The Rise and Fall of the Sui Dynasty in the Forty Years 2: the Age of Hunger

The Rise and Fall of the Sui Dynasty in the Forty Years 2: the Age of Hunger

by Monman

Length:
100Kwords15chapters
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Ch. 15A Generation of British Masters
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About This Novel

The person who was called the "Sage Khan" was not Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty, but Emperor Wen of the Sui Dynasty. This alone is enough to give a glimpse of the prosperity of the Sui Dynasty during the founding years of the Sui Dynasty that was comparable to that of the Tang Dynasty. Emperor Wen of the Sui Dynasty wanted to establish an ideal government and become a wise king and saint who would shine through the ages, so he restrained himself, restored etiquette, and worked hard to govern, which created a bright side of him and the Sui Dynasty: stunning martial arts, radiant regulations, and Qian Yun's heroic spirit... But his demanding ideals and morals also laid a deep crisis for the prosperous age of the Sui Dynasty. : In order to ensure food reserves, he would rather flee famine with the people than open a warehouse for relief; he built the magnificent Daxing City, but the inner square was as strict as a chessboard; he criticized his son harshly, which ultimately led to a tragic tragedy for the family and even the country... His value orientation destined him to be unable to be a moral monarch, let alone a sentimental monarch. His way of ruling also plunged the entire Sui Dynasty into a puzzle of only magnanimity but no warmth.

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