Zhang Xiu

  • The tragedy of Zhang Xiu [Three Kingdoms]

    Some say that although Zhang Xiu killed Cao Cao’s son, nephew, and general Dian Wei, Cao Cao did not have him killed—a stroke of luck for Zhang Xiu. However, caught in the turmoil, Zhang Xiu’s life was profoundly tragic.

  • The Battle of Wancheng [Three Kingdoms]

    The year 197 AD marked a turning point in Cao Cao’s southern expansion—not through victory, but through a catastrophic defeat born of arrogance and personal folly. His campaign against Zhang Xiu in Nanyang Commandery began with a bloodless surrender but ended in humiliation, death, and strategic reversal. What should have been a swift annexation…

  • Key historical events of 196 AD [Three Kingdoms]

    The year 196 AD stands as a critical turning point in the collapse of the Eastern Han Dynasty and the dawn of the Three Kingdoms era.

  • Zhang Xiu surrendered to Liu Biao [Three Kingdoms]

    In the turbulent final years of the Eastern Han Dynasty, as warlords carved up the empire, a lesser-known figure emerged in the strategic heartland between the Central Plains and the Yangtze River. Zhang Xiu, a nephew of the fallen warlord Zhang Ji, found himself thrust into leadership after a fateful raid in 196 AD.…

  • Strategist Jia Xu [Three Kingdoms]

    When discussing the greatest strategists of the Three Kingdoms, names like Zhuge Liang, Xun Yu, Guo Jia, Sima Yi, and Jia Xu often rise to the top. While intellectual brilliance was common among them, Jia Xu stands out as the undisputed master of emotional intelligence (EQ)—a skill that allowed him not only to survive…

  • Liu Yan’s seizure of Yizhou [Three Kingdoms]

    In 188 AD, Liu Yan, a member of the Han imperial clan and former Governor of Nanyang, was appointed Inspector of Yizhou (modern Sichuan and Chongqing). Upon his arrival, he implemented a policy of leniency and benevolence, offering refuge and stability to a population ravaged by war elsewhere.

  • The master of calculated cunning – Jia Xu [Three Kingdoms]

    In the treacherous world of the Three Kingdoms, where brilliant minds often met tragic ends, Jia Xu stands as a singular anomaly—a strategist famed not for grand visions of empire, but for ruthless pragmatism and cold calculation, yet he emerged as one of the very few who lived to a ripe old age and…