The World of Chinese

DYNASTY OF DUPES

CHINA'S IMPERIAL LEGACY OFFERS A LOCAL SPIN ON A CLASSIC SCAM

- – T. Y.

On June 19, 2017, the Shenzhen Intermedia­te People’s Court opened its second hearing on Liu Qianzhen, an unemployed 57-year-old villager from Jiangsu province—or, as his victim Zheng Xueju knew him, the “Qianlong Emperor,” the still-surviving inheritor of multiple Qing family fortunes and sound investment opportunit­y.

Liu met Zheng back in 2012, claiming to be the man who ruled China from 1735 to 1796 and imbibed an “elixir of life” to ensure he was alive and kicking nearly 300 years later. However, the imperial assets that the “emperor” controlled were frozen, necessitat­ing the gullible Zheng and her husband to hand over a reported 40 million RMB (around 7 million USD) to grease the wheels before finally wising to the scam in 2016.

Liu was tried in Shenzhen for impersonat­ion and defrauding the couple out of 2.2 million RMB, including 1.5 million RMB to purchase a lucky cabbage-shaped jadestone similar to one now displayed at the Imperial Palace Museum in Taipei. The cash, intended for “financial derivative­s,” was actually spent by Liu on cars and houses.

Zheng is far from the first to fall for aristocrat­ic impersonat­ors. In Forgery and Impersonat­ion in Imperial China: Popular Deceptions and the High Qing State, historian

Mark Mcnicholas describes how 18th-century swindlers would pretend to be high-ranking officials in order to collect “tax” from the unsuspecti­ng populace. The same era saw the “Spanish prisoner” scam in Europe, as conmen sought bribes to help free fictional wealthy noblemen from unjust imprisonme­nt in Spain. In China, the con tends to take on local ingredient­s such as claims of immortalit­y, and invoke its almost continuous 2,132-year imperial history, which only ended in 1912 with the abdication of the last Qing emperor, Puyi.

Other precedents include Wang Fengying, a 47-year-old Henan farmer sentenced to 13.5 years in 2015 for bilking a total 2 million RMB from numerous victims, supposedly to access 175 billion RMB in imperial assets. In 2011, another scammer convinced a Sichuanese victim that she was a descendant of Puyi’s family, who only needed 30 million RMB to access an undergroun­d fortune three times that amount. The most recent form of the swindle, exposed only last December, involved an education consultant convincing a Beijing couple that their son was a reincarnat­ed god—they just needed to buy 36 million RMB’S worth of relics to unleash the boy’s divinity.

While the more profitable schemes target rich urbanites who should know better, countrysid­e dwellers are susceptibl­e to the more mystical cons. In December, police cut down an extra-tall sorghum that was being worshipped as a “cereal god” in Shandong province, and arrested a local man for embezzling the donations being made to the supernatur­al stalk by village worshipper­s.

Quasi-imperial cults have threatened stability even in the recent past. In 1981, for example, blind villager Ding Xinglai declared himself the “reincarnat­ion of the immortal Baizi,” and establishe­d a fiefdom in Luotian county, Hubei province, that lasted nine years. Ding’s cult spread to cities in both Hubei and Anhui, and enlisted followers among village and township leaders, war veterans, and even members of the Communist Party. Though one of the earliest aims of the Party in the 20th century was to stamp out these types of feudal superstiti­ons, it seems there’s still a long way to go.

Thank you for reading The World of Chinese all of these years. Due to the rising cost of production, as of 2019, The World of Chinese will be increasing the retail price of its paper magazine to 29 RMB and its annual subscripti­on price to 174 RMB within China. The price of an annual subscripti­on overseas (including shipping) will increase to 74 US dollars. For those who have already bought a subscripti­on, the new price will take effect after the end of your current subscripti­on period. The price change will not affect digital publicatio­ns.

As always, we will strive to provide the most authentic and exciting China stories to all our readers, and appreciate your continued support.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China