Liu Bei regarded himself as Uncle Liu Huang and won the world, is he really a royal nobleman of the

Updated on history 2024-07-19
25 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    It is very suspicious whether Liu Bang is really a royal nobleman of the Han Dynasty, and it is very likely that he found an endorsement for himself to facilitate his own trouble.

    Liu Bei originally only lived in a small village, and few people knew about his existence, so his background and identity have always been a mystery, and no one knows about it. At that time, Cao Cao, Yuan Shao, Yuan Shu, Han Fu, Tao Qian, Liu Biao, etc., almost every one of them had an intricate power and background, Cao Cao was a descendant of eunuchs, known throughout the Manchu Dynasty, Yuan Shao and Yuan Shu brothers were the four generations and three princes, Han Fu, Tao Qian and others were all old faces of officialdom, Dong Zhuo was also a famous state pastor, so Liu Bei, who had no identity, must have an identity that could pull the banner, so he chose the identity of Uncle Liu Huang, claiming to be the descendant of King Jing of Zhongshan. Liu Sheng, King Jing of Zhongshan, is the son of Emperor Liu Qi of the Han Dynasty and the half-brother of Emperor Liu Che of the Han Dynasty.

    Liu Bei said that he was Liu Sheng's descendant, and this title was enough for him. More importantly, according to records, Liu Sheng was lustful by nature and had more than 120 sons in his lifetime. There are many heirs, according to the normal reproduction situation, it was passed on to Liu Bei's generation at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and the uncles and brothers of Liu Bei's generation may have reached more than 1,000 people, and it is extremely difficult to prove his identity if anyone really has nothing to do.

    So the smart Liu Bei found himself a background as a descendant of King Jing of Zhongshan, and when he met people, he said that I was a descendant of King Jing and an authentic royal family. With such a loud and prestigious name of Uncle Liu Huang, of course, it is more conducive to Liu Bei to buy people's hearts and win over forces. Liu Bei met with Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty after he and Cao Cao killed Lü Bu and collected Zhang Liao.

    And after claiming that he was King Jing of Zhongshan, Emperor Han Xian wanted to use Liu Bei as a bargaining chip for his turnaround, and helping Liu Bei confirm his identity was equivalent to helping himself, and there was no way to check it anyway, so there was a matter of recognizing relatives. The other princes have nothing to worry about this identity, anyway, at this time, the title of "Uncle Huang" is as false as "Emperor", so why not give it to him. Liu Bei also sat down on this identity in this way.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Yes, but it's a bit of a farther line of nobility. Although he considers himself Uncle Liu Huang. It looked like he was putting gold on himself, but he needed to have that kind of belief to back him up.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    There is no way to find out all this, he said that he is after King Jing of Zhongshan, and there are more than 100 sons of King Jing of Zhongshan, which shows that this number is huge, and it is impossible to find out.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    If Liu Bei didn't say that he was a nobleman of the Han Dynasty's royal family, he would not have the opportunity to become the leader and lead some people to fight the world. He is indeed a clan of the Han Dynasty, but he is not a descendant.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    In the troubled times of the late Eastern Han Dynasty, did Liu Bei really rely on the name of the emperor's uncle to make his fortune? Why? In the troubled times of the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Liu Bei really relied on the name of the emperor's uncle to make his fortune.

    Liu Bei Jing Wang Zhongshan's identity took a long time, his grandfather was raised filial piety, he found the Dongjun County Order, Liu Bei was from the hands of one person, and Cao Cao was named a general when he returned to Xuchang to stay behind, at that time he was still more concerned about the background, he must be sure, but no one has doubted it, so we should still be able to confirm that there is no problem with the identity. In addition, by the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the scale of the Han clan was actually very large, not to mention the humble people like Liu Bei, there were many clansmen in the court, such as the familiar Jingzhou Liu Biao, two generations of Yizhou Liu Yan, Liu Zhang, Youzhou Liu Yu, etc., there are nearly 10 people in the annals of history.

    Liu Bei's Han status did not directly help him, and there was no need to pretend to be Liu Bei. However, there is no mention in the official history that Liu Bei was the uncle of Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty. The legend of the Yellow Turban comes from "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", but it says that Liu Bei was the grandson of Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty.

    If this is true, then he cannot be Liu Bei's uncle, because Liu Xie is the grandson of Emperor Jing of Han and has a much higher status than Liu Bei. Therefore, there should be no problem to say that Liu Bei is a relative of the Han family, but whether he is the emperor's uncle or not, there is no evidence to prove.

    It is hard to imagine that such a large Liu family clan of tens of thousands of people in the Han Dynasty can finally support half of the world, and it is actually a distant relative of Liu Jia, a mat weaver. In addition to those who do not have strength, let's take a look at the rulers of the Liu family in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, such as Liu Yu in Yangzhou, Liu Biao in Jingzhou, and Liu Zhang in Yizhou. Which one is not a Han clan with heavy troops?

    But did they play any key role? In troubled times, only the Almighty resides. So many clansmen of the Liu family have failed to keep the Han family, so why blame Liu Bei, a distant relative of the Han family?

    It's not easy for me to see Liu Bei. Liu Bei this"Uncle"It is not worth mentioning in the eyes of others, the emperor surnamed Liu started from Gaozu four hundred years ago, and it is an exaggeration to say that anyone with the surname Liu does not have any royal blood. Moreover, Liu Bei, the Liu family, and the Liu family of Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty have ceased to be a family since Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty.

    Besides, in that troubled era, reasoning had to rely on fists, and even the authentic Emperor Han Xian had to be taken care of, who cared about your uncle? I don't know if it's true.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Because Liu Bei is the fifteenth grandson of Liu Bang, the ancestor of the Han Dynasty, after King Jing of Zhongshan, belongs to the royal family, and is a generation higher than Liu Xie, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty at that time, so people call Liu Bei Huang Uncle Liu.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Because he is even higher than Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty, and he has the blood relationship of the Emperor of the Western Han Dynasty. In addition, when Emperor Xian of Han was kidnapped by Cao Cao, he met his distant relative Liu Bei, and the two hit it off to fight Cao Cao together.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Liu Bei is from the royal family, and he is an imperial uncle of Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty, so he is called Uncle Liuhuang, which is a very normal title.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Liu Bei, since Xuande, the fifteenth grandson of Liu Bang, the ancestor of the Han Dynasty, and the twelfth grandson of Liu Sheng, the king of Zhongshan, belonged to the royal family of the Western Han Dynasty. Liu Bei was later called Uncle Liu Huang because he was one generation older than Emperor Liu Xie of the Han Dynasty and was Liu Xie's uncle.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Ancient people should attach great importance to genealogy, and the Three Kingdoms only said that Bei was a descendant of Liu Sheng, King Jing of Zhongshan in the Han Dynasty, so on this point, he was really not good at lying, after all, this was not history at the time, you look at the time when no one came out to deny this, this can be exterminated, and the side also shows that he is at least a royal prince.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    You must know that the emperor's uncle at that time was not worth much, and the emperor's uncle had eight hundred, if not a thousand. The Han Dynasty implemented the sub-feudal system, Liu Bang's son was divided into various feuds, all over the country were royal relatives, and each emperor would divide his sons and brothers out, in ancient times, people had nothing to do and gave birth, so the imperial uncle had a lot of extenuating circumstances, or Liu Bei made baskets and sold baskets, why didn't others laugh at him for pretending to be the imperial uncle, it must have been like that at that time.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Liu Bei, a descendant of Liu Sheng, King Jing of the Han Dynasty, was the uncle of the Han Emperor and the founding emperor of the Shu Han Dynasty during the Three Kingdoms period. He was a modest, courteous corporal, lenient to others, ambitious, known and good at making use of people, and was praised by the world for his benevolence, and was a famous politician in the Three Kingdoms period and a famous hero in the Three Kingdoms period. In 221 A.D., he was proclaimed emperor in Chengdu, with the country name Han and the year name Zhangwu, occupying all of present-day Sichuan, most of Yunnan and Guizhou, and part of Hanzhong in Shaanxi and Bailongjiang in Gansu.

    Known as Shu or Shu Han in history, he died of illness in the White Emperor City in 223 AD, at the age of 63, he was called Emperor Zhaolie, and the temple was called Liezu, and the historian called him the ancestor again.

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Yes, a side branch of the royal family, a declining aristocracy. In the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Emperor Han Xian ordered people to check the genealogy, proving that Liu Bei was indeed his imperial uncle. Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty had many imperial uncles, but Liu Bei was not only loyal to him who had lost power, but also had a lot of potential, so he gave him the honor of the imperial uncle of the Han Dynasty.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Yes, it can be said that it is a family related to the royal family or a declining royal family.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    People in history have admitted it, and we can't help it.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Three thousand miles in one table. Distant relatives.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Liu Bei, Emperor Zhaolie of the Shu Han Dynasty, had a title that he was proud of when he made his fortune earlier: Uncle Liu Huang. It is said that when Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty began to chat with Liu Bei, Liu Bei shyly claimed to be the King of Zhongshan, so Emperor Xian affectionately called him the emperor's uncle, who is this King of Zhongshan?

    How many generations did Liu Bei and Emperor Xian of Han have been related?

    At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, 15 miles south of Zhuozhou City, there is such a small village called Lousang Village, Liu Bei was born in this small village, most of the people in Lousang Village are surnamed Liu, where did these households surnamed Liu come from?

    In the early years of the Western Han Dynasty, Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty had 14 sons, of which the eighth son was named Liu Sheng, named the King of Zhongshan, and Liu Sheng, the King of Zhongshan, settled in Hebei. "Joy wine is good".

    What is good wine? The first loves to drink fine wine, the second loves to marry beautiful women, there is no record in the history books about how many beauties he married, but there is one thing that is recorded, Liu Sheng, the king of Zhongshan, has 120 sons, everyone can imagine how many beauties he has to marry to have 120 sons!

    Among the 120 sons, there is a son named Liu Zhen, this Liu Zhen later settled in Zhuozhou, Lousang Village, these people surnamed Liu should be Liu Zhen's descendants, to trace from this information, Liu Bei, as Liu Zhen's descendant, he does have the blood of the Han royal family, and he is indeed a relative of the emperor.

    But this royal relative is a bit miserable, because there is a time gap of more than 300 years, and a pedigree of 13 generations, in other words, although there is the DNA of the royal family, it cannot bring specific changes in the quality of life to life.

    Liu Bei's grandfather is called Liu Xiong, he is filial piety, and he has been the county magistrate of Fan County, Dongjun, and Liu Bei's family is also a scholarly family, but Liu Bei's father died young, and Liu Bei and his mother, orphans and widows, depended on each other, and their lives were very difficult.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Liu Bei was a descendant of Liu Sheng, King Jing of Zhongshan in the Western Han Dynasty, and the founding emperor of the Shu Han Dynasty during the Three Kingdoms period.

    Liu Bei (June 10, 161, 223), the name Xuande, was a native of Zhuo County, Zhuo County, Youzhou (now Zhuozhou City, Hebei Province) in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, a politician, and historians also called him the ancestor.

    Liu Bei studied with Gongsun Zhan under Lu Zhi, and then participated in the suppression of the Yellow Turban Uprising. Together with Guan Yu and Zhang Fei, he has successively rescued Beihai Kong Rong and Xuzhou Tao Qian. After Tao Qian died of illness, he ceded Xuzhou to Liu Bei.

    Liu Bei was exiled in his early days, took refuge in many princes, and later defeated Cao Cao in the Battle of Chibi and Sun Quan's alliance with Sun Quan, taking advantage of the situation to seize Jingzhou, and then entered Yizhou to establish the Shu Han regime. Chen Shou commented that Liu Bei's power was slightly inferior to Cao Cao, but his Hongyi was generous, knew people and treated people, was indomitable, and eventually became an emperor. Liu Bei himself once said that when he does things, "every time he goes against him, things will be done".

    In the first year of Zhangwu (221), Liu Bei was proclaimed emperor in Chengdu, the country was called Han, the year name was Zhangwu, and the history was called Shu or Shu Han, occupying all of present-day Sichuan, most of Yunnan, Guizhou, Hanzhong in Shaanxi and part of Bailongjiang in Gansu.

    In the third year of Zhangwu (223 years), Liu Bei died of illness in the White Emperor City, at the age of 63, he was called Emperor Zhaolie, and the temple was called Liezu (one said Taizong), and he was buried in Huiling. In later generations, there are many literary and artistic works with it as the protagonist, and there is Zhaolie Temple in Chengdu Wuhou Temple to commemorate.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    The historical records are like this, Liu Bang (Han Gaozu) Liu Heng (Emperor Wen of the Han Dynasty) Liu Qi (Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty) Liu Sheng (King Jing of Zhongshan) Liu Zhen (Lucheng Tinghou) Liu Ang Liu Lu (Zhanghou) Liu Lian (Yishui Hou) Liu Ying (Qinyang Hou) Liu Jian (An Guohou) Liu Aihua (Guangling Hou) Liu Xian (Miao Shuihou) Liu Shu (Qiyi Hou) Liu Yi (Qiyang Hou) Liu Bi (Yuan Zehou) Liu Budo (Fengling Hou) Liu Hui (Jichuan Hou) Liu Xiong Liu Hong Liu Bei.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Yes, but dozens of generations apart.

    Liu Bang (Han Gaozu) Liu Heng (Emperor Wen of the Han Dynasty) Liu Qi (Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty) Liu Sheng (King Jing of Zhongshan) Liu Zhen (Lucheng Tinghou) Liu Ang Liu Lu (Zhanghou) Liu Lian (Yishui Hou) Liu Ying (Qinyang Hou) Liu Jian (An Guohou) Liu Aihua (Guangling Hou) Liu Xian (Miao Shuihou) Liu Shu (Qiyi Hou) Liu Yi (Qiyang Hou) Liu Bi (Yuan Zehou) Liu Budo (Fengling Hou) Liu Hui (Jichuan Hou) Liu Xiong Liu Hong Liu Bei.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    After the eighth generation of Shangsu, the grandfather of the grandfather who is the same grandfather as the current emperor is the grandfather of the grandfather, and the next generation is the uncle and nephew.

    - Not kidding, it's true.

    As long as you need it, say yes.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Liu Bei was the concubine of Emperor Liu Qi of the Han Dynasty and the half-brother of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty.

    By Liu Bei's generation, it had long since decayed, and he belonged to the Han family. In terms of generation, he is indeed the distant uncle of Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    It really is. The emperor checked the genealogy sealed.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    Liu Bang (Han Gaozu) Liu Heng (Emperor Wen of the Han Dynasty) Liu Qi (Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty) Liu Sheng (King Jing of Zhongshan) Liu Zhen (Lucheng Tinghou) Liu Ang Liu Lu (Zhanghou) Liu Lian (Yishui Hou) Liu Ying (Qinyang Hou) Liu Jian (An Guohou) Liu Aihua (Guangling Hou) Liu Xian (Miao Shuihou) Liu Shu (Qiyi Hou) Liu Yi (Qiyang Hou) Liu Bi (Yuan Zehou) Liu Budo (Fengling Hou) Liu Hui (Jichuan Hou) Liu Xiong Liu Hong Liu Bei.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Yes, this is clearly recorded in the history books.

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