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Three Kingdoms | A Wisdom Archive on Three Kingdoms |  | Three Kingdoms A selection of articles related to Three Kingdoms |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Three Kingdoms |  |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Three Kingdoms - Three emperorsIn the first month of 220, Cao Cao died and in the tenth month his son Cao Pi deposed the Emperor Xian and ended the Han Dynasty. He named his state Wei and made himself emperor at Luoyang. In 221, Liu Bei named himself Emperor of Han, in a bid to restore the fallen Han dynasty. (His state is known to history as "Shu" or "Shu-Han".) In the same year, Wei bestowed on Sun Quan the title of King of Wu. A year later, Shu-Han troops declared war on Wu and met the Wu armies at the Battle of Yiling. At Xiaoting, Liu Bei was disastrously defeated by ...
See also:Three Kingdoms, Three Kingdoms - Collapse of dynastic power, Three Kingdoms - The rise of Cao Cao, Three Kingdoms - Red Cliffs and its aftermath, Three Kingdoms - Three emperors, Three Kingdoms - Population, Three Kingdoms - Trade and transport, Three Kingdoms - Consolidation, Three Kingdoms - Zhuge Liang's Northern Expeditions, Three Kingdoms - Wu and development of the south, Three Kingdoms - Decline and end of the Three Kingdoms, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Shu, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Wei, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Wu, Three Kingdoms - Major battles, Three Kingdoms - Biographies, Three Kingdoms - Modern-day adaptations Read more here: » Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Three Kingdoms - Three emperors |
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 |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Three Kingdoms - Decline and end of the Three KingdomsFrom the late 230s tensions began to become visible between the imperial Cao clan and the Sima clan. Following the death of Cao Zhen, factionalism was evident between Cao Shuang and the Grand Commandant Sima Yi. In deliberations, Cao Shuang placed his own supporters in important posts and excluded Sima, whom he regarded as a threat. The power of the Sima clan, one of the great landowning families of the Han, was bolstered by Sima Yi's military victories. Additionally, Sima Yi was an extremely capable strategist and politician. In 238 he crus ...
See also:Three Kingdoms, Three Kingdoms - Collapse of dynastic power, Three Kingdoms - The rise of Cao Cao, Three Kingdoms - Red Cliffs and its aftermath, Three Kingdoms - Three emperors, Three Kingdoms - Population, Three Kingdoms - Trade and transport, Three Kingdoms - Consolidation, Three Kingdoms - Zhuge Liang's Northern Expeditions, Three Kingdoms - Wu and development of the south, Three Kingdoms - Decline and end of the Three Kingdoms, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Shu, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Wei, Three Kingdoms - Fall of Wu, Three Kingdoms - Major battles, Three Kingdoms - Biographies, Three Kingdoms - Modern-day adaptations Read more here: » Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Three Kingdoms - Decline and end of the Three Kingdoms |
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 |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia - Ara GayaGojoseon, Jin
Proto-Three Kingdoms:
Buyeo, Okjeo, Dongye
Samhan, Gaya
Three Kingdoms:
Goguryeo, Baekje, Silla
Unified Silla, Balhae
Later Three Kingdoms
Goryeo
Joseon
Japanese Rule
Divided Korea:
N. Korea, S. Korea
List of Rulers
SK electoral history
Ara Gaya, also known as Ana Gaya, Asiryangguk (아시량국, 阿尸良國)), and Alla (안라, 安羅) ...
Read more here: » Ara Gaya: Encyclopedia - Ara Gaya |
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 |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Wars of the Three Kingdoms - BackgroundThe unity of the Three Kingdoms under one monarch was quite a recent development. Since 1541, monarchs of England had also ruled the Kingdom of Ireland through a separate Irish Parliament, while Wales was made part of the Kingdom of England. With the Reformation, King Henry VIII made himself head of the Protestant Church of England and Roman Catholicism was outlawed in England and Wales, but remained the religion of most people in Ireland.
In the separate Kingdom of Scotland the Protestant Reformation was a popular movement led by Joh ...
See also:Wars of the Three Kingdoms, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Background, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Religious Confrontation in Scotland, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - England, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Ireland, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - War Breaks Out, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Main events, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Aftermath Read more here: » Wars of the Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Background |
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 |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Wars of the Three Kingdoms - AftermathWhile the Wars of the Three Kingdoms pre-figured many of the changes that would shape modern Britain, in the short term it resolved little. The English Commonwealth was neither a monarchy nor a real republic. In practise Oliver Cromwell exercised power rather informally, and without a written constitution. There was religious freedom under this regime, but not for Roman Catholics. The Church of England was abolished, as was the House of Lords, but power was never given to the House of Commons and there were no fresh elections. Nor did Cromwe ...
See also:Wars of the Three Kingdoms, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Background, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Religious Confrontation in Scotland, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - England, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Ireland, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - War Breaks Out, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Main events, Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Aftermath Read more here: » Wars of the Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Wars of the Three Kingdoms - Aftermath |
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 |  |  | Three Kingdoms: Encyclopedia II - Guan Xing - Guan Xing in Romance of the Three KingdomsThe Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a 14th century historical novel by Luo Guanzhong, was a romanticization of the events that occurred before and during the Three Kingdoms period. Incorporating Chinese folklore, the author gave Guan Xing's character much more significance.
In Chapter 81, Guan Xing was said to have competed with Zhang Bao, son of Zhang Fei, over the commandership of the vanguard force to attack the Kingdom of Wu to avenge their fathers. Liu Bei, emperor of the Kingdom of Shu, then bade them to swear to be brothe ...
See also:Guan Xing, Guan Xing - Guan Xing in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Guan Xing - Reference Read more here: » Guan Xing: Encyclopedia II - Guan Xing - Guan Xing in Romance of the Three Kingdoms |
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