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The Story of Yan Xi Palace: Is Ai Jia a "Korean Beauty" in history?
In Yan Xi Palace, the resourceful Jia is the "counselor" of Gao Guifei, but she has long been "given a box lunch" and strangled by the virtuous princess herself. Perhaps Ma Yu liked this role better. He arranged for Jia's sister to enter the palace to be "Jia's wife". Compared with her sister, Jony J's IQ is obviously a few grades lower, and she feels a bit like a little aristocrat. She always solves problems by violence, and even dares to punish Wei for two hours. It is estimated that she will soon have the same fate as her sister.

However, this is not the case in Jiaan in history. As a foreigner, she is actually very low-key

Her ancestral home is Sinuiju, South Korea, which can be regarded as a "Korean beauty". Her ancestor's name is Jin Sandali (the original history book is the same, not a typo). After the surrender, Jin became a coated slave. Because Ai Jia entered Wang Fu before Qianlong became emperor, Qianlong gave her preferential treatment, which made her change her surname from "Jin" to "Jin Jia's", became a Manchu surname completely, and even "raised the flag" to raise the family name and joined the banner of Manchu.

Later, Ai Jiasheng gave birth to four brothers, who were promoted to Jia Fei all the way, and his father Jin Jian was promoted from a small pen paste clerk in the Ministry of Internal Affairs to a "typist" who copied and wrote in the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

It is also her father Jin Jian, a doubtful historical figure in history.

Emperor Qianlong liked him very much, because he was Korean, and the Lee Dynasty of Korea also attached great importance to him. Jin Jian himself has great affection for the Korean dynasty, and sent his nephew to secretly bring back the portrait of his ancestors from North Korea and offer sacrifices quietly-because they were all dressed in Ming Dynasty clothes, they could only offer sacrifices quietly.

A Record of Korea's Li Dynasty contains a tip-off from Xu Haoxiu, a North Korean envoy, saying that Jin Jian "served our country a lot before and after", and many inside stories of the Qing court were known by the North Korean dynasty, so some people suspected that Jin Jian was in the Qing court, worried about the motherland, and was "undercover".

Of course, this is not necessarily true, because after all, Emperor Qianlong was so shrewd. If Kim Jian Zhen's was "undercover", it's estimated that he would have withdrawn long ago.

However, Qianlong really loved Ai Jia, and specially ordered the King of Korea to erect a tombstone for Ai Jia's ancestors in his ancestral home.