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Nanchen Diye
History南陈帝业
Good At Pretending To Be Dead
In the third year of Yongding (559), the king of the Northern Zhou Dynasty became the emperor. Gao Yang of the Northern Qi Dynasty left for drinking, and Chen Qian of the Southern Dynasty came to the emperor's residence for the first time. At that time, Jiankang suffered from the disaster of Hou Jing, and his clothes were in ruins; Jiangbiao suffered from the military revolution, and his people lost seventy percent. Fortunately, the emperor's son, Bo Zong, came from later generations to cut off the disadvantages and promote governance, counterattacked the northern soil, and eventually became the emperor's foundation.
In the third year of Yongding (559), the king of the Northern Zhou Dynasty became the emperor. Gao Yang of the Northern Qi Dynasty left for drinking, and Chen Qian of the Southern Dynasty came to the emperor's residence for the first time. At that time, Jiankang suffered from the disaster of Hou Jing, and his clothes were in ruins; Jiangbiao suffered from the military revolution, and his people lost seventy percent. Fortunately, the emperor's son, Bo Zong, came from later generations to cut off the disadvantages and promote governance, counterattacked the northern soil, and eventually became the emperor's foundation.

Greece Recasts Rome
History希腊重铸罗马
Good At Pretending To Be Dead
In 1863, the 17-year-old Prince George of Denmark came to Athens and became the king of the Greeks. People say he changed everything. Commenting on him, historians wrote: What he inherited was a small peninsula country that was poor, chaotic, and desperate. What he left behind was a stable, strong, and prosperous Near Eastern power. He spent sixty years proving that the strength of a country does not lie in enthusiasm, but in pragmatism and calmness; it does not lie in militarism, but in restrained cultivation. The poet praised his achievements thus: When lightning streaked across the sky and thunder echoed through Constantinople. From Libya to Baku, wherever the sound of my Orthodox bells is heard, the glory of my Basilius shines.
In 1863, the 17-year-old Prince George of Denmark came to Athens and became the king of the Greeks. People say he changed everything. Commenting on him, historians wrote: What he inherited was a small peninsula country that was poor, chaotic, and desperate. What he left behind was a stable, strong, and prosperous Near Eastern power. He spent sixty years proving that the strength of a country does not lie in enthusiasm, but in pragmatism and calmness; it does not lie in militarism, but in restrained cultivation. The poet praised his achievements thus: When lightning streaked across the sky and thunder echoed through Constantinople. From Libya to Baku, wherever the sound of my Orthodox bells is heard, the glory of my Basilius shines.