Which emperors were buried in the Ming Tombs?

The Ming Tombs were buried in Changling (Ming), Xianling (Ming Renzong), Jing (Ming Xuanzong), Yuling (Ming Yingzong), Maoling (Ming Xianzong), Tailing (Ming Xiaozong), Kangling (Ming Wuzong), Yongling (Ming Shizong), Zhaoling (Ming) and Dingling (Ming Shenzong). Among them, Zhu Yuanzhang, Zhu Yunwen, Hui Zong, and Zhu Qiyu, the emperor of Ming Dynasty, were not included in the Ming Tombs.

First, Tianshou Mountain The tombs of the Ming Dynasty 13 emperors are all on Tianshou Mountain. After Judy, the founder of the Ming Dynasty, moved to Beijing, he began to choose a place for himself to build a mausoleum. He found many Feng Shui masters and finally chose a place called Huang Tu. When he chose this place, it happened to be his 50th birthday, so he renamed Huangtu Mountain Tianshou Mountain. Moreover, during the original survey, Judy was told that this place was related to the luck of the Ming Dynasty, so Judy chose the imperial tomb here and let future generations build it here.

Second, the Ming emperors who were not in the Ming Tombs had 16 emperors, three of whom were not in Tianshou Mountain, namely Ming Taizu, Zhu Yuanzhang, Ming Huizong, Zhu Yunwen and Zhu Qiyu, Ming Daizong. Zhu Yuanzhang was buried in Nanjing. At that time, the capital of the Ming Dynasty was still in Nanjing. Later, he moved the capital to Beijing, so the later emperor's mausoleum was in Beijing. The second emperor was Hui Zong of the Ming Dynasty, the grandson of Zhu Yuanzhang and Judy's nephew. Judy started the battle of Jingnan and stole his nephew's throne. During this visit, the body of Ming Huizong was not found, and it is said that Zhu Yunwen became a monk, so there is no tomb of Zhu Yunwen on Tianshou Mountain. The third is Zhu Qiyu, Judy's great-grandson. Before Zhu Qiyu, there was an emperor, Zhu Qizhen. Because of the Warra War, Zhu Qizhen was captured by Warra, so the ministers chose Zhu Qizhen's younger brother Zhu Qiyu to succeed to the throne. However, I didn't expect Zhu Qizhen to be welcomed back to the Ming Dynasty and staged a coup to regain the throne. Later, Zhu Qizhen refused to recognize Zhu Qiyu as emperor and reduced him to king. In the end, Zhu Qiyu failed to enter Huangling.

Third, the modern Ming Tombs The modern Ming Tombs have already become tourist attractions, and some imperial tombs can be visited when they are open to the outside world. In the history of so many years, the Ming Tombs have been stolen many times, but the total number is still relatively small, not as clean as the imperial tombs in the Qing Dynasty. The structure of the Ming Tombs is more difficult to steal than that of the Qing Tombs.