Historians of later generations have always had doubts about Zhu Gaochi's national politics and Judy's Northern Expedition, because some people in Zhu Gaochi said it five times and some people said it six times. No one has ever given a clear answer to the question of how many times Zhu Gaochi supervised the country. Most of the answers are five or six times, because Judy's Northern Expedition was also five or six times. Zhu Gaochi refers to Judy's Northern Expedition in the early Ming Dynasty. He handed over the management of the capital to Zhu Gaochi, then the Crown Prince, and Judy's Northern Expedition lasted 1 1 year. Later, historians believed that Judy had made five or six northern expeditions, so Crown Prince Zhu Gaochi also supervised the country five or six times. There are two completely different answers to the question of how many times Zhu Gaochi supervised the country, because Ming Taizu Judy did not conduct the fifth Northern Expedition thoroughly. His first five northern expeditions were all carried out by himself, and he won. However, Judy herself died of illness on the way to the victory of the fifth Northern Expedition. Before he died, he ordered a general to carry out the sixth northern expedition, and still let the crown prince supervise the country. The sixth northern expedition was not carried out by Judy herself, but.
It is for this reason that there are two answers to the number of times that Zhu Gaochi manages the country. Some people think that Judy's first five northern expeditions are reasonable, so Zhu Gaochi supervised the country five times, while others think that the sixth northern expedition was also carried out under Judy's authorization, so Zhu Gaochi should also be regarded as the last one, so there were six northern expeditions and Zhu Gaochi supervised the country six times. Historians of later generations have always believed that the background of Zhu Gaochi's national politics is very complicated, which is due to both Zhu Gaochi's own reasons and Judy's ambition to explore the North. Therefore, the background of state supervision in Zhu Gaochi mainly consists of two aspects. One is that Judy quickly established Zhu Gaochi as the Prince after she ascended the throne, and accumulated rich experience in political struggle. Another way of saying this is that Judy is a very talented person, and most of his political career has been spent on the border, which is not correct.
In fact, the most important thing in the background of Zhu Gaochi's national politics is that Zhu Yuanzhang personally appointed Zhu Gaochi as the Prince. Many historians later commented that Judy's success in usurping the throne was largely due to the help of Zhu Gaochi, and Zhu Gaochi himself was a famous monarch in the history of the Ming Dynasty. He was loved by Zhu Yuanzhang when he was alive, and Zhu Gaochi's prestige reached its peak after the war of Jingnan, which laid the foundation for the later national politics. In addition, the background of Zhu Gaochi's state supervision should also include the six northern expeditions of Amin Emperor Judy. Judy, a rare emperor in the history of the Ming Dynasty, began a large-scale military operation less than eight years after she ascended the throne. He made five northern expeditions, a total of 1 1 year, which completely eliminated the threat of the Ming Dynasty, but during his northern expedition, he stayed in Beijing to deal with it instead of him.
In fact, apart from the reasons of the two emperors themselves, the background of Zhu Gaochi's supervision of the country should also include the support of ministers. Zhu Gaochi had accumulated rich political capital and political struggle experience before he took charge of state power. He is a man who follows the rules and does not show obvious suppression of party struggle. Moreover, his political skills are also relatively clever, which won him the love of some ministers, and enabled Zhu Gaochi to quickly supervise the country after Judy left, and was recognized by the ministers at that time. Zhu Gaochi prison refers to Judy's northern expedition in the early years of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty, and gave the decision on state affairs to Crown Prince Zhu Gaochi. Historians of later generations have always held a completely positive attitude towards Zhu Gaochi's state supervision, believing that Zhu Gaochi's influence on state supervision was mainly positive, because Zhu Gaochi gained rich struggle experience during this period, which enabled him to accumulate a lot of political capital in the future.
Historians of later generations believe that Zhu Gaochi's supervision over the state generally promoted the development of the history of the Ming Dynasty, because long-term state supervision allowed Zhu Gaochi to accumulate a lot of experience in governing the country. After Zhu Gaochi became king, most of the skills he took against his political opponents were learned from this period. Although he was in office for a short time, he also pardoned many old ministers and * * * many unjust prisons during his reign. These political experiences were all learned from the ministers around him during this period. In addition, Zhu Gaochi's supervision of the country brought good news to the intellectuals at that time, because during the reign of Emperor Chengzu of the Ming Dynasty, the status of intellectuals was very low, while the Crown Prince Zhu Gaochi was gentle. During his period of governing the country, the culture was revived, the people in the world had a rest, the treatment of scholars was greatly improved, and the cultural soft power of the Ming Dynasty was greatly improved during this period.
Generally speaking, the influence of Zhu Gaochi's state supervision is favorable, because Zhu Gaochi's state supervision not only stopped some domestic exorbitant taxes and levies, but also put down the frequent ethnic rebellions in southwest China, and also dealt a blow to Zhu Gaochi's partisan struggle in the imperial court to some extent. Although it was not completely eliminated, it had a good influence on the rule in the early Ming Dynasty. "Zhu Gaochi supervised the country" refers to the historical event that the then Crown Prince Zhu Gaochi stayed in Beijing to take charge of the imperial power when his father, Ming Taizu Judy, made the Northern Expedition. Zhu Gaochi has conducted six national inspections. Historians generally have a good evaluation of Zhu Gaochi's state supervision, and think that Zhu Gaochi, as the Crown Prince, has done a very good job in this state supervision.
Many historians use the word "quite" to describe Zhu Gaochi's state supervision, because during the period of 1 1 from the 6th year of Yongle to the 22nd year of Yongle, Zhu Gaochi, as the crown prince, was the actual ruler of the Ming Dynasty at that time. He generally takes a moderate attitude when dealing with daily political affairs, and does not destroy any party's forces, nor does he deliberately support his own forces, so he is narrowly missed in the face of several major events. Historians of later generations rated Zhu Gaochi as an honest man, because he was never confused, very opinionated and very rational. Especially at critical moments, he was able to stand firm and not easily offend people, and played well among ministers and parties.
But later, historians didn't evaluate Zhu Gaochi very well, because some historians thought that Zhu Gaochi didn't make much contribution to the Ming Dynasty in the 1 1 year after the founding of the People's Republic of China. From the 6th year of Yongle to the 22nd year of Yongle, it has been a recession stage in the early Ming Dynasty, on the one hand, because Ming Taizu Judy lost too much manpower and material resources in the Northern Expedition, and on the other hand, because Zhu Gaochi, as the Crown Prince, did not exercise his power well and did not make the country's economy. But on the whole, Zhu Gaochi was a successful prison because Zhu Gaochi gained rich experience in political struggle during this period, and the brutal political struggle made Zhu Gaochi have rich experience against the enemy after he acceded to the throne. In addition, Zhu Gaochi also dealt with the national rebellion from the southwest and beheaded some ministers who colluded with the imperial court for personal gain. In the face of several major events, Zhu Gaochi showed a moderate distance, and there is nothing to blame.