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2 novels found

Ming Dynasty: Starting from Chongzhen's Vassalage in Guangzhou

Xiaoyao Yunei

183K0

(No system, save the Ming Dynasty, fight for hegemony, farm) In 1626, there was a big explosion in Wang Gong Factory - modern people traveled through time and became the believer Wang Zhu Youjian. It stands to reason that this is Tianhu's start - when the emperor's brother dies, he will become Emperor Chongzhen. But he knew clearly: if he sat on that dragon's chair, he would be trapped by the decadent system for more than two hundred years, and he would hang himself on the old crooked neck tree again seventeen years later. Nurhaci has risen and Shaanxi is about to suffer a famine. The Ming Dynasty's dandies still love prosperity, good houses, beautiful maids, fresh clothes, good food, and good horses. ........... Wei Zhongxian thought that this was a dandy prince seeking wealth and peace, while the Donglin Party members thought that this was a sad and wise king who was forced to leave Beijing, and sighed with regret. Only Zhu Youjian himself knew that what he wanted to do in Guangzhou was crazier than becoming an emperor - he wanted to start a new business and rebuild the sun, moon, rivers and mountains. --His Royal Highness King Xin just said lightly: "What I am best at is probably settling accounts for the imperial court."

Make Eastern Rome Great Again, 1416

Xiaoyao Yunei

669K04

In 1416, just after crossing over to become the Eastern Roman Empire, His Highness Andronikos Valleolo, the autocratic monarch of Thessaloniki, was about to face the approaching Sultan Muhammad and tens of thousands of Ottoman cavalry, as if 1453 was happening in advance. But Andronikos did not believe that Rome was doomed by fate. He vowed to reverse the fate of the fall of Constantinople in the original history and make this ancient empire return like a lightning king. ............ 'This little plain of Asia Minor, in which we now find ourselves, must have had a name when the Romans had the honor of inhabiting and ruling it. But now when I ask, no one tells me at all. ... Now, the cities where the ancestors of the Romans once thrived have turned into ruins. What a miserable sight it is! What's even more sad is that because they were abandoned for so long, even their names have been forgotten. In fact, when I asked the names of these cities, local Turks would reply: "We destroyed these cities, but time has erased their names." Although I suffered in silence, I still felt extremely sad. As you can imagine, the ancient names of long history were replaced by barbaric sounds, and I lamented loudly, barely able to conceal my pain. ' --Manuel II Palaiologos, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, 1391