanese military intelligence officers cultivated his ambition and his desire to restore the Qing dynasty. Promised restoration of his throne and protection from Chinese political turbulence, Puyi became increasingly dependent on Japanese patronage. After the Mukden Incident and Japan's seizure of Manchuria in 1931, Japanese agents persuaded him to leave Tianjin secretly and travel to Manchuria to assume leadership of the new puppet state.

Emperor of Manchukuo

In March 1932, Puyi was installed as head of state of Manchukuo. In March 1934, the state was elevated to an empire and Puyi was enthroned as the Kangde Emperor (康德皇帝). In practice, he had no meaningful authority: all executive decisions were made by Kwantung Army officers who staffed every level of the Manchukuo government. Puyi later testified — and wrote in his autobiography — that he lived in constant fear, that Japanese officers humiliated him routinely, and that any attempt to exercise independent judgment was immediately suppressed. Whether his collaboration was fundamentally voluntary or coerced remains a point of genuine historical debate. He presided over Manchukuo until the Soviet declaration of war against Japan and invasion of Manchuria in August 1945.

Prisoner, Trial, and Re-education

With Japan's defeat, Puyi attempted to flee to Japan but was captured by Soviet forces at Shenyang airport in August 1945. He was held in the USSR for five years, testifying at the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal in 1946 about Japanese conduct in Manchuria. Returned to the People's Republic of China in 1950, he was held as a war criminal at the Fushun War Criminals Management Centre and underwent a decade-long programme of political re-education. In 1959, Mao Zedong granted him a special pardon. Puyi spent his final years as an ordinary PRC citizen, working initially as a gardener at the Beijing Botanical Garden before becoming a researcher at the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.

Legacy

Puyi died on 17 October 1967 in Beijing, aged 61, during the Cultural Revolution — denied the medical care that might have prolonged his life. His autobiography, "The First Half of My Life" (我的前半生), written under political supervision and published in 1964, remains a major if ideologically shaped primary source. Bernardo Bertolucci's 1987 Academy Award-winning film "The Last Emperor" brought his story to global audiences. Puyi's life encapsulates three of the most transformative ruptures in modern Chinese history: the collapse of imperial rule, the brutality of Japanese puppet governance, and the Maoist project of transforming class enemies into new socialist citizens.

Related Events (1)