
Biography of the Later Three Kingdoms
About This Novel
People who have read history know that without Yuwentai, the black otter, there would be no Western Wei; without Yuwenhu, the king of Jin, it would be difficult to preserve the Northern Zhou Dynasty; without the Yuwen family and the Guanlong nobles, it would be difficult to establish a country in Guanzhong. Naturally, without the Northern Zhou Dynasty, the coexistence of Southern Chen, Northern Qi and the three kingdoms could not be established. Naturally, there would be no way for Yuwen Yong to use Guanzhong to annex the powerful Northern Qi Gao family regime. Three missing ones are equal to two. Not long after, Yuwen Yong died young, and his bastard son Yuwen Yun inherited the throne. Yang Jian, the general who stole the country, was inspired. He saw the right opportunity and took advantage of the convenience of his eldest daughter being the Queen of the Northern Zhou Dynasty to steal the treasure in one fell swoop and establish the Sui Dynasty. Three Kingdoms unite! Later, the second generation of the Sui Dynasty died, and Li Yuan followed suit and established the Tang Dynasty. This is how Great China came to be based on the Sui and Tang Dynasties. To paraphrase a popular saying: A butterfly flaps its wings and triggers a huge storm thousands of miles away. Leaving aside the 400-year history of the Sui and Tang dynasties, the three kingdoms of the Southern and Northern Dynasties fought vigorously for less than a century, and their exciting content and extent far surpassed the three kingdoms of Wei, Shu, and Wu in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. "Another Three Kingdoms" needs to be explained slowly.
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