•
When discussing the greatest strategist or warrior in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, opinions may vary widely. However, when it comes to identifying the most sharp-tongued critic, Mi Heng undoubtedly takes the crown.
•
Mi Heng, styled Zhengping, was a native of Ban County in Pingyuan Commandery during the Three Kingdoms period. He possessed an upright yet arrogant personality, coupled with a sharp wit and eloquence. Looking down upon everyone, he treated those less talented than himself with utter contempt, making him widely disliked. Though exceptionally gifted, he…
•
In February 195 AD, during a high-level meeting in Chang’an, Li Jue ordered the assassination of his fellow warlord Fan Chou, who had grown increasingly influential and independent. The killing, carried out by Li Jue’s nephew Li Li, shattered the fragile alliance among the warlords controlling the Han court. From this point on, mutual…
•
In early 194 AD, Cao Cao launched his second punitive expedition against Xuzhou, targeting Tao Qian, whom he blamed for the murder of his father, Cao Song. His forces advanced deep into Xuzhou, capturing cities and inflicting heavy casualties.
•
While Cao Cao and Lü Bu waged a brutal war for control of Yanzhou, Tao Qian, the aging Governor of Xuzhou, passed away in 194 AD at the age of 63.
•
The famous episode of Tao Qian’s Three Cessions of Xuzhou is not a historical fact, but a fictional narrative created in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms. In this dramatized account, the aging governor Tao Qian, offers the governorship of Xu Province (Xuzhou) to Liu Bei repeatedly, who in turn humbly…
•
In 193 AD, though the main wave of the Yellow Turban Rebellion had been suppressed, scattered remnants continued to wreak havoc across the Han Empire. Kong Rong, serving as the Chancellor of Beihai Commandery (in modern-day Shandong), found himself at the center of a dire crisis.