1. Reasons:
1. From the perspective of foundation, Wei is the strongest and Shu is the weakest. However, the starting points are different. Sun Quan’s father and brother all defeated him. Well, he just grabbed a Jingzhou (he also destroyed the Wu-Shu alliance, and it was not worth it to let Cao Wei sit on the mountain and watch the tigers fight). Although Cao Cao had a eunuch grandfather, he basically built the country from scratch. He destroyed Yuan Shao and Yuan Shu. , Lu Bu, Zhang Xiu, Liu Biao, Ma Teng. Although the legal person is Donghan Company, Lao Cao took over after bankruptcy. Although Liu Bei only had three places: Yizhou, Jingzhou, and Hanzhong. But it was built from scratch. By the way, some people questioned the value of the Emperor's uncle's sign at that time, and Liu Zhang and Liu Yan were both clan members, and they were genuine clan clans. (The old Liu family has grown up with each other from generation to generation. Liu Bei, Liu Zhang, and Liu Yan are all brothers, hehe). From this point of view, the rankings are Cao Cao, Liu Bei, and Sun Quan.
2. From the perspective of military command, Lao Cao led countless battles, most of which were conducted personally. Although the emperor's uncle's victory rate was not as high as Cao Cao's, after all, he led the troops in Jingzhou and Yizhou by himself, Sun Quan? It seems that he has never played many games. There was only one time when Zhang Liao shocked Xiaoyaojin. That time he led the team by himself in the game against Hefei, but he didn't get anything. From this point of view, it is still Cao Liusun.
3. From the perspective of funeral arrangements, although Cao Cao’s son is far behind me, he is still much better than Adou of the Liu family and A Liang of the Sun family. It should be said that Sun Quan belongs to the type of people who first became bright and then became dim. In his later years, he believed in Lu Yi and made the country a mess. And although Liu Bei's son was ineffective, after all, the auxiliary ministers he arranged were pretty good. After Sun Quan died, his son became a decoration and was controlled by powerful ministers (and was eventually abolished). From this point of view, Cao Liusun still ranked.
4. From the perspective of employing people, I think this aspect should be the most critical. Lao Cao has a lot of advisers and strong generals. There are brothers from the same family, and there are also those who have surrendered and rebelled, and both The balance between them is very good. Sun Liu was far behind in comparison. After Sun Quan took over, he also discovered the talent of Lu Xun. The rest were all the original team members left behind by his father and brother. Although Liu Bei found some talents such as Zhuge Liang, Pang Tong, Huang Zhong, Wei Yan, and Ma Chao, Liu Bei's employment style was obviously family-style. He gave priority to those who kowtowed to the death of his brothers before considering outsiders. At this point, the two of them are evenly matched, and it's hard to tell the winner.
2. Introduction:
1. Cao Cao (155-March 15, 220), whose courtesy name was Mengde, whose last name was Geely, whose diminutive name was Amo, who lived in Qiao County, Pei State ( A native of present-day Bozhou, Anhui Province. He was an outstanding statesman, militarist, writer and calligrapher in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and the founder of the Cao Wei regime in the Three Kingdoms.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the world was in chaos. In the name of the Emperor of the Han Dynasty, Cao Cao conquered all directions, internally eliminated the separatist forces such as Yuan, Lu Bu, Liu Biao, Ma Chao, and Han Sui, and externally surrendered the Southern Xiongnu, Wuhuan, Xianbei, etc. , unified northern China, and implemented a series of policies to restore economic production and social order, expand farmland, build water conservancy projects, reward farmers and mulberry trees, attach importance to handicrafts, resettle the exiled population, and implement "rent modulation", thus gradually stabilizing the society and economy of the Central Plains. There's a turning point. Under Cao Cao's rule, the Yellow River Basin experienced a certain degree of political clarity, the economy gradually recovered, class oppression was slightly alleviated, and the social atmosphere improved. Some of the measures taken by Cao Cao in the name of the Han Dynasty had a positive effect.
When Cao Cao was alive, he served as the prime minister of the Eastern Han Dynasty and later the king of Wei, laying the foundation for the founding of Cao Wei. After his death, he was given the posthumous title of King Wu. After his son Cao Pi became emperor, he was honored as Emperor Wu, with the temple name Taizu.
2. Liu Bei (161 AD - June 10, 223 AD), courtesy name Xuande, was born in Zhuo County, Zhuo County, Youzhou (now Zhuozhou City, Hebei Province) in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. He was a descendant of Liu Sheng, Prince Jing of Zhongshan in the Western Han Dynasty. During the Three Kingdoms period, he was the founding emperor and statesman of the Shu Han Dynasty. Historians also call him the First Lord.
Liu Bei worshiped Lu Zhi as his disciple when he was young, and later participated in suppressing the Yellow Turban Uprising. He successively led the army to rescue Beihai Prime Minister Kong Rong, Xuzhou Mu Tao Qian and others. After Tao Qian died of illness, he ceded Xuzhou to Liu Bei.
Liu Bei was on the move in his early years, experienced hardships, and sought refuge with many princes. During the Battle of Chibi, he allied with Sun Quan to defeat Cao Cao and took advantage of the situation to capture Jingzhou. Then advance to Yizhou. In the first year of Zhangwu (221), he proclaimed himself emperor in Chengdu. His country was named Han, and it was called Shu or Shuhan in history. "Three Kingdoms" commented that Liu Bei's power and ability were slightly inferior to Cao Cao's, but he was formidable and generous, knew people well and treated people well, was persevering, and eventually became an emperor. Liu Bei also said that when he does things, "every time he goes against Cao Cao, he will succeed."
In the third year of Zhangwu (223 years), Liu Bei died of illness in Baidi City at the age of sixty-three. His posthumous name was Emperor Zhaolie, and his temple name was Liezu.
3. Sun Quan, the great emperor of Wu Taizu (182-May 21, 252), named Zhongmou, was a native of Fuchun, Wu County (now Fuyang District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang). The founder of Soochow during the Three Kingdoms period.
Sun Quan’s father Sun Jian and brother Sun Ce laid the foundation of Jiangdong during the separatist rule in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. In the fifth year of Jian'an (200 years), Sun Ce was assassinated and Sun Quan took over and became a prince. In the thirteenth year of Jian'an (208 years), he established the Sun-Liu Alliance with Liu Bei and defeated Cao Cao in the Battle of Chibi, laying the foundation for the establishment of the Three Kingdoms. In the twenty-fourth year of Jian'an (219), Sun Quan sent Lu Meng to successfully attack Liu Bei's Jingzhou, greatly increasing its territory.
In the first year of Huangwu (222 years), Sun Quan was canonized as King of Wu by Wei Wendi Cao Pi and established the Kingdom of Wu. In the first year of Huanglong (229), Sun Quan officially proclaimed himself emperor. After Sun Quan became emperor, he established agricultural officials, implemented farming, established counties and counties, and continued to suppress Shanyue, which promoted the economic development of Jiangnan. On this basis, he sent people to sea many times. In the second year of Huanglong (230), Sun Quan sent Wei Wen and Zhuge Zhi to Yizhou.
In his later years, Sun Quan was erratic on the issue of his successor, which led to party disputes and instability in the government. He died of illness in the first year of Taiyuan (252) at the age of seventy-one. He reigned for twenty-four years. He was given the posthumous title of Great Emperor and the temple name of Taizu. He was buried in Jiangling. He was the longest-lived among the rulers of the Three Kingdoms era.