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There are 300,000 to 400,000 descendants of the emperor. Why didn’t he think of restoring the Qing Dynasty?

A man named Jin Fuxin publicly called for the restoration of the monarchy. This person was a member of the royal family of the Qing Dynasty: the tenth grandson of Kangxi.

This is not a rumor, it was officially reported on Sohu’s “Domestic News” channel. "Descendants of the Qing Emperor petition in Beijing to restore the monarchy": Jin Fuxin, a descendant of the Qing imperial family, plans to launch a nationwide petition in Beijing in October 2010, demanding the restoration of the symbolic monarchy to promote the development of China's tourism culture. Jin Fuxin’s petition activities mainly include collecting people’s signatures. "I plan to establish a symbolic monarchy. Starting this autumn, I will travel to every corner of China to collect people's signatures," Jin Fuxin said. His goal is to collect more than 1 million signatures and submit it to the National People's Congress for approval at the 2011 Two Sessions.

Jin Fuxin also hopes that the government will allow him to live in the Forbidden City. "No one lives there now, only tour guides and tourists come and go," Jin Fuxin said. "If the government allows us to live in the palace, we will be responsible for welcoming tourists and acting as guides. Wouldn't that be great?"

Jin Fuxin emphasized that the purpose of the petition was only to hope that the government would restore those factors that were "beneficial to tourism" and was not an attempt to restore the Qing Dynasty.

The last emperor (Aixinjueluo Puyi) fell ill in Beijing on October 17, 1967, at the age of 61. After the cremation, the ashes were placed in a side room of the Babaoshan Cemetery in Beijing. The then Prime Minister Zhou Enlai instructed that they be moved to the main room and later moved to the Hualong Royal Cemetery.

The last emperor of the Qing Dynasty also had no heirs after his death. After the fall of the Qing Dynasty, the Aixinjueluo people mostly took the Chinese surname Jin or Luo. Jin Fuxin (Aixinjueluo·Fuxin) was born in 1935. He is a member of the Chinese Calligraphers Association and a librarian of the Beijing Qing History Research Institute. He is the sixteenth son of Emperor Kangxi, the ancestor of the Qing Dynasty, and the tenth grandson of Emperor Kangxi. His grandfather, the famous calligrapher and painter Aixinjueluo Puzuo, was the great-grandson of Emperor Daoguang, the son of Zai Yingbeile, and the cousin of Emperor Xuantong.

Jin Fuxin is a descendant of the Qing royal family, but he is not a direct heir to the Aisin Gioro royal family. Jin Fuxin seems to have always maintained a "royal complex" and dreamed of restoring the Qing royal family. He had planned to write to more than 20 countries that still retain monarchies, telling them that China still has members of the royal family to seek support. "I hope to see the symbolic monarchy restored." In order to show the identity of the Dragonborn, their daily necessities and clothing are all yellow. Jin Fuxin once said that this is a sign of respect and attachment to the clan.