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Chapter 49 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhuge Liang Borrows the Eastern Wind; Zhou Yu Launches the Fire Attack” – marks the dramatic climax of the Battle of Red Cliffs, where meteorology, mysticism, and military genius converge to shatter Cao Cao’s dream of unification.
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In the autumn of 208 CE, as Cao Cao’s massive army marched southward to unify China under his rule, the fate of the realm hung in the balance.
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Chapter 46 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhuge Liang Borrows Arrows with Straw Boats; Zhou Yu Beats Huang Gai in a Feigned Punishment” – presents two of the most celebrated stratagems in Chinese military lore, both instrumental in paving the way for the decisive fire attack at Red Cliffs.
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Chapter 45 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhou Yu Schemes to Eliminate Cai Mao and Zhang Yun; Jiang Gan Falls for the Bait at the Heroes’ Feast” – unfolds as a masterclass in psychological warfare and strategic deception on the eve of the epochal Battle of Red Cliffs.
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Chapter 44 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhuge Liang Provokes Zhou Yu; Sun Quan Vows to Resist Cao Cao” – marks the dramatic crystallization of the Sun-Liu alliance against Cao Cao, while simultaneously planting the seeds of a rivalry between two master strategists: Zhuge Liang and Zhou Yu. With Eastern Wu…
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In Chapter 44 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, titled “Zhuge Liang Uses Wit to Provoke Zhou Yu,” one of the novel’s most celebrated episodes unfolds. Seeking to solidify the fragile Sun-Liu alliance against Cao Cao on the eve of the Battle of Red Cliffs, Zhuge Liang employs a daring rhetorical gambit: he deliberately…
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In Chapter 43 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, as Zhuge Liang arrives in Chaisang to persuade Sun Quan to form an alliance against Cao Cao, he is confronted not by soldiers, but by scholars.
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In the autumn of 208 CE, following his swift conquest of Jing Province after Liu Cong’s surrender, Cao Cao sent a letter to Sun Quan – a message that read less like diplomacy and more like a declaration of intent.
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Chapter 43 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhuge Liang Debates the Scholars of Wu; Lu Su Urges Sun Quan to Resist Cao Cao” – marks a pivotal moment in the epic: not on the battlefield, but in the halls of diplomacy.