• The Fall of the Song at Yamen

    Introduction: This article tells the final fall of the Southern Song at the Battle of Yamen. After Lin’an surrendered, loyalists Zhang Shijie, Wen Tianxiang, and Lu Xiufu fought on. In 1279, the Yuan navy defeated the Song fleet. Lu Xiufu drowned with the child emperor, ending the 319‑year Song Dynasty.

  • The Corrupt Court: Jia Sidao and the Fall of the Southern Song

    Introduction: This article reveals how Jia Sidao’s corruption doomed the Southern Song. He lied about a Mongol victory, imprisoned envoys, purged generals, and neglected state affairs for cricket fighting. His misrule led to the fall of Xiangyang, fatally weakening the Song and clearing the way for the Yuan conquest.

  • The Rise of the Yuan: From Steppe Khans to Chinese Emperors

    Introduction: This article narrates the rise of the Yuan Dynasty. After the Mongols broke their promise to the Song, Kublai Khan embraced Han governance to rule Central Plains. He won the Mongol succession war, founded the Yuan in 1271, built Dadu (Beijing) as capital, and prepared to conquer the Southern Song.

  • The Fall of the Jin: An Alliance of Convenience and a Cycle of Vengeance

    Introduction: This article records the fall of the Jin Dynasty. Besieged by Mongol armies, the Jin made a fatal mistake by attacking the Southern Song. The Song allied with the Mongols out of hatred, jointly destroying the Jin in 1234. This short‑sighted partnership removed the Jin buffer, soon exposing the Song to Mongol conquest.

  • The Sword in the Ink: The Lament of Xin Qiji

    Introduction: This article tells the tragic life of Xin Qiji, a patriotic poet‑general of the Southern Song. A brave warrior who fought the Jin in the north, he later offered wise invasion strategies that were ignored. Forced into retirement, he wrote powerful poems of sorrow and unfulfilled ambition. His life reflects the pain of…

  • The Reign of Shi & Zhang: A Tale of Two Empires

    Introduction: This article covers the rule of Jin’s Emperors Shizong and Zhangzong, alongside Southern Song’s political shifts. After Hailing Wang’s failed invasion, Shizong stabilized the Jin with Sinicized reforms. Song’s Xiaozong honored Yue Fei and launched a northern expedition. The two empires reached a long peace, with Jin flourishing as a model of enlightened…