The first is Mrs. Fan, who is the only woman in The Romance of Zhao Zilong recorded in historical books. There is Pei Songzhi's annotation "Cloud Biezhuan" in the "Three Kingdoms" as evidence.
The second is Ma Yunlu, Marten's daughter and Ma Chao's sister. Because she practiced martial arts with her father since childhood, she is not only good at needlework, but also good at martial arts. She is generous and gentle, and she is also a super beauty (in short, imagine Fujisaki Shiori).
Therefore, Marten loves her like the apple of her eye and vows to find a son-in-law who is a hero in the world. Later, when I met Zhao Yun, I naturally fell in love at first sight. This is a character in the anti-Three Kingdoms novel, which is naturally fictional.
Zhao Yun (? -229), the word Zilong, was born in Zhengding, Changshan (now Zhengding, Hebei), a famous Shu and Han in the Three Kingdoms period. At the end of the Han Dynasty, warlords scuffled, and Zhao Yun led Gongsun Zan, a general who was easy to take refuge in the White Horse. During this period, he met Liu Bei, a royal relative of the Han Dynasty, but soon after, Zhao Yun left because of his brother's death. About seven years after Zhao Yun left Gongsun Zan, he met Liu Bei in Yecheng and followed Liu Bei from then on.
Zhao Yun followed General Liu Bei for nearly 30 years, participated in Bowangpo Campaign, Changbanpo Campaign and Jiangnan Pacification Campaign, and commanded the Battle of Entering Sichuan, Hanshui Campaign and Ji Gu Campaign alone, all of which achieved very good results. In addition to fighting everywhere, Zhao Yun also took the partial general as the prefect of Guiyang, leaving Sima to stay in the camp and supervise Jiangzhou with the general of Yijun.
Allusions:
In addition, when Zhao Yun pacified Yizhou, he quoted the story of Huo Qubing to persuade Liu Bei to return the farmland to the people. After Guan Yu and Zhang Fei were killed, he advised Liu Bei not to cut Wu. He was praised by later generations as a Confucian general with a large number of ministers, and even considered a perfect figure in the Three Kingdoms period. After his death, Zhao Yun was named "Shunping Hou" by posthumous title, and his image of "ever-victorious general" was widely circulated.
The title of General Zhao Yunsheng is widely circulated among the people, and the earliest source is difficult to verify. Some scholars in Ming and Qing dynasties also mentioned it in their personal works, but they did not directly say the word "ever-victorious general", but used words such as "invincible general" and "invincible general".
In 1984 China Quyi Publishing House's ballad "Biography of the Tang Dynasty", Luo Cheng was compared to the ever-victorious general Zhao Zilong. In 2008, Zhao Yun was portrayed as an ever-victorious general in the movie "Breaking the Dragon" directed by Li Rengang and starring Andy Lau.