
Golden Family, I Will Lead the Mongolian Cavalry Across Asia and Europe
About This Novel
If you traveled to the Mongolian grasslands in the 13th century and became a young man of Han and Mongolian descent, how would you choose? Should he go south and return to the Song Dynasty, or integrate into the Mongolian tribe? Facing this problem, Zhao Shuo just wanted to say one thing: "Temujin Khan, please betroth Huazheng to me!" Zhao Shuo, who traveled to the Mongolian grasslands, started as Temujin's son-in-law and gradually ascended to the supreme throne of the grasslands. Destroy the Jin Dynasty, massacre Xixia, and sweep across Asia and Europe! After Temujin's death, faced with the disintegration of the Golden Family, Zhao Shuo suppressed all dissent with one person's power. Many years later, Zhao Shuo found that he had many titles on his head. The First Battle of Mongolia, the Golden Sword Prince Consort, the Protector of Immortality, the Reincarnation of the Eagle, the Conqueror of Khwarezm, the Grand Master King, the Governor of the Eastern Hemisphere, the talker of the Eurasian continent...
What Readers Think
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Official(91)Scraped 2d ago
The protagonist's surname is Zhao
Author, you can change the protagonist's surname to Zhao in another period, but the protagonist's surname is Zhao in the Two Song Dynasty. It gives people a really bad feeling. It is easy to think of the royal family of the Two Song Dynasties. When you think of the Two Song Dynasties, the weak and incompetent emperor, and the few die-hard tomorrows
It's embarrassing for the protagonist to become emperor. Although he has prestige and strength, Genghis Khan treats the protagonist so well. If the protagonist takes the initiative to split the Mongol Empire and kill Genghis Khan's descendants, his reputation will not be good. Anyway, proclaiming the emperor is only in name, and there is no real benefit. The descendants of Genghis Khan will not take the initiative to attack the protagonist if they are in their right mind. The other Khanate clans are the descendants of the protagonist. The expansion of territory includes Australia, America, and Europe. The protagonist can't finish it until his death. Why not leave the title of emperor to his son? Can the protagonist's son not give the protagonist a posthumous title? No one cares about the protagonist. It doesn't matter whether he wants to be emperor or not. King Khan and Emperor mean nothing to the protagonist.
When I saw the beginning of the evolution of Mongolian characters, I began to feel uncomfortable. It felt like the Chinese civilization had degenerated into that of Japan and South Korea, and had to insert Chinese characters into foreign languages. I suddenly realized that this book was actually an invasion of Mongolian culture, and the three views were inconsistent.
Historical literature should be decisive in killing! Not only did all the literati in the Southern Song Dynasty have to be killed, at least eight levels of them should be killed, and all the Beikong family should be killed!
It's good to watch. Although the historical details are lacking, I enjoyed reading it. It's very qualified as a historical novel, and the protagonist's character is also good. As a Mongolian, he kills when he needs to, not the kind of indecisive Madonna.
The Three Kingdoms, Sui and Tang Dynasties, and the Ming Dynasty have more stories written about them, and less about Mongolia. The writing style is also good.
If you want to rule such a big place, you need less than 20 sons.
Can the author have some kind of sky screen to watch the movie behind? It would be quite exciting, right?
Eight Banners is pretty good. The armor of the Qing army is very handsome. I researched it.
She was a woman with an oval face, a high nose, snow-white skin, a slender figure, toned but not thin, and bright and attractive eyes. Who was not Temujin's favorite daughter Hua Zheng? It's too much. It should be slightly beautified but still have some basic characteristics of the Mongolians at that time.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(91)Scraped 2d ago
The protagonist's surname is Zhao
Author, you can change the protagonist's surname to Zhao in another period, but the protagonist's surname is Zhao in the Two Song Dynasty. It gives people a really bad feeling. It is easy to think of the royal family of the Two Song Dynasties. When you think of the Two Song Dynasties, the weak and incompetent emperor, and the few die-hard tomorrows
It's embarrassing for the protagonist to become emperor. Although he has prestige and strength, Genghis Khan treats the protagonist so well. If the protagonist takes the initiative to split the Mongol Empire and kill Genghis Khan's descendants, his reputation will not be good. Anyway, proclaiming the emperor is only in name, and there is no real benefit. The descendants of Genghis Khan will not take the initiative to attack the protagonist if they are in their right mind. The other Khanate clans are the descendants of the protagonist. The expansion of territory includes Australia, America, and Europe. The protagonist can't finish it until his death. Why not leave the title of emperor to his son? Can the protagonist's son not give the protagonist a posthumous title? No one cares about the protagonist. It doesn't matter whether he wants to be emperor or not. King Khan and Emperor mean nothing to the protagonist.
When I saw the beginning of the evolution of Mongolian characters, I began to feel uncomfortable. It felt like the Chinese civilization had degenerated into that of Japan and South Korea, and had to insert Chinese characters into foreign languages. I suddenly realized that this book was actually an invasion of Mongolian culture, and the three views were inconsistent.
Historical literature should be decisive in killing! Not only did all the literati in the Southern Song Dynasty have to be killed, at least eight levels of them should be killed, and all the Beikong family should be killed!
It's good to watch. Although the historical details are lacking, I enjoyed reading it. It's very qualified as a historical novel, and the protagonist's character is also good. As a Mongolian, he kills when he needs to, not the kind of indecisive Madonna.
The Three Kingdoms, Sui and Tang Dynasties, and the Ming Dynasty have more stories written about them, and less about Mongolia. The writing style is also good.
If you want to rule such a big place, you need less than 20 sons.
Can the author have some kind of sky screen to watch the movie behind? It would be quite exciting, right?
Eight Banners is pretty good. The armor of the Qing army is very handsome. I researched it.
She was a woman with an oval face, a high nose, snow-white skin, a slender figure, toned but not thin, and bright and attractive eyes. Who was not Temujin's favorite daughter Hua Zheng? It's too much. It should be slightly beautified but still have some basic characteristics of the Mongolians at that time.
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Official(4)
If you traveled to the Mongolian grasslands in the 13th century and became a young man of Han and Mongolian descent, how would you choose? Should he go south and return to the Song Dynasty, or integrate into the Mongolian tribe? Facing this problem, Zhao Shuo just wanted to say one thing: "Temujin Khan, please betroth Huazheng to me!" Zhao Shuo, who traveled to the Mongolian grasslands, started as Temujin's son-in-law and gradually ascended to the supreme throne of the grasslands. Destroy the Jin Dynasty, massacre Xixia, and sweep across Asia and Europe! After Temujin's death, faced with the disintegration of the Golden Family, Zhao Shuo suppressed all dissent with one person's power. Many years later, Zhao Shuo found that he had many titles on his head.



The son-in-law of Genghis Khan starts the game. He is of mixed Mongolian and Chinese descent. His golden finger has superhuman physique and memory for future generations. He is currently the second-in-command in Mongolia. The follow-up should be to unify Mongolia, Jin and Song Dynasties. It depends on how the author arranges it to be a reasonable inheritance.




If you traveled to the Mongolian grasslands in the 13th century and became a young man of Han and Mongolian descent, how would you choose? Should he go south and return to the Song Dynasty, or integrate into the Mongolian tribe? Facing this problem, Zhao Shuo just wanted to say one thing: "Temujin Khan, please betroth Huazheng to me!" Zhao Shuo, who traveled to the Mongolian grasslands, started as Temujin's son-in-law and gradually ascended to the supreme throne of the grasslands. Destroy the Jin Dynasty, massacre Xixia, and sweep across Asia and Europe! After Temujin's death, faced with the disintegration of the Golden Family, Zhao Shuo suppressed all dissatisfaction with one person's power




Historical literature If you traveled to the Mongolian grasslands in the 13th century and became a young man of Han and Mongolian descent, how would you choose? Should he go south and return to the Song Dynasty, or integrate into the Mongolian tribe? Facing this problem, Zhao Shuo just wanted to say one thing: "Temujin Khan, please betroth Huazheng to me!" Zhao Shuo, who traveled to the Mongolian grasslands, started as Temujin's son-in-law and gradually ascended to the supreme throne of the grasslands. Destroy the Jin Dynasty, massacre Xixia, and sweep across Asia and Europe! After Temujin's death, faced with the disintegration of the Golden Family, Zhao Shuo suppressed all dissent with one person's power. Many years later, Zhao Shuo found that he had many titles on his head. The First Battle of Mongolia, the Golden Sword Prince Consort, the Protector of Immortality, the Reincarnation of the Eagle, the Conqueror of Khwarizimo, the Grand Master King, the Governor of the Eastern Hemisphere, the talker of the Yahuan Continent...













