Volume 1 Testimonials
There are several good nodes in Chinese history, including Shang Dynasty (the terrible evil sacrifice of killing people and sharing food in the Shang Dynasty. King Wen of Zhou and Bo Yikao were eaten like this, allowing Confucius to admire the Zhou rituals, civilization began to replace barbarism), Qin Shihuang (the carriages and the same writings, the same ties, and the same ties began to truly unify, and the emperor of the ten thousand emperors), Han Wu, Emperor Xuan (the confidence of a nation), Sui Wen (the long-term combination will be divided, and the long-term division will not be combined, like Jiaozhi), Zhu Yuanzhang (I dare not say).
Or add another node, starting from Ran Min's "awakening" to Emperor Xiaowen of the Northern Wei Dynasty.
There are also several bad nodes, Sima wins the world, Anshi Rebellion, Fengboting, and Li Zicheng.
The great magician Emperor Guangwu was almost perfect emperor. The Eastern Han Dynasty was just a continuation of the Western Han Dynasty and could not be regarded as a node. A terrible monster began to be born in his hands: the gentry! Similarly, the Tang Dynasty was just a continuation of the Sui Dynasty.
The Tang Dynasty was a pseudo-powerful state, which destroyed Goguryeo and made Silla. It defeated the Turks, the Khitan and the Uighurs. It defeated Tuyuhun and the Tubo. It also left a disaster for the Song Dynasty, Dangxiang... The only ones that were truly powerful was the Han Dynasty. Even if it was split into the Three Kingdoms, it was an invincible existence. Sun Wu recovered Jiaozhi and conquered Taiwan. Liu Shu pacified the rebellion in the southwest. Cao Wei even beat the Huns to cry and called their parents (I personally think that the first general of the Three Kingdoms was not Lu Guan, Zhao, Zhou and Lu, but Zhang Liao. The battles between Bailang Mountain and Xiaoyaojin were enough to make him crush the entire era).
Get back to the point.
I passed the outline of this book to the editor, who did not believe it was a history book.
But this book mainly writes about war and power struggle. Although there are some fantasy settings, if you don’t lose, there may be some science fiction settings (park), and it is also borrowed from some Chinese history, so it is classified as a historical fiction category.
However, the first volume started from the southwest and lacked the sense of substitution. It may have been improperly classified as a historical category or not written well.
Suddenly I remembered the little jade axe that Zhao Da used to keep paper. In fact, the decline of the Tang Dynasty and the Anshi Rebellion really had little to do with Yang Guozhong's two failures in the south. But it had something to do with Yang Guozhong. If it weren't for his random command with Emperor Xuanzong of Tang, whether it was Geshuhan, Gao Xianzhi or Feng Changqing, he could have blocked An Lushan east of Tongguan.
Let’s continue to talk about the topic, anyway, I don’t understand what the reason is, and my current results are too bad.
The protagonist of the second volume has more than twenty chapters left in the southwest and will return to Da'an City. The sense of substitution may be stronger, and the biggest setting, that piece of jade will appear one by one, I hope the results will be better.
Chapter completed!