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Even as Cao Cao consolidated control over northern China in 204 CE, Yuan Tan, the eldest son of Yuan Shao, remained fixated not on survival – but on destroying his younger brother, Yuan Shang.
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In early 204 CE, Cao Cao launched his decisive campaign to capture Ye City (Yecheng), the capital of Jizhou (Ji Province) and the last stronghold of the Yuan clan. As chronicled in Romance of the Three Kingdoms (Chapters 33–34) and corroborated by historical sources like the Records of the Three Kingdoms, this siege marked…
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From September 202 to April 204 CE, the power struggle between Yuan Tan and Yuan Shang – sons of the late warlord Yuan Shao – unfolded as a tragic drama of mistrust, betrayal, and self-destruction.
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The Battle of Cangting (201 CE) was indeed a real military engagement between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao following the pivotal Battle of Guandu. However, while historical sources confirm its occurrence, they offer only sparse details – far removed from the dramatic, large-scale confrontation vividly depicted in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms.
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Among the many factors that doomed Yuan Shao after his defeat at the Battle of Guandu (200 CE), none proved more destructive than his attempt to replace his eldest son, Yuan Tan, with his younger favorite, Yuan Shang, as heir.
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In the aftermath of his narrow victory at the Battle of Guandu (200 CE), Cao Cao faced a dilemma that tested not only his judgment but the very stability of his regime. Among the spoils of war were bundles of secret letters – evidence that many of his own officers and officials in Xuchang…
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After Yuan Shao’s crushing defeat by Cao Cao at the Battle of Guandu in 200 CE, his chief strategist Jü Shou was captured. Refusing to surrender, Jü Shou was executed shortly thereafter. But he was not the only loyal advisor to suffer for speaking truth to power. Another key figure—Tian Feng, Yuan Shao’s most…
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In October 200 CE, following his catastrophic defeat at the Battle of Guandu, Yuan Shao fled north with only 800 cavalrymen. He crossed the Yellow River in disarray and regrouped at Liyang, attempting to rally his scattered forces. While Yuan Shao managed to escape, his chief strategist Jü Shou was not so fortunate.
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In the popular novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Lu Su is portrayed as a gentle, even naive figure – kind-hearted but politically passive. This depiction stands in stark contrast to historical records. In reality, Lu Su was one of the most astute strategic minds of his era: a visionary statesman, a skilled diplomat,…