
The Rise and Fall of the Sui Dynasty in the Forty Years 1: Hegemony in East Asia
by Monman
About This Novel
The Sui Dynasty was like a meteor, shining brightly and destroying in an instant in Chinese history. Despite this, it has extraordinary and legendary historical characteristics: unity, prosperity, civilization and short-lived, tyrannical and rebellious coexistence. Yang Jian, the founder of the Sui Dynasty, was born in a monastery and raised by nuns. He entered the official career at the age of only fourteen and quickly climbed to the core of power with special means. When he was less than forty years old, he once again used special means to seize the imperial power from the orphans and widows after the death of the emperor's son-in-law. Changing dynasties has long been commonplace in the Northern and Southern Dynasties. During the two hundred years, many emperors and generals hoped to end the troubled times, but they all failed. However, Yang Jian succeeded. In history, Emperor Wen of the Sui Dynasty was still a new emperor at the time, but he used force and strategy to split the Turkic Empire and replace it as the hegemon in East Asia. Later, the world once again saw his power as a hegemon, and the Sui Dynasty wiped out Nanchen and unified the world in just two months. In terms of hegemony, he deserves the title of "Eternal Emperor"!
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Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 11d ago
Good experiences will become better if they are revised repeatedly, but repeated revisions of bad experiences will be in vain.
We have been working hard, but we have never become what we want. Not only did he not grow up, he even felt a little more melancholy about "never coming back in his prime". So, is life meant for experience or for correction? Will it really be better after correction? If it's not better, why do we bother fixing it? Good experiences will get better if you repeatedly correct them. Bad experiences will be corrected repeatedly in vain. If you have too many bad experiences and are too lazy to correct them, you will just lie flat.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 11d ago
Good experiences will become better if they are revised repeatedly, but repeated revisions of bad experiences will be in vain.
We have been working hard, but we have never become what we want. Not only did he not grow up, he even felt a little more melancholy about "never coming back in his prime". So, is life meant for experience or for correction? Will it really be better after correction? If it's not better, why do we bother fixing it? Good experiences will get better if you repeatedly correct them. Bad experiences will be corrected repeatedly in vain. If you have too many bad experiences and are too lazy to correct them, you will just lie flat.
