Juan

  • The defection of Xu You at Battle of Guandu [Three Kingdoms]

    Among the Three Great Campaigns of the Three Kingdoms—the Battles of Guandu, Red Cliffs, and Yiling—the Battle of Guandu was by far the most critical for Cao Cao. While his loss at Red Cliffs merely cost him control of Jing Province, defeat at Guandu would have meant total annihilation. For Yuan Shao, too, this…

  • The Wuchao Raid and defeat of Yuan Shao [Three Kingdoms]

    The Battle of Guandu, already a grueling test of endurance and strategy, reached its dramatic climax in October 200 CE. With his army starving and morale crumbling, Cao Cao gambled everything on a daring night raid – guided by a defector’s intelligence and executed with ruthless precision. The burning of Wuchao, the betrayal of…

  • The turning tide at Guandu: Xu You’s defection [Three Kingdoms]

    The second phase of the Battle of Guandu (200 CE) marked a critical juncture in the war between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao. Though Cao Cao had successfully quelled rebellions in his rear and repelled Liu Bei’s incursions, the situation at the front remained dire. Outnumbered nearly ten to one and running dangerously low…

  • The opening phase of the Battle of Guandu [Three Kingdoms]

    The Battle of Guandu (200 CE) – the decisive confrontation between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao – did not unfold in isolation. Even as the two warlords marshaled their forces along the Yellow River, a cascade of events across the empire shaped the conflict’s trajectory.

  • The grain that built an alliance: Lu Su vs Zhou Yu [Three Kingdoms]

    In the chaotic landscape of the late Eastern Han dynasty, survival often depended not on wealth alone, but on strategic foresight and timely alliances. Few episodes illustrate this better than the famous encounter between Lu Su and Zhou Yu, immortalized in both historical records like the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi) and dramatized…

  • The hidden politics behind Sun Ce’s execution of Xu Gong [Three Kingdoms]

    The assassination of Sun Ce, the “Little Conqueror” of Jiangdong, is often attributed to a simple act of vengeance: his killing of Xu Gong, the former Administrator of Wu Commandery, led to retaliation by Xu’s loyal retainers.

  • Why Sun Ce should not kill Yu Ji? [Three Kingdoms]

    Sun Ce’s execution of the revered Daoist healer Yu Ji is often remembered in Romance of the Three Kingdoms as a tale of supernatural retribution—but historically, it was a grave political miscalculation rooted in impulsiveness, insecurity, and a failure to understand soft power. Far from eliminating a threat, Sun Ce’s public killing of Yu…

  • Why did Sun Ce execute Yu Ji? [Three Kingdoms]

    The execution of Yu Ji, the so-called “living immortal” of Jiangdong, by the young warlord Sun Ce stands as one of the most enigmatic and symbolically rich episodes in Romance of the Three Kingdoms. While the novel dramatizes the event with supernatural overtones—ghostly apparitions, cursed mirrors, and divine retribution—the historical roots reveal a more…

  • The tragic fate of Pei Yuanshao [Three Kingdoms]

    In the vast tapestry of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Pei Yuanshao appears only briefly—yet his fleeting arc encapsulates a profound theme: the difficulty of escaping one’s past in an era defined by rigid loyalties and violent reckonings.