Noble Consort Wenxi's personal name was not recorded in history.
Family background
Noble Consort Wenxi's family was much more prestigious when compared to the maternal families of the other sons of the Kangxi Emperor, apart from Yinreng. Her paternal grandmother, Mukushen, was Nurhaci's daughter, which would make the Kangxi Emperor and Noble Consort Wenxi second cousins. When she died in 1694, her younger brother, Alingga, represented her family in mourning.
Fourth younger sister: Duchess of the Fourth Rank, wife of Yunsheng (云升) of the Aisin-Gioro clan (愛新覺羅氏)
Fifth younger sister: First Class Viscountess, wife of Ayushen (阿玉什)
Kangxi era
It is not known when Lady Niohuru entered the Forbidden City and became a mistress of the Kangxi Emperor. She was first mentioned in official histories on 28 January 1682 when the Kangxi Emperor granted ranks and titles to his consorts. She was granted the title of "Noble Consort". As she was the only one among the imperial consorts to hold that rank, she did not receive a title to distinguish her from the others.
She gave birth on 28 November 1683 to the emperor's tenth son, Yun'e, and on 24 October 1685 to his 11th daughter, who would die prematurely in June or July 1686.
On 17 December 1694, Lady Niohuru became critically ill. She died two days later and was interred in the Jing Mausoleum of the Eastern Qing tombs. She was granted the posthumous title "Noble Consort Wenxi".
Noble Consort (貴妃; from 28 January 1682),[3] third rank imperial consort
Noble Consort Wenxi (溫僖貴妃; from 29 December 1694)[4]
Issue
As Noble Consort:
Yun'e (輔國公 允䄉; 28 November 1683 – 18 October 1741), the Kangxi Emperor's 18th (10th) son
Unnamed daughter (24 October 1685 – June/July 1686), the Kangxi Emperor's 11th daughter
Media
Noble Consort Wenxi is briefly mentioned by the Empress Dowager in the 2011 Chinese television series Empresses in the Palace. She is described as a superior woman who obtained the former Emperor's favor in a conversation between the Empress Dowager and Longkodo.