Forty-eight years of Kangxi, especially because of the king of Duoluochun County. Before and after Yong Zhengdi came to power, the two brothers were fighting in the dark, but Ewing was "respectful and cautious". Yong Zhengdi named him Prince Chundu and became a first-class prince. However, such an open tomb of the Qing king was visited and destroyed by grave robbers many times after his death, but the present situation is terrible.
Ewing Tomb is located in the south of Qingxi Mountain in Yixian County, Baoding City, Hebei Province. Ewing died on the second day of the fourth lunar month in 1730. Yongzheng specially chose a piece of geomantic treasure to bury this younger brother. According to the first volume of Yizhou Records, Yong Zhengdi chose the mausoleum site as "thick and big, and then passed it on"; "Di Xian's kindness is like heaven, and his nature is good", so he gave Jidong of St. Shi Cun, not far from the Qing Xiling, to Ewing, the seventh brother of the emperor.
Ewing Tomb covers an area of nearly 100 mu, which shows Yong Zhengdi's love for it. At first, there were special grave keepers, mainly Zhao and Li. Every year before Tomb-Sweeping Day, Li and Zhao clean the inside and outside of the cemetery. During the Republic of China, Pukun, the descendant of Ewing, found some people to come to the cemetery, cut down many trees and sold them. In addition, bricks and stones that can be used for construction in the cemetery area have also been sold to others.
1933 On the first day of the fourth lunar month, most villagers near the mausoleum went to go to the opera, Kannonji, Shenshizhuang. The next morning, someone saw a pile of soil behind the wall circle, only to find that it had been stolen, and the Tuolong Monument and the Great Hall had been bombed. Today, Ewing's mausoleum contains only underground palaces and stone gates. Most of the interior of the underground palace has been buried by garbage and miscellaneous soil, and the space is extremely narrow, but it can still be seen that the golden ticket is in the east-west direction, and the Shimen is in the north, open and obviously T-shaped.