Wang Cuiqiao was from Linzi, Shandong, from a poor family. She was sold to Ma's family, a courtesan family. Wang Cuiqiao changed her name to Ma Qiao'er (马翘儿). She learned the skills of singing, playing the flute and pipa, and became a courtesan. Her adoptive mother brought her to Jiangnan to perform, and she was popular singing Wushe songs. She sang with clear enunciation, a crisp voice, and played musical instruments, attracting many audiences. Wang displayed a calm personality and was not interested in prostitution. She did not approach rich people who were wealthy but uneducated.[2][3] Her adoptive mother often scolded and beat her for this. She used her personal savings to regain her free status. Later, she changed her name from Ma Qiao'er to Wang Cuiqiao and went to Suzhou and Hangzhou to perform. Wang and the chivalrous Anhui rich man Luo Longwen married.[4] After they were invaded by Japanese pirates, Luo Longwen escaped, but Wang Cuiqiao was captured. She remarried, to pirate leader Xu Hai. Wang Cuiqiao and Xu Hai wandered on the sea. She listened to Hu Zongxian and persuaded Xu Hai to surrender to Hu Zongxian. Xu Hai committed suicide by diving into the water.[5] Wang Cuiqiao was escorted back by officers. In order to reward Peng Yinan for his efforts in quelling the Japanese pirates, and to save face after losing his temper after drinking, Hu Zongxian gave Wang Cuiqiao to Peng Yinan. Wang Cuiqiao was so distraught that she jumped into the Qiantang River and committed suicide.[6]
Literature
The story of Wang Cuiqiao appears in many literary works of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. "Wang Cuiqiao", the sixth of Mao Kun's "Ten Rap Songs and Drum Songs by the Great Sima Hu Gong", record Wang Cuiqiao. From the end of Jiajing to the beginning of Wanli, Ming Dynasty historian Xu Xuemo wrote the first Biography of Wang Qiao'er. Wang Shizhen wrote The Continuation of Yan's Different Edition Wang Qiao'er. Wang Cuiqiao is mentioned in Mei Dingzuo's Green Ni Lotus. Wang Cuiqiao appeared in Feng Menglong's Zhitan. Dai Shilin's Li Cuiqiao. Yu Huai's The Biography of Wang Cuiqiao. Zhou Qingyuan's Hu Shaobao's Victory in Pinging the Japanese. Lu Renlong President Hu made clever use of Hua Diqing, and Wang Cuiqiao's death was reported to Xu Mingshan. The Biography of Jin Yunqiao written by Qing Xincairen in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties adapted Wang Cuiqiao's story into a novel.[7] Both the novel Jin Yunqiao and the poem The Tale of Kieu presented Wang Cuiqiao as a prostitute.[8]
^McMahon, Keith (1995). Misers, Shrews, and Polygamists: Sexuality and Male-Female Relations in Eighteenth-Century Chinese Fiction. Duke University Press. p. 284. ISBN9780822315667.