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In the chaotic aftermath of Yuan Shao’s death in 202 CE, his sons Yuan Tan and Yuan Shang turned from heirs into enemies, igniting a civil war that would seal the fate of northern China.
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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…
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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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If one were to judge solely by the ability to escape defeat unscathed, Liu Bei stands alone in the annals of the Three Kingdoms. Throughout his tumultuous career, Liu Bei suffered numerous battlefield losses – but he was never captured. Historical records consistently show him voluntarily seeking refuge with new allies after defeat, never…
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In Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Lu Su is often depicted as a mild-mannered, even gullible figure—caught awkwardly between the brilliance of Zhuge Liang and the ambition of Zhou Yu. This portrayal, however, grossly misrepresents the historical Lu Su. Far from being a passive bystander, he was a strategic visionary on par with Zhuge…
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In Chapter 28 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, as Liu Bei languishes under the watchful eye of Yuan Shao—his every move scrutinized after Guan Yu’s slaying of two of Yuan’s top generals—a quiet but brilliant escape unfolds. Orchestrated not by force, but by wit, this maneuver hinges on Jian Yong’s masterful use of…
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Popular memory—shaped heavily by the Romance of the Three Kingdoms—portrays Cao Cao’s invasion of Xu Province in 193 AD as a brutal act of filial vengeance: his father, Cao Song, was murdered in Tao Qian’s territory, so Cao Cao launched a merciless campaign to avenge him.
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At first glance, it seems paradoxical: Yuan Shao and Yuan Shu, sons of the same illustrious family, heirs to the prestigious Yuan clan of Runan—one of the most powerful gentry lineages of the Eastern Han—should have stood united against the chaos engulfing the empire.