An urgent introduction to Liu Bei and Zhuge Liang

Liu Bei's character profile

His courtesy name was Xuande, a native of Zhuojun (now Zhuoxian County, Hebei Province). He was a descendant of Liu Sheng, Prince Jing of Zhongshan, the son of Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty, and was the founding king of Shuhan in the Three Kingdoms. In the last years of Emperor Ling of the Eastern Han Dynasty, he worked with Guan Yu and Zhang Fei to defeat the Yellow Turban bandits, and became the county captain of Anxi Village. The secret attempt to kill Cao Cao failed and he fled. After three visits to the thatched cottage, Zhuge Liang assisted him. Later, he joined forces with Sun Quan to defeat Cao Cao in Chibi, captured Yizhou and Hanzhong, and established himself as the king of Hanzhong. In 221, he ascended the throne in Chengdu and proclaimed himself emperor. His country was named Han, and his reign was named Zhangwu. He was defeated in the attack on Eastern Wu and suffered heavy losses. He returned to Baidi City and died of illness at the age of sixty-two. His posthumous title was Zhaolie Emperor and he was known as Liu Xianzhu in history.

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Zhuge Liang (181-234 AD), Han nationality, named Kongming, also known as Wolong layman. Born in Yinan County, Shandong Province, he was an outstanding prime minister of the Shu Han Dynasty during the Three Kingdoms period in China, as well as a statesman, military strategist, strategist, essayist, and diplomat. Historical records record that he was eight feet tall, which is about 1.84 meters today.

Zhuge Liang's birthday: Xinyou, Bingshen, Guichou, Dingsi.

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