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"Strategy" refers to six strategies and three strategies, ancient art books. The three strategies refer to Huang Shigong's three strategies.
Liu Tao, also known as Liu Taigong Tao or Taigong Art of War, is a famous art book in ancient China. "Sui Shu Jing Ji Zhi" Note: "Written by Zhou Wenwang's teacher Wang Jiang." Wang Jiang, also known as Lv Wang, also known as Ziya (once said, the word is still good), commonly known as Jiang Taigong and Jiang Ziya, was the founding hero and ancestor of the Western Zhou Dynasty. In history, there are many disputes about the author, the time of writing and the authenticity of the book. Since the Song Dynasty, it has been basically denied that the book was written by Lv Wang, and it was believed that it was falsely entrusted by people after the Han Dynasty. 1972, a large number of bamboo slips were unearthed in the Han Tomb of Zhangzi, Linyi County, Shandong Province, including 54 pieces of Liu Tao, indicating that Liu Tao had been circulated in the world before the Western Han Dynasty, rather than being wrongly entrusted by people after the Han Dynasty. Nowadays, most scholars believe that Tamia Liu was written in the Warring States Period.
Through the dialogue with Zhou Wenwang, King Wu and Lv Wang, Liu Tao expounded the theory and principles of governing the country, the army and the army. It is a valuable military book, which has a great influence on later generations and has been valued by military strategists in past dynasties. Sima Qian's "Historical Records: A Family" says: "The words of later generations are the yin merits of Zhou. They all live in Taigong. " During the Yuanfeng period in northern Song Shenzong, Liu Tao was listed as one of the Seven Martial Arts Books, which was a must-read book for martial arts. Tamia Liu also has a far-reaching influence abroad. /kloc-was introduced to Japan in the 6th century, and/kloc-was introduced to Europe in the 8th century. Now it has been translated into Japanese, French, Korean, Vietnamese, English, Russian and other languages.
Six Towers contains 60 articles in 6 volumes, with nearly 20,000 words. There are more than 20 existing versions, among which the important versions are bamboo slips, Dunhuang manuscripts in the Tang Dynasty, A Compendium of Books, Seven Books of the Five Classics and Sikuquanshu compiled by Wei Zhi in the Tang Dynasty. This electronic edition is based on a series of ancient sequels and the Five Classics and Seven Books of Song Dynasty. For obvious mistakes, extensions, deviations and errors in the original version, please refer to bamboo slips, Dunhuang manuscripts, lectures on the Five Classics and Seven Books, a compilation of the Five Classics and Seven Books, and direct interpretation of the Five Classics and Seven Books. Errors in the original version are marked with (). Loanwords and archaic words are generally replaced by modern words with articles, and those that are not replaced are indicated in the notes.