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Chapter 48 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Cao Cao Recites ‘Short Song’ Under the Moon” – captures a moment of tragic irony on the eve of the Battle of Red Cliffs.
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In Romance of the Three Kingdoms Chapter 36, a pivotal transition unfolds: the departure of Xu Shu (courtesy name Yuanzhi), Liu Bei’s first true strategist, marks not just a moment of sorrow, but the prelude to a greater destiny. While steeped in dramatic fiction, this chapter bridges the gap between Liu Bei’s early struggles…
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The departure of Xu Shu from Liu Bei remains one of the most emotionally charged and widely misunderstood episodes in the lore of the Three Kingdoms.
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Following the catastrophic defeat at the Battle of Guandu (200 CE), Yuan Shao refused to accept his fate. In a final attempt to reclaim dominance, he rallied a massive force – some 200,000 to 300,000 troops – and marched once more against Cao Cao. Yet this campaign at Cangting, dramatized in Chapter 31 of…
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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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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.
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The Battle of Baima (200 CE) stands as a critical early clash in the epic confrontation between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao, two dominant warlords vying for supremacy in a fractured Han China.
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After leveraging Cao Cao’s forces to capture Xuzhou and eliminate Lü Bu, Cao Cao did not return Xuzhou to Liu Bei. Instead, he appointed his trusted subordinate Che Zhou as the new Governer of Xuzhou and brought Liu Bei to Xuchang. Ostensibly, this was to present him at court for rewards, but in reality,…
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The year 199 AD marked a pivotal turning point in the life of Liu Bei, transforming him from a politically constrained and closely watched vassal under Cao Cao into an independent warlord once again. This dramatic shift—from subservience in Xuchang to open rebellion in Xu Province (Xuzhou) —was not sudden, but the culmination of…