1, Yang Naiwu and Chinese cabbage case
Yang Naiwu Pakchoi case is one of the four major unjust cases in Qing Dynasty. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, Yang Naiwu, a juren from Yuhang Town, interacted with Bi Xiugu, who was called "Chinese Cabbage". Chinese cabbage was originally a child bride of Ge's family, and once worked as a housekeeper in Yang's family. Due to courtesy and fame, they had to marry each other, and Chinese cabbage married Ge Xiaoda. Liu Xitong, the magistrate of Yuhang County, was condemned by Yang Naiwu for taking bribes and perverting the law. His son Liu raped Bi Xiugu with rape drugs, poisoned her husband Ge Xiaoda, and blamed the crime on. Yang Naiwu was tortured on death row.
2. Zhang Wenxiang's Spurs case
Zhang Wenxiang's horse stabbing case is also one of the four unsolved cases in the late Qing Dynasty. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, after Zhang Wenxiang assassinated Ma Xinyi, the governor of Liangjiang, he did not run away immediately, but shouted: "The assassin is my Zhang Wenxiang!" After several interrogations, Zhang Wenxiang answered questions, which made interrogators General Jiangning and Francisco "terrified" and thought the confession was bizarre. Finally, the Qing government convicted Zhang Wenxiang of "collaborating with the enemy" and sentenced him to give up his heart. Until now, no one still knows the truth of the assassination. In modern times, this legend has been created into many TV dramas and operas.
3. Yang Yuelou's unjust case.
Yang Yuelou's unjust case is one of the four strange cases in the late Qing Dynasty. Yang Yuelou, a famous Peking Opera actor, was a "palace tribute" of the Qing Dynasty and once sang for Cixi. In the winter of the twelfth year of Tongzhi, a tea merchant named Wei in Xiangshan, Guangdong Province, 17-year-old lady fell in love with her after watching the play for three days in a row. From then on, she began to write her own books and longed to get engaged to Yang Yuelou. Although promised, this matter was resolutely stopped by Wei's female uncle with the courtesy of not marrying, and was prosecuted by the government for kidnapping and theft, and was punished. But in the end, Cixi clarified the grievances of this case.
4. Taiyuan Strange Case
Taiyuan case-solving is one of the four major cases in the late Qing Dynasty. During the Daoguang period in the late Qing Dynasty, Taiyuan millionaire Zhang betrothed his second daughter Yuzhu to a large family of Cao and Yao, but Yuzhu eloped with Cao. After Zhang Million found that Yuzhu was missing, he went to his eldest daughter Zhu Jin's house to look for it, but he found the stunned monk and thought he was dead. After the monk woke up and fled, he molested women and was killed by the butcher. At this point, the monk's murder case and the "walking dead" case caused a sensation throughout the city. Since then, the plot is still tortuous, because the case is bizarre and lasting, and scripts and movies have been staged in modern times.
5. Huai 'an Strange Case
This case is a rare case in the history of the Qing Dynasty, and it is also one of the biggest unjust cases in the Qing Dynasty. In the thirteenth year of Jiaqing, the Yellow River soared, Huai 'an area was affected, and hundreds of thousands of victims were hungry and displaced. The Qing court allocated 99,000 yuan for Huai 'an disaster relief. Later, Jinshi was ordered to check the accounts, but was poisoned and strangled by the corrupt county magistrate Wang. Emperor Jiaqing investigated and clarified the case. This case involves a wide range of people, from emperors, government officials to ordinary people.
6. Lv Liuliang case
In ten years of Shunzhi, Lv Liuliang took the exam as a student, but he could not live in seclusion. Kangxi refused to become a monk in the Qing dynasty, and then he got a haircut and died. After Lv Liuliang's death, Ceng Jing and others worshipped Lv Liuliang's thoughts, and later instigated Yue Zhongqi, governor of Sichuan and Shaanxi, to rebel. However, the defendant was sent to prison, which implicated two students in Lv Liuliang. Lv Liuliang himself was cut open, slaughtered and his works burned. His descendants were either slaughtered, beheaded or exiled into slavery, which was the first literary inquisition in the Qing Dynasty and one of the top ten unjust cases in the Qing Dynasty.