
Bloodshed of 1898 (part 1)
About This Novel
In 1898, the Manchu Qing Dynasty was in turmoil. Forced by internal and external troubles, the young Emperor Guangxu boldly promulgated the "Edict to establish the country" and determined to reform. Tan Sitong, as a pillar of the country, came to Beijing to respond to the imperial edict... This is by far the longest historical novel with the most extensive length, the most complete historical materials, and the most detailed narrative describing the Reform Movement of 1898. It reproduces all the major events that happened in the decadent dynasty in the short year of 1898: the Sino-Japanese naval battle, the letter to the public, the strong society, the Hundred Days Reform, the Boxer Rebellion, the invasion of the Eight-Power Allied Forces, the exile of the powerful, and the uprising of the independent army. It has created a large number of flesh-and-blood and lifelike historical figures, adding endless brilliance to the art gallery of Chinese literature! Tan Sitong and others shed blood in Caishikou, and the reform and reform ultimately failed. However, Tan Sitong's deafening shouts of "Today in China, we have never heard of anyone who shed blood due to the reform, and this is why this country is not prosperous. If there are, please start with the same heir", which has been stirring up all the people with lofty ideals for a hundred years.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 6d ago
Hahaha, okay, okay
Fujian coffee
Have a great time driving, you like it
good
Good book, worth reading
Pretty much.
. . . . . . . .
Uh uh uh uh uh
! ! ! ! ! ! !
Li Hongzhang, Weng Tonghe. The Prime Minister Hefei is thin and the world is thin, and the agricultural minister is always familiar with the world's famine.
It's really a hundred schools of thought contending and speaking freely.
Tan Sitong, one of the Six Gentlemen of 1898, said, "I am smiling to the sky with my horizontal sword, leaving my liver and gallbladder intact."
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 6d ago
Hahaha, okay, okay
Fujian coffee
Have a great time driving, you like it
good
Good book, worth reading
Pretty much.
. . . . . . . .
Uh uh uh uh uh
! ! ! ! ! ! !
Li Hongzhang, Weng Tonghe. The Prime Minister Hefei is thin and the world is thin, and the agricultural minister is always familiar with the world's famine.
It's really a hundred schools of thought contending and speaking freely.
Tan Sitong, one of the Six Gentlemen of 1898, said, "I am smiling to the sky with my horizontal sword, leaving my liver and gallbladder intact."
