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In the turbulent final years of the Eastern Han Dynasty, few figures wielded as much influence with so little visibility as Jia Xu. A quiet strategist with no army of his own, he never sought the spotlight, yet his words altered the course of history.
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The assassination of Dong Zhuo in 192 AD was meant to restore the Han dynasty. Masterminded by Wang Yun and executed with the sword of Lü Bu, it was celebrated as a heroic act that liberated Emperor Xian from tyranny.
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When discussing the military hierarchy of Dong Zhuo’s regime, it is essential to look beyond the romanticized narrative of Luo Guanzhong’s Romance of the Three Kingdoms and consult the more sober accounts of historical records such as Chen Shou’s Records of the Three Kingdoms and Fan Ye’s Book of the Later Han.
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In the chaotic twilight of the Eastern Han Dynasty, two figures stand in stark contrast in the historical record: Dong Zhuo, the tyrant who seized the throne, and Wang Yun, the minister who orchestrated his assassination. One is universally condemned as a villain; the other, celebrated as a hero.
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The assassination of Dong Zhuo in 192 AD was hailed as a heroic act that liberated the Han court from tyranny. Wang Yun, the mastermind behind the plot, emerged as the new guardian of the dynasty, standing alongside Lü Bu as the saviors of the realm.
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The death of Dong Zhuo in 192 AD triggered widespread celebration across the capital, as the tyrant who had terrorized the Han court was finally overthrown. Yet amidst the jubilation, one man—Cai Yong, a renowned scholar, historian, and musician—publicly sighed at the news. Worse still, he did so within earshot of Wang Yun, the…
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The Battle of Jieqiao (191–192 AD) stands as one of the most pivotal early conflicts in the collapse of the Han dynasty and the rise of regional warlords. It marked a turning point in Yuan Shao’s struggle for dominance in northern China, pitting him against the formidable cavalry general Gongsun Zan.
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The assassination of Dong Zhuo in 192 AD marked a pivotal moment in the late Eastern Han dynasty, symbolizing the end of one tyrant and the beginning of another chaotic era. This event is famously depicted in Luo Guanzhong’s Romance of the Three Kingdoms and corroborated by historical records such as Chen Shou’s Records…