
Ming Dynasty 1540
About This Novel
(The best historical novel in the universe! All Trisolarans love to read it!) What a fucking world! Damn Jiajing! Master Hao is not afraid of anything except that the world will not be in chaos!
Official Sources
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 1mo ago
It's a boring novel, I fell asleep while reading it
Good history, but frustrating novel
Let's just say that the protagonist is a time traveler, and he has grasped Jiajing's thoughts. The teacher Xia Yan is the chief minister of the dynasty. In the end, Xia Yan still ended up being cut in half, so why did you travel through time? It doesn't make sense to have this protagonist, not to mention that the protagonist himself has less ink, so you could just change the way he died. All in all, it's a good book, but I can't stand it anymore.
The name doesn't work
It's important to clarify the main line. The more fancy the name, the better.
Okay, it's a very interesting historical novel.
Few people occupy the building
There are so few people here, so I occupy a building. From the red ji comment section
There is no distinction between priority and secondary. The previous chapters are a mess. The events in the capital can be deleted or passed over in one go. The reading experience will be much better. I don't know what the meaning is.
The writing in the early stage was good. Although it was dull, once you read it, you felt that there was something real. However, when it came to the ending of Xia Yan, it was so speechless. As a character with so much writing and ink, Xia Yan died in half. He didn't die of illness and exhaustion, and he didn't die well. It was a warm light in the heart of the protagonist. Are you going to write an important character to death just for the selfish and indifferent protagonist to have a heart? There are so many ways for the protagonist to be patient, so why can't the protagonist turn evil because of Xia Yan's death? In this novel, it is hard to reconcile when I think that Xia Yan tried his best for the Ming Dynasty but did not end well, and the protagonist then contributed to the Ming Dynasty for his enemies (Jiajing and these subjects).
This is the first time I have seen such a confident introduction. I must read this masterpiece.
The writing is okay, but there is too little ink about the main character. I suggest you read Daming Primary School Students
Renamed "Principles of Ming Political Science (1540 Edition)" to send it to the end of the Ming Dynasty, so that it can continue my greatness for another 150 years.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 1mo ago
It's a boring novel, I fell asleep while reading it
Good history, but frustrating novel
Let's just say that the protagonist is a time traveler, and he has grasped Jiajing's thoughts. The teacher Xia Yan is the chief minister of the dynasty. In the end, Xia Yan still ended up being cut in half, so why did you travel through time? It doesn't make sense to have this protagonist, not to mention that the protagonist himself has less ink, so you could just change the way he died. All in all, it's a good book, but I can't stand it anymore.
The name doesn't work
It's important to clarify the main line. The more fancy the name, the better.
Okay, it's a very interesting historical novel.
Few people occupy the building
There are so few people here, so I occupy a building. From the red ji comment section
There is no distinction between priority and secondary. The previous chapters are a mess. The events in the capital can be deleted or passed over in one go. The reading experience will be much better. I don't know what the meaning is.
The writing in the early stage was good. Although it was dull, once you read it, you felt that there was something real. However, when it came to the ending of Xia Yan, it was so speechless. As a character with so much writing and ink, Xia Yan died in half. He didn't die of illness and exhaustion, and he didn't die well. It was a warm light in the heart of the protagonist. Are you going to write an important character to death just for the selfish and indifferent protagonist to have a heart? There are so many ways for the protagonist to be patient, so why can't the protagonist turn evil because of Xia Yan's death? In this novel, it is hard to reconcile when I think that Xia Yan tried his best for the Ming Dynasty but did not end well, and the protagonist then contributed to the Ming Dynasty for his enemies (Jiajing and these subjects).
This is the first time I have seen such a confident introduction. I must read this masterpiece.
The writing is okay, but there is too little ink about the main character. I suggest you read Daming Primary School Students
Renamed "Principles of Ming Political Science (1540 Edition)" to send it to the end of the Ming Dynasty, so that it can continue my greatness for another 150 years.










