
Deceived Kangxi
by Da Sikong
About This Novel
At the most critical moment of the Kowloon war, the illegitimate son of Longkodo, the nine-door admiral, deceived Kangxi miserably!
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Official(112)Scraped 2d ago
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The author wrote about the protagonist's imperial examination, Tiping Rakshasa, and talked about the development of firearms, firearms, gunpowder and other thermal weapons. You must know that Kangxi was well versed in Chinese and Western studies, and was involved in astronomy, geometry, and mathematics. He also understood the power of firearms. In the early days, due to the turmoil, he had to pay attention to firearms. However, because he understood the power of firearms, he was afraid that the development of firearms would threaten the status of the Eight Banners Cavalry. First he was a Manchu, and then he was the emperor of the Qing Dynasty, so he was cautious and cautious about the use of firearms. As expected in history, he immediately stopped the research and development of firearms after the situation stabilized, and even banned the destruction of drawings. At that time, continuous-fire flintlock guns had already appeared, and Kangxi strictly prohibited the green camp from using firearms and private research and development. In these circumstances, the protagonist's writing in this way cannot actually be approved by Kangxi.
Demining for readers
In this book you will see: 1. The feudal dross of the Qing Dynasty distorted and destroyed human nature. 2. The protagonist has an idol complex and a relationship with the Red Mansion (to be determined). He likes to accept women, and he makes excuses in roundabout ways. 3. The protagonist is not the image of Wei Guangzheng, but just goes with the flow. If you can't stand it, don't watch it.
The author is from Manchu, right?
My first reaction after reading this book was that the author must be a Manchu, otherwise why would he know so many habits of the Manchus so well?
After reading this book, you will know that if you cross the Qing Dynasty, you will rebel.
Judging from the description in this book, if we were to wear it on those women who were sent around, and the slaves who were shouted around, who could bear it?
Rebellion?
Rebellion! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Your brother Ding Min is waiting for you obviously
I'd like to ask if this is a book about using boar skin as a dog.
Who knows? If so, I won't watch it.
The greasy worldliness of middle-aged people and their unexamined self-righteousness
The greasy worldliness of middle-aged people and their unexamined self-righteousness
Castrated Kangxi
It would be better to change the name, such as Kangxi
nausea!
It's disgusting, disgusting, disgusting to write. Protagonist is disgusting The author is worse One bad taste after another
Rating
Community(0)
Official(112)Scraped 2d ago
Make complaints
Where did these ratings come from? How did the editor recommend this book? Did he get paid?
Give the author a suggestion
The author wrote about the protagonist's imperial examination, Tiping Rakshasa, and talked about the development of firearms, firearms, gunpowder and other thermal weapons. You must know that Kangxi was well versed in Chinese and Western studies, and was involved in astronomy, geometry, and mathematics. He also understood the power of firearms. In the early days, due to the turmoil, he had to pay attention to firearms. However, because he understood the power of firearms, he was afraid that the development of firearms would threaten the status of the Eight Banners Cavalry. First he was a Manchu, and then he was the emperor of the Qing Dynasty, so he was cautious and cautious about the use of firearms. As expected in history, he immediately stopped the research and development of firearms after the situation stabilized, and even banned the destruction of drawings. At that time, continuous-fire flintlock guns had already appeared, and Kangxi strictly prohibited the green camp from using firearms and private research and development. In these circumstances, the protagonist's writing in this way cannot actually be approved by Kangxi.
Demining for readers
In this book you will see: 1. The feudal dross of the Qing Dynasty distorted and destroyed human nature. 2. The protagonist has an idol complex and a relationship with the Red Mansion (to be determined). He likes to accept women, and he makes excuses in roundabout ways. 3. The protagonist is not the image of Wei Guangzheng, but just goes with the flow. If you can't stand it, don't watch it.
The author is from Manchu, right?
My first reaction after reading this book was that the author must be a Manchu, otherwise why would he know so many habits of the Manchus so well?
After reading this book, you will know that if you cross the Qing Dynasty, you will rebel.
Judging from the description in this book, if we were to wear it on those women who were sent around, and the slaves who were shouted around, who could bear it?
Rebellion?
Rebellion! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Your brother Ding Min is waiting for you obviously
I'd like to ask if this is a book about using boar skin as a dog.
Who knows? If so, I won't watch it.
The greasy worldliness of middle-aged people and their unexamined self-righteousness
The greasy worldliness of middle-aged people and their unexamined self-righteousness
Castrated Kangxi
It would be better to change the name, such as Kangxi
nausea!
It's disgusting, disgusting, disgusting to write. Protagonist is disgusting The author is worse One bad taste after another
Featured in 20 Booklists
Official(20)
There are not many novels about the Han, Tang, Song, Ming and Qing dynasties that are popular nowadays. This is one of the few novels about the Qing Dynasty with good quality. I recommend it to everyone.




Traveling back in time, Cheng Longkodo's biological son started various political speculations in the last years of Kangxi, seeking military power and preparing to usurp the Qing Dynasty. The writing is very delicate, the research is well done, and some of the adaptations are also very good. 8.0 Points.




I wrote about the Qing Dynasty. The male protagonist is the illegitimate son of Longkodo and his father-in-law's concubine. He is cautious about entering the country due to his suspicion of poison. He will take the imperial examination route in the early stage, but he should rebel in the later stage. The author is a figure in the system. He understands all the sayings. The more knowledge he has, the more reactionary he becomes. He carries the red flag and fights against the red flag.




At the critical moment when Kowloon was fighting for the throne, Kangxi was deceived by the illegitimate son of Longkodo, the admiral of the Nine Gates! Just reading the introduction of the book, you will know that this is a usurper. In the early stage, he developed obscenely, gained a certain amount of trust and rights, and then directly launched an attack in Kowloon when he wanted to seize the throne (I haven't written it down yet, I'm just guessing). The society in it feels very real. The author must have put a lot of effort into it. There is nothing toxic about it. I recommend reading it.













