Why not put the royal mausoleum of the Qing Dynasty in Beijing?

There are three royal mausoleums in Qing Dynasty: the Three Mausoleums outside Guanwai, the Mausoleum in East Qing Dynasty and the Mausoleum in West Qing Dynasty. The Three Mausoleums outside Shanhaiguan are the earliest, because the Qing Dynasty made its fortune there.

First, the Commissioner's three tombs, namely three places:

1. Yongling Mausoleum: Founded in 1558, the ancestors of Nurhachi were buried, including six ancestors, Taizu, Taizu, father and uncle. The second is Fuling: built in 1629, where Nurhachi and his queen were buried. The third is Zhaoling, where Huang Taiji and his queen are buried.

Second, the Qing Dongling

This is the largest and most famous imperial tomb of the Qing Dynasty. After the Qing army entered Shanhaiguan, the emperor shunzhi once hunted outside, and has been in Malanyu, zunhua city City, Hebei Province. He saw that this generation of geomantic omen was excellent, with Changrui Mountain as a hermit in the north, Jinxing Mountain as a pilgrimage site in the south, Yingbi Mountain as a copywriter in the middle, Eagle Flying Upside Down Mountain as Wolong in the east, Huanghua Mountain as a white tiger in the west, and two big rivers around. The emperor shunzhi immediately began to build the Qing Dongling. Before and after the construction of Dongling in the Qing Dynasty, there were five imperial tombs, namely Shunzhi, Kangxi, Qianlong, Xianfeng and Tongzhi, where 14 queens and 136 concubines were buried.

Third, Qingling.

Located at the foot of Yongning Mountain, west of Yixian County, Hebei Province 15km away from Beijing 120km away, construction began during the Yongzheng period, with four imperial tombs (Yongzheng, Jiaqing, Daoguang and Guangxu), nine empresses, 56 concubines, princes and princesses, and so on ***80 people.

In fact, the Qing tombs in the pass are not far from Beijing. If you care about why there are no tombs in Beijing, you can only blame Beijing for its small area.