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In the summer of 208 CE, as death approached, Liu Biao, Governor of Jing Province, made a startling offer to Liu Bei: “After I die, you shall assume control of Jingzhou.” To an ambitious warlord who had wandered homeless for two decades, this was the opportunity of a lifetime – yet Liu Bei declined.
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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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In Chapter 35 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Liu Bei’s journey from desperation to hope unfolds through two pivotal encounters – first with the reclusive sage Sima Hui (Water-mirror Master), and then with the disguised strategist who would briefly illuminate his path to legitimacy: Xu Shu, alias Shan Fu.
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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…