
Popular Romance of the Two Jin Dynasties (part 1 and 2)
by Cai Dongfan
About This Novel
In the one hundred and fifty-six years of the Eastern and Western Jin Dynasties, except for the more than 20 years since the founding of the Jin Dynasty, there was no day of trouble or invasion. If there was no internal strife, there would be external aggression. Foreign aggression has always been the most severe, and it has never been more severe than the two Jins, the Five Hus and the Sixteen Kingdoms. They rise and fall suddenly, and there is no end. If the husband's internal affairs are in disrepair, internal strife will inevitably arise; if internal restraint arises, external aggression will take advantage of it. Insects grow on decaying wood, and ants invade the walls. This has been the case since ancient times, but it is particularly noticeable in Jin Dynasty. The Eastern and Western Jin Dynasties seemed to be always facing foreign aggression, but after all, they were like snipers and clams, and only fishermen existed. The land of Shenzhou is sinking, the bronze camels are thorny, the two masters are captured, and they are drinking in Di Ting. It is nothing more than internal affairs that are not in line, so this is the reason. Fortunately, in the battle of Feishui, Fu Qin was defeated and half of the country was saved. The monarchs and ministers of the Eastern Jin Dynasty became arrogant after a slight victory. Arrogance led to laziness, and there was no improvement. So they usurped each other, and disasters arose one after another, eventually leading to the destruction of the country. The downfall of the Jin Dynasty was not entirely caused by foreign aggression: bad ethics and seeking revenge among flesh and blood were the first disasters for the country's downfall; the loss of faith and the feud between the powerful and powerful were the second disasters for the country's downfall.
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