1644, Dashun Army captured Beijing, Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself, and the Ming Dynasty perished.
Several Nanming regimes established by the Ming imperial clan in South China lasted for decades, and were completely wiped out by the Qing army in the 22nd year of Kangxi (1683).
The historical process of the Ming Dynasty and its related regimes can be divided into four periods:
Xiwu, the predecessor of the Ming Dynasty (1364-1368)
Rule the whole country-Ming dynasty (1368-1644)
Half of Jiangnan-Nanming (1644-1662)
The last aftermath-Zheng Ming (1662-1683)
The Ming Dynasty (1368- 1644) was founded by Zhu Yuanzhang, the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty, and lasted for 276 years. In the early Ming Dynasty, Tianfu (now Nanjing) was designated as the capital city. In the 19th year of Yongle (142 1), Judy, the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty, moved the capital to Shuntianfu (now Beijing), but Tianfu was renamed Nanjing. Because the Ming emperor surnamed Zhu, it was also called Zhu. The Ming Dynasty was a unified dynasty after the Yuan Dynasty in the history of China. 1644, Li Zicheng went to Beijing, Zhu Youjian hanged himself in Jingshan Park, and the Ming Dynasty perished. After the demise of the Ming dynasty, the imperial clan of the Ming dynasty successively established some political powers in the south, which was called Nanming in history. 1683, the Qing army occupied Taiwan Province province, the quiet king Zhu Shugui committed suicide, and the last regime in Nanming was destroyed.