Prince of Yi (Ming dynasty) explained

Princedom of Yi
Creation Date:1487, fief taken in 1495
First Holder:Zhu Youbin (Prince Duan)
Last Holder:Zhu Yihao (the 11th prince)
Status:Extinct
Extinction Date:1539
Family Seat:Jianchangfu (建昌府) (nowadays Nancheng County, Jiangxi province)

Prince of Yi (Chinese: 益王), was a first-rank princely peerage used during Ming dynasty, it was created by the Chenghua Emperor for his sixth son, Zhu Youbin.

See main article: article and Vassals princes of Ming dynasty.

Generation name / poem

As members of this peerage were descentants of Yongle Emperor, their generation poem was:-

The main line of this peerage used the poem until Yi (怡) generation.

Princedom of Yi

Princedom of Yi 益王
Creation Date:1487
Creation:first creation
First Holder:Zhu Youbin, Prince Duan
Last Holder:Zhu Yihao, 11th Prince of Qin
Status:Extinct
Family Seat:Jianchang (today's part of Nancheng County, Fuzhou, Jiangxi)


Family tree

Non-inherited cadet peerages

Heirless peerage

Absorbed peerages

Inherited cadet peerages

Comm. Prince of Jinxi

The peerage of Comm. Prince of Jinxi (金谿郡王) was created in 1517, continued to 1644. The non-inherited cadet peerage, Comm. Prince of Wenchang (文昌郡王) was a branch of this peerage.