Qingling, located 1.5 kilometers northwest of Changling among the Thirteen Tombs, and about 0.5 kilometers northwest of Xianling. It is located at the southern foot of Huangshan Temple Erling in the Tianshou Mountain Mausoleum in Changping, Beijing. It is the 14th emperor of the Ming Dynasty - Ming Guangzong Zhu Changluo and Queen Guo , the joint burial mausoleum of the Wang family and the Liu family.
The Qingling Mausoleum was originally a mausoleum built by Emperor Jingtai of the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Qiyu, for himself. He was later deposed as king by his brother Ming Yingzong. At the same time, the mausoleum that Emperor Jingtai had begun construction in Tianshou Mountain was abandoned. After his death, he was buried in Xishan, Beijing, according to the specifications of a prince. In 1620, Ming Guangzong Zhu Changluo, who had been emperor for 29 days, died suddenly. In a hurry, they had to use the site of Emperor Jingtai's Shouling Mausoleum and rebuilt the Ming Dynasty Zong Zhu Qiyu's mausoleum that had been abandoned for more than 160 years. This is Qingling today. In the sixth year of Tianqi (1626), the ground construction was completed. The cemetery building consists of three parts: the Shinto, the mausoleum palace and the ancillary buildings outside the mausoleum palace. A single stone bridge was built on the Shinto. Near the mausoleum, there is a monumental pavilion built for sacred merits and virtues. In the pavilion, a stele is erected, with the head of a turtle falling down and no words.