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Chapter 40 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms depicts a moment of profound crisis and moral clarity. With Liu Biao’s death, the fate of Jing Province, one of the last great strongholds of the crumbling Han dynasty, hangs in the balance. What follows is a chain of betrayal, strategic brilliance, and unwavering compassion: Cai…
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Chapter 39 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms marks the true debut of Zhuge Liang as a master strategist. Fresh from his thatched cottage in Longzhong, he is immediately thrust into two high-stakes crises: a deadly succession struggle within the Liu family of Jing Province, and a full-scale invasion by Cao Cao’s elite forces.…
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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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In the turbulent final years of the Eastern Han dynasty, Liu Qi, eldest son of Jingzhou governor Liu Biao, found himself trapped in a deadly succession struggle orchestrated by his stepmother’s powerful clan.
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In the grand theater of the Three Kingdoms, where titans like Cao Cao, Liu Bei, and Sun Quan shaped empires, Liu Qi – eldest son of Jing Province governor Liu Biao – stands as a poignant figure of quiet courage and tragic limitation. Neither a master strategist nor a battlefield hero, Liu Qi was…
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Following the Battle of Guandu (200 CE), the collapse of the Yuan clan created a power vacuum in northern China. When Yuan Shao died shortly thereafter, his sons Yuan Tan and Yuan Shang plunged into a bitter succession struggle.
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Following Cao Cao’s consolidation of northern China, the balance of power in the late Eastern Han dynasty shifted dramatically. As chronicled in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Chapter 34, and corroborated in key historical texts such as the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi) by Chen Shou, Liu Bei’s precarious refuge in Jing Province…