
A Book to Understand the Fifteen Years of Wanli
by Chen Xiaoxun
About This Novel
Based on Huang Renyu's classic works, this book deeply dissects the historical slices of "calm on the surface but turbulent undercurrents" during the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty. Through the ups and downs of seven core figures including Emperor Wanli, Zhang Juzheng, and Hai Rui, the book reveals how moral idealism and technical flaws jointly stifle the vitality of reform. From the financial management loopholes exposed by Zhang Juzheng's premature reform, to the paradox of Hai Rui's integrity but being rejected by the system; from the tragedy of Qi Jiguang's military innovation being stifled by the civil service system, to the dilemma of Li Zhi's ideological enlightenment encountering the strangulation of ethics, the social ill of "replacing morality with the rule of law" is analyzed layer by layer. The book focuses specifically on the "insignificant year" of 1587, decoding historical details such as the struggle to establish the crown prince behind the emperor's neglect of government, the falsification of data hidden in the Qing Dynasty's land, and the imbalance of civil and military affairs reflected in the anti-Japanese war, showing how a huge empire declined in a systemic collapse. Through the perspective of the "big historical perspective", it not only restores the classic discussion of "The Fifteenth Year of Wanli", but also incorporates in-depth interpretation from a contemporary perspective, building a cognitive bridge for readers to connect historical laws and realistic enlightenment.
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