Chapter 6: The Queen's Two Widowed Sisters (09)

Han Yu couldn't guess it, but as the two widowed sisters of the young queen Xiao Yanyan, Xiao Huran and Xiao Mianyan, knew best.

It turned out that since they were young, Xiao Huran, as the eldest sister, and Xiao Mian, as the second sister, have been frequent visitors to their father Xiao Siwen, and the son of Han Kuangsi, a Han official who has been greatly admired by generations of Liao emperors and queens.

However, as aristocratic girls born in the descendants of the Liao Kingdom, their marriages are often involuntary.

Although with the increasingly frequent economic and cultural exchanges between the Liao and the Han region, the marriages between the Liao nobles and the Han upper-class forces also increased.

However, for the marriage of the descendants of the Great Liao, as early as the reign of Yelu Deguang, Taizong of Liao, the imperial court issued a decree: without a decree, the non-four tent royal families are not allowed to intermarry with the descendants!

For Xiao Huyin and Xiao Mianyan, the laws of the imperial court are naturally something they cannot violate. Not only that, as their mother, the eldest daughter of the venerable Taizong Yelu Deguang, the eldest princess of Yanguo, Yelu Bugu, has always longed for her three daughters to marry into the royal family one day.

This desire, with the birth of her youngest daughter Yanyan, became even stronger after she never gave birth again.

Because for a family that lacks men, wishing for a son to become a dragon has become a luxury, and wishing for a woman to become a phoenix has become her inevitable pursuit.

Therefore, when choosing a name for her youngest daughter Yanyan, she deliberately asked her husband, who was obsessed with Sinology, to carefully select a good name for her third daughter, a name that could give her infinite hopes.

Xiao Siwen naturally understands what his wife means, in fact, as a descendant of the young father's house, Xiao Siwen's desire to become a phoenix is not weaker than that of his wife.

This can be glimpsed from the names he gave to his eldest and second daughters: the chariot, the chariot of the emperor in ancient times; The crown, the crown of the emperor in ancient times.

In the end, with his profound knowledge of Sinology, he gave his third daughter a single name

"Nickname". This one

The word "绰" comes from a sentence in the poem "Ten Songs and Four Gifts of Filial Piety" by the famous poet Yuan Zhi in the Tang Dynasty: once stood to serve the Danqi, and the flowers of the Blooming Palace were brushed with branches.

The meaning of the name is self-evident.

Chapter 6 of "Chasing Love: Through the Millennium to Liao": The Queen's Two Widowed Sisters (09) are hitting in the hand, please wait a moment,

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