
Three Hundred Years of the Song Empire 1: the Time of Zhao Kuangyin (part 1)
by Jin Gang
About This Novel
Looking around, there are wolves everywhere. There are vassal towns that cannot be controlled by the king's law, there are vassal towns that are resisting the rule of law, there are vassal towns that are about to be moved, and there are even wanton plundering by Khitan cavalry. Although the imperial court was there at that time, the world was already dead. From AD 927 to AD 951, the thirty years before the Song Dynasty, it was the dark age of Chinese history. If you understand these thirty years, you will understand what barbarism and cruelty are, and you will understand why the Song Dynasty is called a prosperous civilization. Thirty years before the founding of the Song Dynasty, it was a military battlefield where wolves roamed and cavalry raged. It was a place where vassal towns were divided, factions fought against each other, and conspiracies and brutal crimes took place. It was a purgatory where civilization was ruined, morality was lost, and the world had constant nightmares. The history of the thirty years before the founding of the Song Dynasty was a history of turmoil caused by usurpation and disaster, and a history of Chinese people's suffering covered by blood and tragedy. If you understand these thirty years of history and see clearly the cause and effect of the troubled times of the Five Dynasties, you will understand the origin of the Song Dynasty Empire and Zhao Kuangyin's good intentions in constructing and deducing the Song Dynasty civilization...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(11)Scraped 11d ago
Zhao Kuangyin can be considered a grassroots person!
pile of stories
It feels like the book has no main line, and the whole book is filled with small stories, which makes me feel sleepy while reading. The author's writing power is obviously not enough to support such a large historical structure, which is far worse than the Qin Empire.
Heroes emerge from troubled times, and great ambitions emerge from troubled times. The loneliness of the Tang Dynasty led to the rise of the Song Dynasty. The emperor who founded the Song Dynasty was Song Taizu. Song Taizu was also a filial son. He respected his mother's will and passed the throne to his younger brother after his death.
Carrying a great banner in troubled times, he worked hard for the unification of the country and the stability of the people. Zhao Kuangyin made a great contribution to the unification. The army was also controlled by the Privy Council, and the imperial power was centralized.
I first learned that Zhao Kuangyin was involved in the Chenqiao mutiny. I don't know the details. I only know that he was pushed to the throne and the unification of the country was a foregone conclusion before his death. His "liberation of military power over a glass of wine" is also a classic
Ranna, all kinds of rebellion.
During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, you fought against me.
The chaos in China has begun.
Just watch it!
Good book. Worth reading
Rating
Community(0)
Official(11)Scraped 11d ago
Zhao Kuangyin can be considered a grassroots person!
pile of stories
It feels like the book has no main line, and the whole book is filled with small stories, which makes me feel sleepy while reading. The author's writing power is obviously not enough to support such a large historical structure, which is far worse than the Qin Empire.
Heroes emerge from troubled times, and great ambitions emerge from troubled times. The loneliness of the Tang Dynasty led to the rise of the Song Dynasty. The emperor who founded the Song Dynasty was Song Taizu. Song Taizu was also a filial son. He respected his mother's will and passed the throne to his younger brother after his death.
Carrying a great banner in troubled times, he worked hard for the unification of the country and the stability of the people. Zhao Kuangyin made a great contribution to the unification. The army was also controlled by the Privy Council, and the imperial power was centralized.
I first learned that Zhao Kuangyin was involved in the Chenqiao mutiny. I don't know the details. I only know that he was pushed to the throne and the unification of the country was a foregone conclusion before his death. His "liberation of military power over a glass of wine" is also a classic
Ranna, all kinds of rebellion.
During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, you fought against me.
The chaos in China has begun.
Just watch it!
Good book. Worth reading
