Everyone who has watched "Yongzheng Dynasty" knows that Emperor Yongzheng changed the names of his brothers not long after he came to power. He changed his names more than once. Why did he keep changing his names? In fact, this involves some rules for the management of the royal clan of the Qing Dynasty. In the Qing Dynasty, starting from the princes of Emperor Kangxi, the Chinese generation ranking system was mainly used to distinguish the royal family. In order to avoid the taboo of the emperor's name, the names already given would also be changed. This is why Lao Ba and Lao Jiu, whose original name was Yinhu, were first renamed to Yunhu in the first name change after Yongzheng Emperor Yinzhen succeeded to the throne. The reason why ? and ? Yunzhen? is precisely to avoid taboos. This time the name change is in compliance with the rules and has no other meaning.
Later, the names of the two of them were changed to Aqina and Seth Hei. The meaning is completely different. Aqina, the transliteration of Manchu "akina". The old saying is that it means dog. Seth Hei, Manchu transliteration, is a word with multiple meanings, meaning disgust, boredom and trembling. "Qingwen Zonghui" explains it as disgust. From a political standpoint alone, Emperor Yongzheng was undoubtedly the winner in the tragic battle of "Nine Sons to Seize the Rightful Son", and all those who opposed him except him would not have a good end. When Emperor Yongzheng changed the names of Lao Ba and Lao Jiu to "Aqina" and "Seth Hei", it showed that they were no longer brothers. It was the winner's ridicule of the loser, a kind of Insult is a punishment.
More people also believe that Emperor Yongzheng did it on purpose. In order to completely attack the two brothers who hindered his governance, this is a strong hatred for betrayal that stems from blood being thicker than water. But when we analyze the behavior of an emperor from a relatively rational perspective, analyze the operation and management methods of a royal family, and understand the differences in customs between Manchu and Han Dynasties, perhaps we can get a more common-sense interpretation. ?