Zhu Yuanzhang's most domineering poem

"Don't provoke buddhist nun to be a monk" is a seven-character quatrain written by Zhu Yuanzhang, a poet in the Ming Dynasty.

Jiangnan killed millions of soldiers, and the sword around his waist was still bloody.

Monks don't know heroes, just ask their names.

The creation of the poem "Don't mess with buddhist nun's monk" can be traced back to 1364. Zhu Yuanzhang, who was fighting for the world at that time, was fighting a decisive battle with Chen Youliang, one of the leaders of the peasant uprising army. The two sides have waged several battles of life and death in Poyang Lake waters. One night, Zhu Yuanzhang led several bodyguards to worship Buddha in prajna temple near Jinling. The abbot of prajna temple mistakenly thought that Zhu Yuanzhang and others were robbers and villains, and felt a snub to Zhu Yuanzhang and others. Later, he felt that Zhu Yuanzhang and others were different from ordinary people and had a king's demeanor, so he asked his name. Zhu Yuanzhang refused to tell me his name. Under the harassment of the old monk, Zhu Yuanzhang wrote a domineering poem on the temple wall.