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Chapter 61 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – Cao Cao marches south again; Sun Quan plots to seize Jingzhou – weaves together two parallel narratives that reveal the fragile balance of power in the post–Red Cliffs era.
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Following the pivotal Battle of Red Cliffs (208 CE), the alliance between Sun Quan and Liu Bei had successfully repelled Cao Cao’s southern advance. However, victory left a complex territorial puzzle. While Cao Cao retained control of northern Jing Province, the southern portion – especially the critical commandery of Nan Commandery (Nanjun) centered on…
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Chapter 57 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms captures a pivotal moment of political realignment and personal transformation across the fractured landscape of post-Red Cliffs China. With Zhou Yu gone, the fragile Sun-Liu alliance teeters – but Zhuge Liang’s diplomatic brilliance steadies it. Meanwhile, Pang Tong, spurned by Sun Quan for his unimpressive appearance,…
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Chapter 55 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms delivers the climactic unraveling of Zhou Yu’s grand stratagem, transforming what was meant to be a political coup into a national embarrassment. Having failed to detain Liu Bei through marriage, Sun Quan and Zhou Yu now resort to force – but every move is anticipated by…
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Chapter 54 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms is a masterclass in psychological warfare and narrative irony, where a scheme designed to ensnare an enemy instead cements his legitimacy and deepens his alliance with the rival house. Sun Quan and Zhou Yu conspire to use Sun Shangxiang’s marriage as bait to lure Liu Bei…
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Chapter 52 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms marks a critical turning point in the post-Red Cliffs era, as the Sun-Liu alliance begins to fray under the weight of competing ambitions.
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Chapter 51 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms exposes the fragile nature of wartime alliances through a tale of military valor undone by political cunning. Fresh from the triumph at Red Cliffs, Zhou Yu engages Cao Ren in a fierce struggle for Nan Commandery (Nan Jun), only to see his hard-won gains snatched away…
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Was Lü Meng’s capture of Jing Province in AD 219 a betrayal of an ally? Some people argue that the Sun–Liu alliance effectively collapsed after the Xiang River Partition (circa AD 215), when Liu Bei and Sun Quan divided Jing Province along the Xiang River. However, primary sources from the Records of the Three…
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Chapter 50 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Guan Yu Releases Cao Cao at Huarong Trail” – concludes the epic Battle of Red Cliffs not with a final blow, but with an act of moral complexity that reshapes history.