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What did Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty call Zhao? What do you pronounce that character?

Song Huizong’s name was Zhao Ji (jí).

①(jí) Looks strong. "Poetry·Xiaoya·June": "Four Mu Ji Ji."

②(jí) means "诘". See "彶qu豱gna".

佶qu豱gna (佶jí) describes the sentence as difficult and stiff, making it difficult to read. Han Yu's "Jin Xue Jie": "Zhou Hao Yin Pan, Ji Qu Nie Ya." Ji Qu, also known as "Jie Ji", originally has a bent appearance, but is extended to mean disobedience. [1]? Reduced version of the 1989 edition of "Cihai"

③ Name: Zhao Ji (jí), Huizong of the Song Dynasty (May 5, 1082 to June 4, 1135), son of Shenzong and Zhezong His younger brother was the eighth emperor of the Song Dynasty. Zhao Ji was successively named King of Suining and King Duan. Zhezong died of illness in the first month of 1100 AD without any children, so Empress Xiang made him emperor in the same month. In the second year, the year was changed to "Jianzhong Jingguo". In the 25th year of Song Huizong's reign (February 23, 1100 - January 18, 1126), he was captured and tortured to death at the age of 54. He was buried in Yongyou Mausoleum (35 miles southeast of today's Shaoxing County, Zhejiang Province) . He created a calligraphy font that later generations called "Skinny Gold Calligraphy".