
Nanjing City at the End of Ming Dynasty
by Xu Haofeng
About This Novel
It drizzled for half a day on December 12, the fifteenth year of Wanli, and the spring scenery in the old city of Nanjing was still far away. In the colder north, a group of royal guards rode fast horses, enduring the cold pain in their noses and ears, and brought the news of the death of the famous general Qi Jiguang into the capital. The Ming Dynasty established a complete and strict civil service system. In order to prevent the recurrence of local military and vassal chaos in the Tang Dynasty, military attachés have been suppressed. The establishment of an army to sweep away Japanese pirates along the eastern coast and the establishment of a vassal vassal to deter the Mongolian tribes gave Qi Jiguang control over nearly 400,000 troops and became the only military attache in the dynasty capable of rebellion. He died of old age after being demoted to a commoner. On that day, Emperor Shenzong, wearing a black dragon robe with dark red embroidery, learned of his death in the Wenhua Hall of his study without giving any instructions.
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