This article reveals the bloody collapse of the Liu Song Dynasty. Plagued by parricide, fratricide, and tyrannical child emperors, the imperial family slaughtered each other for power. Cruelty and paranoia destroyed the realm, clearing the way for Xiao Daocheng to seize the throne and found the Southern Qi Dynasty.
This article recounts the heroic Siege of Xuyi. After Liu Song’s failed northern expedition, Emperor Taiwu of Northern Wei attacked the small fortress. Magistrate Shen Pu and General Zang Zhi defended it bravely, repelling the mighty Wei army. Humiliated, Taiwu returned north and was soon assassinated, ending his tyrannical reign.
This article tells the tragic story of Cui Hao, Northern Wei’s top advisor. He helped unify northern China with brilliant strategies but was executed for writing an honest imperial history that angered Xianbei nobles. His fate shows the danger of speaking truth to power in ancient times.
This article traces Liu Yu’s rise from a common soldier to the founder of the Liu Song Dynasty. He suppressed Sun En’s rebellion, defeated Huan Xuan, restored Eastern Jin, then launched successful northern campaigns. Eventually, he usurped the throne, ending Jin’s rule and establishing a new era of reform and stability in the south.
This article narrates the Battle of Fei River, a decisive clash between Former Qin and Eastern Jin. Overconfident Fu Jian ignored all warnings and invaded with a huge army. A feigned retreat turned into chaos; his forces collapsed, ending Qin’s unification dream. The Jin won but soon declined, leaving China divided.
This article chronicles Fu Jian’s rise and fall as ruler of Former Qin. He overthrew the tyrant Fu Sheng, ruled with virtue alongside Wang Meng, unified northern China, and revived culture and education. Yet blinded by hubris, he ignored Wang Meng’s final warning and prepared to invade Eastern Jin, sealing his tragic fate.
This article reviews Huan Wen’s three futile Northern Expeditions for Eastern Jin. He conquered Cheng-Han and nearly took Chang’an but hesitated at critical moments. Court distrust and supply failures led to defeat. His ambition reshaped Jin politics, yet his dream of recapturing the north died unfulfilled.
This article tells Shi Le’s inspiring rise from a Jie slave to founding emperor of Later Zhao. Guided by strategist Zhang Bin, he unified northern China, governed with wisdom and mercy, and valued history despite being illiterate. His legacy proves courage and integrity can lift even the lowest‑born to greatness.