Knowledge expansion:
Dingfengzhu is the magic weapon of Jiuding Tiecha Mountain in the Romance of Gods. I once lent it to the immortal to show mercy to the real person, broke one of the ten unique wind roar arrays, and then restrained Han Zhixian's wind bag. In addition, Molihong, one of the four generals (four heavenly kings) of Jia Mengguan's Magic Mansion, also has a fixed wind bead on his magic weapon "mixed umbrella".
Many Taoist friends in the original text of Romance of the Gods said, "Where can I borrow the wind beads?" Lingbao exorcist said, "I have a friend who lives in the Babao Guang Yun Cave in Jiuding Tiecha Mountain. Zhenyin has a set of wind beads with which disciples can write.
In the mid-term attack on Zhou Dynasty, Wen Zhong's Taishi soldiers attacked Xiqiao, invited the "Ten-day King of Jin Ao Island" to stop teaching, and went to the "Ten-level Array" to help abuse. There was an unbreakable wind roar array, so Lingbao exorcist offered to borrow wind beads from real people. After that, Jiang Ziya sent Sanyisheng and Chaotian to Jiuding Tiecha Mountain to get wind beads.
The Romance of the Gods (commonly known as the List of Gods), also known as The Complete Biography of Shang and Zhou Countries, The History of King Wu Attacking Zhou, The Biography of Gods, etc. ) is a fictional novel created by Xu in Ming Dynasty, which was written in the Wanli period.
The book "Romance of the Gods" has been published for a hundred times, and it tells the story of attacking Zhou. The first thirty chapters focus on the tyranny of Zhou Wang. The last 70 chapters mainly focus on the battle of Shang and Zhou Dynasties. Zhou Wang was fierce and set himself on fire. King Wu seized the world and enfeoffed the nations.
The novel takes the historical concept and political concept as the ideological framework to support the book, mixed with a lot of grand imagination, which shows the author's support and praise for benevolent monarchs and saints, as well as his dissatisfaction and resistance to ruthless and ignorant monarchs.
Jiang Ziya's theory of beheading a general has long been told by poets, and the story of beheading a general took shape with the publication of Wu Wang's beheading Pinghua in Yuan Dynasty.