‘He was wearing same black cotton clothes he would have worn in prison’: nephew recalls life and times of China’s last emperor
Jin Yulan now collects and displays antiques harking back to the days of the Qing imperial dynasty once led by his uncle

His uncle was the last Emperor of China, reigning over the Middle Kingdom from the Forbidden City. Now Jin Yulan scours the antique shops of communist-ruled Beijing for trinkets that might once have belonged to his family.
The Qing dynasty (1644-1911) ruled over China for 268 years until it was deposed after the 1911 revolution. But interest in the past is growing and when Jin opened an exhibition of his artefacts this week, dozens of enthusiasts attended.
A retired teacher dressed in a polo shirt and jacket, Jin said he liked things “with a sense of age, with a kind of culture and history to them”.
“I never knew the life of the court,” he lamented. “I can’t say how good life there was or how succulent the food would have been, but I feel a link with my ancestors and this bond will last forever.”
Born in 1948, shortly before Mao Zedong’s Communists took power, Jin has had a life of marked contrast to the Imperial finery of his forebears.