This is a love of the house. "Fang Rebellion" refers to the palace coup staged by Fang (Fang's second son) and his wife Princess Gaoyang (the 17th daughter of Emperor Taizong). Princess Gaoyang is arrogant and bossy. She was having an affair with a famous monk, Xuanzang. After the incident, the debating machine was beheaded and died. Princess Gaoyang was also scolded by Emperor Taizong and was not allowed to enter the palace again. Princess Gaoyang has been unhappy. After the accession to the throne, Princess Gaoyang and Fang contacted Chai Lingwu (who married the fifteenth female princess Danyang) and planned to launch a coup, abolish it and make the king (the seventh son of Emperor Gaozong) emperor, but the matter was not kept secret, and the plan leaked out and a bunch of people were arrested. Emperor Sun Chang Wuji tried the case, and Sun Chang Wuji took this opportunity to implicate the prince Li Ke. Li, Li Ke, Fang, Princess Gaoyang, Chai Lingwu and Princess Baling were all killed.
Li Ke, the king of Wu, cursed Sun Chang Wuji for "stealing power and harming good" before he died. Then, Sun Chang Wuji and Chu Suiliang framed 17-year-old Li Daozong, king of Jiangxia, who followed Emperor Taizong to war and made meritorious military service, and sent him to Xiangzhou. Li Daozong died on the way. Historians of later generations think that Sun Chang Wuji and Chu Suiliang are jealous of talented people, and that "irreconcilable title factors lead to injustice for thousands of years" (Book of the Old Tang Dynasty, Volume 60, Biography of Wang Daozong in Jiangxia).
The impact of this incident on the housing family: the housing family copied the door and Fang's reputation was abolished.