From: Romance of the Three Kingdoms
Romance of the Three Kingdoms: Romance of the Three Kingdoms is one of the four classical novels in China. It is China's first chapter-by-chapter historical romance novel. Its full name is Popular Romance of the Three Kingdoms. It was written by Luo Guanzhong, a famous novelist in the late Yuan Dynasty and early Ming Dynasty. Romance of the Three Kingdoms describes the historical situation from the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty to the early years of the Western Jin Dynasty 105, mainly describing wars, and tells the story of the warlord scuffle in the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the political and military struggle in Wei Shuwu, and the establishment of the Jin Dynasty by Sima Yan. It reflects the transformation of various social struggles and contradictions during the Three Kingdoms period, summarizes the historical changes of this era, and shapes a group of heroes of the Three Kingdoms.
Content Description: The Romance of the Three Kingdoms embodies rich historical contents, and the names of people, places and major events are basically the same as those in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. The characters are also based on the fixed image left by the Three Kingdoms, and then play again, exaggerating, beautifying, uglifying and so on. This is also the routine of historical romance novels. On the one hand, The Romance of the Three Kingdoms reflects the relatively real history of the Three Kingdoms and caters to the readers' demand for real history. On the other hand, according to the actual situation of Ming society, the figures of the Three Kingdoms were exaggerated, beautified and vilified.
Zhuge Liang: (18 1 year -234 10/October 8), born in Yang Du, Xuzhou (now yinan county, Linyi City, Shandong Province), was an outstanding politician, strategist, essayist, etc. when he was alive, he was named Hou of Wuxiang. After his death, he pursued loyalty to the marquis of Wuxiang. Because of its military ability, the Eastern Jin regime was posthumously named King Wu Xing. Representative prose works include An Example and A Book of Commandments. He once invented the wooden ox, the flying horse, the Kongming lantern and so on, and transformed the crossbow, called Zhuge Lian crossbow, which can hit all targets with one crossbow. In the twelfth year (234), Yu Jianxing died in Wuzhangyuan (now Qishan, Baoji).