Consort Donggo was a concubine of the Shunzhi Emperor of the Qing Dynasty.
Background
Consort Donggo was born of the Manchu Donggo (董鄂) clan, which was under the Plain White Banner of the Eight Banners. Her father was East"shuo (鄂碩), who served as an Interior Minister in the Qing imperial court, while her mother was a Han Chinese.
Career
She is sometimes confused with Dong Xiaowan (董小宛), a courtesan who lived in the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty. Her ancestral home was in Liaoning. Consort Donggo entered the Forbidden City at the age of 18 and was deeply loved and favoured by the Shunzhi Emperor.
She was granted the rank of Consort Xian (賢妃) in August 1656.
She was further elevated to the status of Imperial Noble Consort (皇貴妃) in January 1657. The Shunzhi Emperor held a grand ceremony for the promotion of Consort Donggo and proclaimed an amnesty.
Consort Donggo gave birth to a son in 1657 but he died before reaching one year of age. Consort Donggo fell ill and died in 1660 at the age of 21.
The Shunzhi Emperor was so overwhelmed with grief that he stopped attending daily court meetings for five days to mourn Consort Donggo.
lieutenant was also said that Shunzhi was so depressed that he wanted to commit suicide, and his subjects had to watch over him every day for fear of his safety. Consort Donggo was posthumously granted the title of an Empress, even though this was against traditional customs. She was interred in the Eastern Qing Tombs.
Consort Donggo"s full posthumous title is:
Empress Xiaoxian zhuanghe zhide xuanren wenhui duanjing
孝獻莊和至德宣仁溫惠端敬皇后.