Huang Chao repeatedly failed in the imperial examination, and wrote: "Stay in Qiu Lai on September 8th, and I will kill the flowers when they are all out. The poem "Fragrant array permeates Chang 'an and the city is full of golden flowers" makes him feel that society has an impulse to retaliate against him.
At the end of the Tang dynasty, natural disasters struck everywhere, and the people failed to harvest, but the court did nothing. In this hot water, Huang Chao drew a group of desperate people and started his uprising. He revolted with Wang Xianzhi. The uprising lasted for a long time and spread widely, which dealt a heavy blow to the Tang Dynasty. In this process, Wang Xianzhi was killed by a double agent, and Huang Chao took the power of Wang Xianzhi as his own and continued the uprising.
Huang Chao captured Guangzhou in just one day, and soon occupied a large area from Shandong to Guangdong, established political power in Chang 'an, proclaimed himself emperor, and established the Daqi regime. But before long, Huang Chao's right-hand man Zhu Wen defected and surrendered to Datang, Li Keyong conquered Chang 'an, and Huang Chao began his escape career. In the second year, Huang Chao was killed on the way to escape and was destroyed by his nephew, thus ending the Huang Chao Uprising. Huang Chao Uprising, like Li Zicheng Uprising, was a peasant uprising, and the same problem accelerated the demise of the dynasty.
The disaster of Baima Post refers to the incident in which Zhu Wen killed the minister. Zhu Wen had the intention of usurping the throne and took control of the capital and the emperor. Egged on by his subordinates, he killed more than 30 ministers in Baimagang. With the death of ministers, the Tang Dynasty came to an end. The disaster of Baimayi had a great influence on the Tang Dynasty, and the nobles of the Tang Dynasty perished one after another. Without the support of nobles, the Tang Dynasty was not far from extinction.