Li Ji's personality is not suitable for living in a palace. After Liu Rong became a prince, she was very arrogant. Once Princess Guantao came to Li Ji, hoping to marry Chen Ajiao to Liu Rong, but Li Ji was too arrogant to look down on Chen Ajiao, so she angered Princess Guantao. From then on, Princess Guantao often scolded Liu Rong for his mistakes in front of Emperor Han Jing. Later, Li Ji angered Emperor Han Jing, who was furious and ordered all the relatives of Li Ji who were officials in the imperial court to be put to death. After the decline of the family, Li Ji died of depression. Since then, Liu Rong has no one to rely on in her family. In addition, Han Jing doesn't like Liu Rong, so Liu Rong is a monarch on the surface, but in fact he is hollow and has no real power.
In Liu Rong, Liu Rong wants to expand his palace. As a result, when expanding the palace, he occupied the outer wall of the ancestral temple. At that time, there were only two ancestral temples in the Han Dynasty, one owned by Emperor Gaozu Liu Bang and the other by Liu Heng. Later, someone reported it to the court. When Han Jing knew this, he was very angry, so Han Jing recalled Liu Rong to Beijing. After Liu Rong arrived in Beijing, he was taken to the captain's office for interrogation. Liu Rong asked officials to come with pen and ink, wrote a suicide note and committed suicide.
Liu Rong was originally a high-ranking prince, but because of his mother's mistake, he not only lost his mother, but also lost his status as a prince, and finally committed suicide himself. His life is really a tragedy.