-
After Sun Quan's death, Eastern Wu fell into a chaotic political struggle, which led to the gradual decline of Eastern Wu's national power, and was finally destroyed by the Western Jin Dynasty.
-
Because other countries have become stronger one after another. Soochow's nation didn't have the last laugh.
-
That's because the national power of Eastern Wu gradually declined during Sun Quan's time.
-
In the early days, the emperors of Eastern Wu were lustful and loved to drink, and were mediocre and incompetent, so the phenomenon of slow weakening of Eastern Wu appeared.
-
Soochow's strength is declining more and more.
-
Mainly because the times are still developing, Soochow is slowly falling behind.
-
It really doesn't matter if you have the time to laugh to the end, the strength of a country is the most important thing.
-
Whether or not the whole country can be unified has nothing to do with how long the country has been established, but with the strength of the country.
-
The Three Kingdoms Wei Dynasty was established on December 10, 220, and fell on February 4, 266.
The Wei Dynasty (December 10, 220 – February 4, 266) was one of the secession regimes during the Three Kingdoms period, and later historians mostly called Cao Wei, because the later Northern Wei was called "Later Wei", so Cao Wei was also called "Former Wei" or "Former Wei", and was the most powerful state among the Three Kingdoms.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the world was in turmoil, and Cao Cao gradually increased his power in the warlord melee and controlled the Eastern Han court, laying the foundation for the establishment of Cao Wei. When Cao Cao was awarded the title of Duke of Wei, he ruled in Ye, where Wei County was located in the Eastern Han Dynasty, so Emperor Xian of Han named him "Duke of Wei" and "King of Wei", so the country name was "Wei". In the first year of Yankang (220), Cao Pi forced Emperor Chan Rang of Han Xian, officially replaced the Han Dynasty, established Cao Wei, and set the capital Luoyang, until the second year of Xianxi (265), Sima Yan usurped Wei, changed the name of the country to Jin, and Cao Wei perished.
Because Cao Wei occupied the Central Plains region among the Three Kingdoms, his national strength was far superior to that of Shu Han and Eastern Wu. During the Cao Wei Dynasty, the most important reform was Chen Qun's Jiupin Zhongzheng system, which had a profound impact on the politics of the two Jin and Northern Dynasties. In terms of territory, it inherited the rule of the Eastern Han Dynasty in the Western Regions, set up the Western Regions Governor's Mansion for management, and incorporated the northern part of the Korean Peninsula into the territory after the conquest of Goguryeo by Biqiujian, and the southern states were roughly bounded by the Qinling Mountains, the Huai River, Shu and Wu.
In 263 AD, the Shu Han was conquered and Yizhou and Nanzhong were included in the territory, and the territory of Cao Wei reached about 4 million.
The Three Kingdoms (220 years, 280 years) is a historical period from the Eastern Han Dynasty to the Western Jin Dynasty, which was divided into three regimes: Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu. During the Battle of Chibi, Cao Cao was defeated by the combined forces of Sun and Liu, laying the prototype of the Three Kingdoms.
In 220, Cao Pi usurped the Han Dynasty and became emperor, with the country name "Wei", known as Cao Wei in history, and the history of the Three Kingdoms officially began. The following year, Liu Bei continued the Han Dynasty in Chengdu and was known as Shu Han in history. In 222, Liu Bei lost the Battle of Yiling, and Sun Quan gained most of Jingzhou.
Liu Bei died in 223, and Zhuge Liang assisted Liu Bei's son Liu Chan to re-ally with Sun Quan. In 229, Sun Quan was proclaimed emperor, the country name was "Wu", and the history was called Eastern Wu, so the Three Kingdoms were officially established.
In the following decades, Zhuge Liang and Jiang Wei of Shu Han led the army to the north to attack Cao Wei many times, but they never changed the three-legged pattern. The real power in the later period of Cao Wei was gradually controlled by Sima Yi. In 263, Sima Zhao of Cao Wei launched the Wei War to destroy Shu, and Shu Han perished.
Two years later, Sima Zhao died of illness, and his son Sima Yan abolished Emperor Wei Yuan and established himself, and the founding name was "Jin", known as the Western Jin Dynasty in history. In 280 AD, the Western Jin Dynasty destroyed the Eastern Wu Dynasty and unified China, thus ending the Three Kingdoms period and entering the Jin Dynasty.
-
Establishment of Eastern Wu: On May 23, 229 AD, Sun Quan was proclaimed emperor in Wuchang, and Sun Wu officially established the state, and then moved the capital to Jianye.
The Fall of Eastern Wu: On May 1, 280 AD, the boat division led by Wang Jun first arrived at the foot of Stone City, and Sun Hao, knowing that the general situation had gone, tied his hands behind his back, and carried the coffin to the gate of the Western Jin Dynasty to surrender. Jiaozhou Thorn Shi Tao Huang insisted on not surrendering, and Sun Hao wrote a personal letter to persuade him to be promoted.
Sun Wu perished, and the Western Jin Dynasty achieved unification.
-
The state of Wu (May 23, 229 – May 1, 280), one of the Three Kingdoms, was a regime established by Sun Quan in southeastern China.
-
First of all, there is no doubt that the Sun-Wu regime began to improve the system almost since the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and developed an independent regime south of the Yangtze River in the economic level, productivity level and humanities field, and even the development of Guangdong, Guangxi and Taiwan was the first. His historical contribution is significant.
To put it simply, the establishment and development of Sun Wu is inseparable from four important battles, the first is Sun Ce's Wu County Campaign, which basically obtained the base area centered on Jiangxia, and continued to develop in difficulty, on the eve of the Battle of Guandu, integrated troops, annexed local armed forces and even the remnants of Yuan Shu, and continued to grow in strength.
The second battle was the Battle of Chibi, which basically laid the prototype of the strategic pattern of three points in the world, and in the next nearly a century, Soochow achieved a strong enough military deterrent by virtue of natural hazards and excellent personnel deployment.
The third battle was the Jingzhou War, which we can also call the Xiangfan War, which lasted until the end of the Battle of Yiling, bringing the two strong against the weak back to a relatively balanced situation of one strong against the weak, and also realizing the strategic concept of the Sun Wu regime to completely occupy the south of the Yangtze River.
The fourth battle was the Battle of Shiting, in which the victory over Cao Xiu basically completely established the local hegemony of Eastern Wu for half a century, and also laid a solid foundation for Sun Quan to become emperor, and the military strength of Wu and Wei returned to normal values.
After Sun Quan's death, the disadvantages of the extremely complex political environment of Soochow were exposed, and the continuous political disputes seriously consumed the national strength, so the development of Soochow was inseparable from Sun Quan's outstanding political ability and leadership ability.
-
Soochow during the Three Kingdoms period refers to the present-day areas of Shanghai, Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangxi, Guangdong, Hainan provinces, Hunan, Hubei, and Jiangsu. The territory of Eastern Wu owned most of Yangzhou, and Sun Quan successively obtained the western part of Jingzhou and Jiaozhou after the Battle of Chibi, and after defeating Guan Yu, he obtained the entire southern part of Jingzhou, until Sun Quan's territory stabilized after becoming emperor.
Dongwu North and Cao Wei confronted each other in the area of the Yangtze River, the Huai River and the Han River, with Jianye and Jiangling as the important towns; It is adjacent to the Three Gorges in the west and Shuhan, and Xiling is an important town; It is bounded by the East China Sea in the east and south to the South China Sea, and the central part of Vietnam in the south. Soochow originally had 32 counties and three prefectures (Jingzhou, Yangzhou, and Jiaozhou), and Guangzhou was set up in 226, which was later merged into Jiaozhou, and was restored in 264, adding a total of one state. Sun Wu is the longest lasting state among the Three Kingdoms, with four emperors and a total of 52 years.
-
The territory of Soochow included the present-day Shanghai, Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangxi, Guangdong, Hainan provinces and parts of Hunan, Hubei, and Jiangsu.
Sun and Wu were the longest-lasting of the Three Kingdoms, with four emperors for a total of 52 years (59 years from 222 AD). In the early years of Wei and Huang, Sun Quan was nominally attached to Cao Wei and was named King of Wu. On May 23, the first year of Huanglong (229), Sun Quan was proclaimed emperor in Wuchang (now Ezhou, Hubei), Sun Wu officially founded the state, and then moved the capital to Jianye (now Nanjing, Jiangsu).
In the second year of Huanglong (230), Sun Quan sent Wei Wen and Zhuge to sail to Taiwan (then known as Yizhou), which was the first time that China's political forces reached Taiwan. Sun Wu commanded most of Yangzhou and Jingzhou in the late Han Dynasty and the entire territory of Jiaozhou, and later divided the northeast of Jiaozhou into Guangzhou. Sun Wu vigorously developed the economy and made significant contributions to the development of the Jiangnan region.
On May 1, the fourth year of Tianji (280), Sun Wu died in the Western Jin Dynasty, marking the complete end of the situation of secession since the end of the Han Dynasty and the Three Kingdoms in China.
-
Three Kingdoms Soochow. It was destroyed by the Western Jin Dynasty. In 279 AD, Emperor Wu of Jin.
The order was given to divide into six routes to attack Wu on a large scale, and the Eastern Wu side was centrifuged up and down, neglecting to take precautions, and there was no unified countermeasure, resulting in successive failures. The Jin army was like a bamboo, and it didn't take much effort to attack Jianye City. Sun Hao saw that the general trend was gone, so he had to take off his clothes, ordered someone to tie himself up, went out of the city and surrendered, and Eastern Wu perished.
Wu. (May 23, 229 – May 1, 280), one of the Three Kingdoms, was Sun Quan.
The regime established in southeastern China was called "Wu" and was known as Sun Wu in the historical circles. Due to the relationship with Cao Wei.
Shu Han is in a strong trend, and the area ruled by it is in the east of the Three Kingdoms, so it is also called Eastern Wu.
In August of the second year of the early Huang dynasty of Wei (221), Sun Quan was nominally attached to Cao Wei and was canonized as King of Wu. In October of the third year of the early Huang dynasty (222), Linjiang refused to defend it, declared independence, changed its name to Huangwu, and became an independent kingdom of Wu, which stood with Cao Wei and Shu Han. In the eighth year of Huangwu (229), in April Bingshen (May 23), Sun Quan proclaimed himself emperor in Wuchang (now Ezhou, Hubei), and Sun Wu officially founded the country and changed the name of the year to Huanglong.
In September, the capital was moved to Jianye (now Nanjing, Jiangsu). In the second year of Huanglong (230), Sun Quan sent Wei Wen and Zhuge to sail to Taiwan (then known as Yizhou) with the "Jiashi Wan" in a straight manner, which was the first time that China's political forces reached Taiwan.
The territory of Sun Wu Quansheng included most of Yangzhou and Jingzhou in the late Han Dynasty and the entire territory of Jiaozhou, and later divided the northeast of Jiaozhou into Guangzhou. Sun Wu vigorously developed the economy and made significant contributions to the development of the Jiangnan region.
On May 1, the fourth year of Tianji (280), Sun Wu was destroyed by the Western Jin Dynasty, marking the complete end of the situation of secession since the end of the Han Dynasty and the Three Kingdoms in China.
Sun and Wu were the longest-standing states of the Three Kingdoms, with four emperors and a total of 52 years (59 years if you count from 222 AD when he became King of Wu).
Refers to Yu, Wei, Gu, and Lu. Yu, the representative figure Yu translated. This one was almost killed by Sun Quan. >>>More
Sun Jian, Sun Ce, Zhou Yu, Tai Shici, Cheng Pu, Han Dang, Huang Gai, Jiang Qin, Dong Xi, Ling Cao, Xuan Tong, Lu Meng, Zhu Huan, Xu Sheng, Ding Feng, Lu Xun.
He didn't shout that anyone would dare to kill me, but he died at the hands of Ma Dai. >>>More
After the Battle of Chibi, Zhou Yu refused Cao Cao's inducement to surrender, helped Sun Quan quickly expand the power of Eastern Wu, and also ambitiously planned to take Bashu first, then the north, and then unify the world. In December of the fifteenth year of Jian'an (210), just as he wanted to develop his ambitions, he suddenly fell seriously ill and died in Baqiu (now Yueyang, Hunan) at the age of 36. >>>More
I'll give you statistics of Cao Cao's generals, divided into two categories. >>>More