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Qi Jiguang (Ming Dynasty anti-Japanese famous general, national hero).
Qi Jiguang (November 12, 1528, January 5, 1588), the character Yuan Jing, the name Nantang, the late name Meng Zhu, and the death of Wu Yi. Han nationality, a native of Penglai, Shandong (one said that his ancestral home is Dingyuan, Anhui, and was born in Luqiao Town, Weishan County, Jining, Shandong)[1]. A famous general of the Ming Dynasty, an outstanding military strategist, calligrapher, poet, and national hero.
Qi Jiguang has fought against the Japanese in the southeast coast for more than ten years, swept away the troubles that have been abusing the coastal areas for many years, and ensured the safety of the lives and property of the coastal people; Later, he fought against the Mongol tribes in the north for more than ten years, defended the security of the northern territory, promoted the peaceful development of the Mongolian and Han nationalities, and wrote the 18-volume "New Book of Discipline and Effectiveness" and the 14-volume "Practical Record of Military Training" and other famous military books, as well as the "Zhizhitang Collection" and the recitals and revisions submitted to the imperial court in various historical periods.
At the same time, Qi Jiguang is also an outstanding weapons expert and military engineer, he has transformed and invented various fire attacks; The large and small warships and chariots he built made the Ming army's waterway equipment superior to the enemy; He creatively built a hollow enemy platform on the Great Wall, which could be attacked and defended, which was a very distinctive military project. Collection.
Li Guang (famous general of the Western Han Dynasty).
Li Guang (?) 119 BC), Han nationality, a native of Chengji, Longxi (now Qin'an County, Tianshui, Gansu), was a famous general in the Western Han Dynasty of China. In the fourteenth year of Emperor Wen of the Han Dynasty (166 years ago), he joined the army to defeat the Xiongnu and became Zhonglang because of his merits.
During the reign of Emperor Jing, he successively served as the Taishou of the seven counties in the northern borderlands. Emperor Wu ascended the throne and was summoned as the guard of Weiyang Palace. In the sixth year of Yuanguang (129 years ago), he served as a general of Xiaocai, led more than 10,000 horsemen to ride out of Yanmen (now Youyunan, Shanxi) to attack the Xiongnu, and was wounded and captured due to the disparity in numbers.
The Huns put him lying between the two horses, Li Guang feigned death, jumped up on the way, and galloped back. Later, he served as the Taishou of Youbeiping County (Zhipinggang County, now southwest of Ningcheng, Inner Mongolia). The Huns were afraid of submission, called it General Fei, and did not dare to attack for several years.
In the fourth year of Yuanzhan (119 BC), in the Battle of Mobei, Li Guang served as a former general, but because he lost his way, he failed to participate in the war, and committed suicide in anger.
Tang Dezong enshrined Li Guang and other 64 famous generals with outstanding martial arts in history in the Wucheng Temple, known as the 64 generals of the Wucheng Temple. Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty posthumously honored Li Guangwei Huairoubo, and was one of the seventy-two generals of the Song Wu Temple.
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Yue Fei was the Southern Song Dynasty, and Qi Jiguang was the Ming Dynasty.
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Yue Fei was a famous anti-Japanese general in the Southern Song Dynasty, and Qi Jiguang was a famous anti-Japanese general in the Ming Dynasty.
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Yue Fei (1103-1142), known as Pengju, was born in Tangyin County, Xiangzhou (now Tangyin County, Henan) in the Song Dynasty, a famous general of the Southern Song Dynasty, a famous military strategist, strategist, and national hero in Chinese history, and one of the four generals of Zhongxing in the Southern Song Dynasty.
Qi Jiguang (November 12, 1528 - January 5, 1588) was a famous general of the Ming Dynasty, an outstanding military strategist, calligrapher, poet, and national hero.
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Qi Jiguang's ability is too great, and he will be calm in ****; At that time, it was the era of the noble and the lowly, even if Qi Jiguang became the commander-in-chief (commander of the military region), he still claimed in a letter to Zhang Juzheng, the first assistant: "The lackey under the door.""!
No matter how great the credit is, once the war is pacified and the enemy is wiped out, you can't get rid of the feeling of "the cunning rabbit dies, and the lackeys cook"! It is impossible for a civil official in power to bestow the honor of a feudal marquis on a "lowly" martial artist!
So later, Li Chengliang learned a lesson, raised Kou for self-respect, a family of three marquises, and finally raised a Nurhachi!
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Qi Shaobao's good at training troops is comparable to Yu Ban, and his good command of troops is comparable to Zhang Liao and Zhang He, at least at the level of Wuziliang General.
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Li Guang (famous general of the Western Han Dynasty).
Yang Yanzhao was a famous general of the Northern Song Dynasty.
Yue Fei was a famous general of the Southern Song Dynasty.
Qi Jiguang was a famous general of the Ming Dynasty.
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Cao Cao was the late Eastern Han Dynasty (Three Kingdoms period), Qi Jiguang was the Ming Dynasty, Li Guang was the Han Dynasty [should be the Western Han Dynasty], and Sun Wu was the Spring and Autumn Warring States [should be the Spring and Autumn Period].
Choose mine
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Cao Cao was the Three Kingdoms period, Qi Jiguang was the Ming Dynasty, Li Guang was the Western Han Dynasty, and Sun Wu was the Spring and Autumn Period.
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Cao Cao: Tang Dynasty.
Qi Jiguang: Ming Dynasty.
Li Guang: Han Dynasty.
Sun Wu: Spring and Autumn Warring States.
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At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, it was divided into three kingdoms, and the beacon fire was endless.
Qi Jiguang was born in the seventh year of Jiajing of the Ming Dynasty (1528) in Dengzhou, Shandong (now Penglai City), and Li Guang was from the Western Han Dynasty.
Sun Wu was a drop of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period.
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Cao Cao was the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Qi Jiguang was the Ming Dynasty, Li Guang was the Han Dynasty (it seems to be the Western Han Dynasty), and Sun Wu was the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period (as if it was the Spring and Autumn Period).
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Cao Cao, late Eastern Han Dynasty, Qi Jiguang Ming Dynasty, Li Guang, Western Han Dynasty, Sun Wu Spring and Autumn Period.
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In order: Three Kingdoms, Ming, Han, Spring and Autumn.
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Cao Cao, Han Dynasty, Qi Jiguang, Ming Dynasty, Li Guang, Han Dynasty, Sun Wu, Zhou Dynasty.
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Cao Cao, during the period of the Three Kingdoms, Sun Wu was the Spring and Autumn Period, Zheng He was the Ming Dynasty, Qi Jiguang was also the Ming Dynasty, Wang Zhaojun and Li Guang were both Han Dynasty, and Cao Xueqin and Pu Songling were Qing Dynasty.
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Spring and Autumn Warring States: Sun Wu. Han:
Li Guang, Wang Zhaojun, Cao Cao. Tang: Song:
Ming: Zheng He, Qi Jiguang. Qing:
Cao Xueqin, Pu Songling.
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Eastern Han Dynasty: Cao Cao Sun Wu: Spring and Autumn Period Zheng He: Ming Dynasty Qi Jiguang: Ming Dynasty Wang Shaojun: Han Li Guang: Western Han Dynasty Cao Xueqin: Qing Dynasty Pu Songling: Qing Dynasty.
Famous anti-Japanese generals, national heroes, military strategists, and martial artists in the Ming Dynasty. The word Yuanjing, called Nantang, also known as Meng Zhu. A native of Dengzhou, Shandong (now Penglai, Shandong). >>>More
Qi Jiguang is a famous patriotic general in the Ming Dynasty, he was born in Jiangmen, influenced by his father's education, loved military affairs since he was a child, and aspired to be an upright civil and military all-round soldier. At that time, China's coastal areas were often infested by the Japanese pirates, and Qi Jiguang hated the atrocities of the Japanese pirates very much, and when he was 16 years old, he once wrote a poem: "It is not my wish to be a marquis, but I hope that the sea will be peaceful." >>>More
Everyone knows that Qi Jiguang is a famous anti-Japanese general, and he is also a very talented, outstanding military strategist and national hero. He fought against the Japanese in the southeast coast, and for more than ten years, he cleared away the hidden dangers of the Japanese in the southeast coast and ensured the safety of the local people's lives and property. Maybe everyone doesn't know that in addition to resisting the Japanese, Qi Jiguang also resisted the Mongol invasion in the north. >>>More
Li Guang had three sons: the eldest son Li Danghu, the second son Li Jiao, and the third son Li Kang. >>>More
There are many agricultural proverbs in various places, such as: strong seedlings are harvested in three points, and weak seedlings are lost in half; Good seedlings are planted, and good trees bear good peaches; Cotton hoe eight times, cotton peach into bunches; Dry cowpeas, waterlogged beans, mung beans are harvested without drought or waterlogging; Cotton that does not die in the sun, pumpkins that do not die (in the rain); the cabbage that can't drown, the green onion that can't die when it droughts; peach, three apricots, four pears for five years; Jujube trees can be exchanged for money back then. >>>More