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I don't think there was a fourth country during the Three Kingdoms period. Because these three most powerful forces restrain each other and contend with each other, the Three Kingdoms were formed. Even if there was a fourth country at that time, it would have been swallowed up by the other three countries.
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Yes, it's just that the power is very small, so it is not called a country, for example, Nanban Menghu, is also a country, but the strength is not good.
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There is a fourth country, and this country is the Yan State established by the Liaodong family, but it was eventually destroyed by Sima Yi.
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There is a 4th country. But there are so many such countries that they can't be compared with the other three countries.
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Wei, Shu, Wu.
The Three Kingdoms (220 and 280) was a historical period that inherited the Eastern Han Dynasty and the Western Jin Dynasty, and was divided into three political branches: Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu. During the fierce hunger and balance 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 was discarded and Emperor Wei Yuan became self-reliant, 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.
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Cao Wei, Shu Han, Sun Wu.
The Three Kingdoms refer to the early countries of Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Sun Wu. The Three Kingdoms (220-280) is a period of Chinese history after the Han Dynasty and before the Jin Dynasty. The Three Kingdoms is also called the Three Kingdoms period, because it was because the world was established by the three forces of "Wei Yuju, Shu (Han), and Wu" at that time.
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The Three Kingdoms period was the Three Kingdoms of Wei, Shu and Wu. The Three Kingdoms period is a historical period in Chinese history after the Han Dynasty, during which three major regimes emerged: Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu. Cao Wei was the most powerful of the Three Kingdoms, and the Shu Han was eventually destroyed by Cao Wei, and the Eastern Wu was finally destroyed by the Western Jin Dynasty, marking the end of the Three Kingdoms separation.
1, Cao Wei
Wei was one of the separatist regimes during the Three Kingdoms period, and it was also the most powerful of the Three Kingdoms. Cao Wei occupied the Central Plains region of the Three Kingdoms, and its national power was far superior to that of Shu Han and Eastern Wu. At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Cao Cao controlled the Eastern Han Dynasty and laid the foundation for Cao Wei, and in the first year of Yankang, Cao Pi formally established Cao Wei.
Thing signal2, Shu Han
Shu Han was established in 221 AD, Liu Bei was proclaimed emperor in Chengdu, the country name was Han, and the history was called "Shu Han." In its heyday, Shu Han occupied Jingzhou, Yizhou and other places, and often took the initiative in the military cover, but it declined in the later period and was finally destroyed by Cao Wei, who was controlled by the Sima family.
3. Soochow
The state of Wu is the regime established by Sun Quan in the southeast of China, and its country name is "Wu", which is called "Sun Wu" in the historical circles, because the area it ruled is Tanshan in the east of the Three Kingdoms, so it is called Eastern Wu. Eastern Wu was eventually destroyed by the Western Jin Dynasty, marking the complete end of the division of the Three Kingdoms.
Cao Wei (also known as Wei) dominated the north.
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Zhang Jiao was the leader of the "Yellow Turban Army", a peasant rebel army in the late Eastern Han Dynasty of China, and the founder of Taiping Dao. Because he received the Taiping Qing Lingshu (i.e., the Taiping Sutra) preached by the Taoist priest Yu Ji and others, he took religious salvation as his own responsibility, and used some of the religious concepts and social and political ideas in it to organize the masses, and preached at the beginning of the Ling Emperor Jianning (168 172). In the first year of Zhongping (184), Zhang Jiao took the slogan of "the sky is dead, the yellow sky should stand, the age is in Jiazi, and the world is auspicious", called himself "General Tiangong", and led the masses to launch an uprising, which is known as the "Yellow Turban Uprising" in history. >>>More
4 generations. The monarch of the Three Kingdoms Cao Wei and the year name Temple name The name of the monarch The year name The year period. >>>More