Is there such a person as Miyue in history?

Mi Yue is really fictional, and there is no such person in history. As the daughter of the Chu imperial clan, she married King Qin Huiwen for political purposes and was named Bazi, known as Qibazi in history. Her real name is not recorded in the history books. But from the life experience, to some extent, there is a certain degree of similarity.

Empress Xuan was originally from the State of Chu, and later became the concubine of King Qin Huiwen, known as the Seven Babies. 306 years ago, Qin Wuwang died lifting a tripod. Because Qin Wuwang had no children, his younger brothers competed for the throne. King Wuling of Zhao sent county magistrate Zhao Gu to send her son Ji, who was taken hostage in Yan State, back to Qin State. With the help of Xuan Di's half-brother, his son Ji succeeded to the throne, that is, the King of Qin. Wei Ran then put down the turmoil in the royal family for the throne, so that Huiwen and Gongzi Zhuang and Gongzi Yong were killed. After mourning, they were deported to Wei, and all the sons who were at odds with the king of Qin were eliminated. Because Qin was a young king, Empress Xuan served as Empress Dowager, and Wei Ran assisted him.

Qin Huiwen's wife, Huiwenhou, was the wife of Qin Huiwen and the mother of Qin Wuwang after the Qin Emperor in the Warring States Period. Her name and place of origin are not recorded in the history books, so she may not be from Chu, which is inconsistent with the setting of The Legend of Mi Yue.

However, this is actually very understandable. Historical TV plays are adapted on the basis of history to make them conform to some effect that writers want to highlight, so they will inevitably be contrary to real history. Therefore, when watching historical TV series, we must not regard it as real history.