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In the book "The Turning Point of History", it is said that the battle of Chibi was defeated because of Cao Cao's head wind disease and the plague From some other history books, Cao Cao's head wind disease is often mentioned It can be seen that Cao Cao did have a head wind disease As for whether he died of head wind disease, we cannot verify it, so we can only infer it in this way.
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The records of various versions of history are different, and sometimes Cao Cao's death is scandalized for political purposes, because he is not from the Han Dynasty. Now most say he died of illness, from a head wind. I think he's also suffering from overwork...But this is all written by predecessors and cannot be studied.
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It's sick and dead Think about it, how many comfortable days will there be in your life to fight the world You must be full of illness The most powerful thing is the head wind In the end, Hua Tuo suggested that he have surgery He didn't dare to lie At that time, no one had ever tried head surgery So he gave up and died in the end!
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In the first month of the twenty-fifth year of Jian'an (220), Cao Cao returned to Luoyang. In the same month, he died of illness in Luoyang at the age of 66. In October of this year, Cao Pi was proclaimed emperor on behalf of the Han Dynasty, with the country name Wei, and Cao Cao was posthumously honored as Emperor Taizuwu.
Head wind, it should be the current cerebral hemorrhage!
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Most of the view is that he died of a head stroke. As for the theory of cutting down trees, it may be a hypothesis that was born because the cause was not identified, or it may be a wild history or something.
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The headache and death were originally made by Hua Tuo ** Then he suspected Hua Tuo In the end, Hua Tuo left Cao Cao died of illness without treatment.
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The Romance of the Three Kingdoms is a superstitious ending. It is estimated that Cao Cao either had brain cancer or cerebral congestion. I'm interested in what Hua Tuo said, Hua Tuo said that he could open his skull**, I don't know if he can really do it.
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In the twenty-fifth year of Jian'an, Cao Cao died of illness in Luoyang at the age of sixty-two.
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Cao Cao was a famous representative of the Three Kingdoms period, and when you hear Cao Cao's name, you will think of many fierce battles and stories. Historians have commented that he was a "supernatural man" who lived to be 66 years old, not an untimely death at the time, but not a long life. Do you know how Cao Cao died?
Let's take a look at how Cao Cao died!
Cao Cao, whose name is Mengde, was a political and military strategist who was proficient in the art of war in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and an outstanding writer who was good at poetry. His famous works such as "Watching the Sea" and "Turtle Although Shou" have been widely praised by later generations. In the film and television drama "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", Cao Cao died of illness, although Cao Cao fought all his life, but because he was too suspicious, he rejected Hua Tuo's **, and finally died of head wind.
In Cao Cao's life, his achievements were not only reflected on the battlefield, but also his own reform and governance of the country, which was the most open among the three kingdoms. Cao Cao loves talents, so he took the lead in using the system of selecting talents from the people, and it is also a way out for the people to change their fate, so Cao Cao has never been short of talents, just need to find a way to use them well.
During the Battle of Guandu, the two armies faced each other, the war was tense, and Cao Cao's headache began to appear. Until his later years, his brain disease did not improve, not to mention, and his attacks were unusually frequent. After carefully diagnosing Cao Cao, Hua Tuo, a miracle doctor at that time, determined that Cao Cao had a brain tumor in his skull and proposed a craniotomy.
Cao Cao, because of his naturally suspicious personality and suspicion of Hua Tuo's motives, killed Hua Tuo, and no one has been able to cure his brain disease.
On the 23rd day of the first month of the 25th year of Jian'an, Cao Cao, then 63 years old, died of brain disease in Luoyang, and a generation of Shenshen heroes fell. Cao Cao served as the prime minister of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and later became the king of Wei, laying the foundation for the establishment of Cao Wei. After his death, he was nicknamed King Wu.
His son Cao Pi was called the emperor, and he was posthumously honored as Emperor Wu, and the temple name was Taizu.
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On March 15, 220 AD, Cao Cao died of illness in Luoyang at the age of 66, nicknamed "King Wu", and was buried in Gaoling after his death.
The specific cause of Cao Cao's death:
Cao Cao began to lead troops to fight at the age of 30 and fought for 36 years until his death. As a commander-in-chief, he was under tremendous pressure, so he suffered from headaches all the time. During the Battle of Guandu, Hua Lun stabbed Cao Cao in the head to relieve his headache, but as the condition worsened, the headache became more and more intense, so Cao Cao asked Hua Lun for the best way.
After some thought, Warren suggested that he undergo a craniotomy to remove the lesion. But Cao Cao was suspicious by nature, thinking that Hua Tuo was going to murder him, so he ordered Hua Tuo to be killed, and his condition gradually worsened because he could not be treated, and finally after the battle of Xiangfan, Cao Cao returned to Luoyang, because of headaches, he became terminally ill, and died of illness in Luoyang.
Cao Cao Profile: Emperor Wu of Wei Cao Cao (March 15, 220, 155), his real name is Jili, the word Mengde, the nickname Apu, the nickname Emperor Wu (Emperor Wu of Wei), a native of Peiguo County (now Bozhou, Anhui). He was an outstanding politician, military strategist, writer, and calligrapher in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and the founder of the Cao Wei regime.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the world was in turmoil, Cao Cao conquered the Quartet in the name of Liu Xie, the emperor of the Han Dynasty, and eliminated the separatist forces such as Eryuan, Lü Bu, Liu Biao, Ma Chao, and Han Sui internally, and surrendered the Southern Xiongnu, Wuhuan, Xianbei, etc., to unify northern China, and implemented a series of policies to restore economic production and social order, expand tuntian, build water conservancy, reward agriculture, attach importance to handicrafts, resettle the exiled population, and implement "rent regulation", so that the Central Plains society gradually stabilized and the economy took a turn for the better.
In the eighteenth year of Jian'an (213), Cao Cao was awarded the title of Duke of Wei, established the Duchy of Wei, set the capital of Yecheng, Hebei, and then entered the King of Wei. After his death, his son Cao Pi was called the emperor, and Cao Cao was posthumously honored as Emperor Wu, and the temple name was Taizu.
Cao Cao likes to use poetry and prose to express his political ambitions and reflect the people's livelihood and suffering, and is a representative of Wei and Jin literature, and Lu Xun praised him as "the ancestor of reforming articles". At the same time, Cao Cao was good at calligraphy, and Zhang Huaijun of the Tang Dynasty rated Cao Cao's chapter grass as a "wonderful product" in the Tang Dynasty.
No. Cao Cao values Guo Jia very much, but he is not the most important, I think Cao Cao is the most important is Sima Yi.
Cao Cao is generally a contradictory character, both cherishing talents and loving talents (Cao Cao's most shocking move is the three orders he issued as prime minister) and jealous of talents! (Killing Yang Xiu is the best proof). He has both a treacherous, selfish, cruel, and suspicious personality, as well as a far-sighted, strategic, and eloquent side that is good at employing people. >>>More
I also like him very much, well, he is relatively rich After the failure of the assassination of Dong Zhuo, he fled to his home, and he said that the money was not enough, and said that we have a family here that has money, you can go and discuss, and the rich businessman paid to support him, so he recruited troops and bought thousands of people. Later, the Cao brothers and the Xiahou family all came to him.
In Cao Cao's "Internal Commandment", there is such a clause: "Loneliness is not good for fresh decorations." "To the effect that I don't like ornate and conspicuous utensils. >>>More
Cao Cao was defeated and entered Huarong Road, the main road guarded by Guan Yu here Because Cao Cao was kind to Guan Yu before, Guan Yu was willful and let Cao Cao go.