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    History and Literature

  • Historical Figures
  • Historical Events
  • Archeology and Cultural Relics
  • Classics
  • Anecdotes
  • Literature
  • Humanistic Spirit

 

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Most Popular

  • Oath of Brotherhood in the Peach Garden
    Oath of Brotherhood in the Peach Garden
    At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the whole Chinese society was in great turbulence.
  • Yue Fei's Mother Tattooing on His Back
    Yue Fei's Mother Tattooing on His Back
    Zong Ze, an old anti-Jin commander, handed his seal to Yue Fei when hovering between life and death.
  • Tu Si Hu Bei (The fox mourns the death of the hare)
    Tu Si Hu Bei (The fox mourns the death of the hare)
    This is an idiom, meaning that when the hare dies, the fox feels grieved.

Recommended Topics

  • Jiao Tu San Ku (A wily hare has three burrows)
    Jiao Tu San Ku (A wily hare has three burrows)
    The idiom literally means that a wily hare prepares several burrows to hide.
  • Zhou Chu Weeding Out
    Zhou Chu Weeding Out "Three Harms"
    Zhou Chu was born in 242 and died in 297, both his grandfather and father being the official of the Wu State during the Three Kingdoms Period.
    • Anecdotes

      Three Visits to the Thatched Cottage,Empty Fort Strategy,Scrape the Poison off the Bone,Cutting Hair Instead of Head,Quench Thirst by Watching Plums (Console Oneself with Vain Hopes),Talk of Cao Cao and He Comes (Talk of the Devil and He Comes),Defining a Hero While Warming the Wine,Zhou Yu Beat Huang Gai,Zhou Yu Has Already Been Born, So Why Was Zhuge Liang Ever Born?,Return the Jade Intact to the State of Zhao
  • Capturing Military Graduate Li (Li Wuju)

    Capturing Military Graduate Li (Li Wuju)
    Once, Liu Yong made a private inspection trip in plain clothes outside Beijing.
  • How could any egg stay intact once the nest has been destroyed?

    How could any egg stay intact once the nest has been destroyed?
    The sentence literally means since the nest is destroyed, all of the eggs inside shall also be broken.
  • Let him who tied the bell on the tiger take it off.

    Let him who tied the bell on the tiger take it off.
    This idiom is from the story about a monk named Fadeng.
  • Fokulun the Fairy

    Fokulun the Fairy
    Legend has it that long long ago, there were three beautiful fairies living on the lakeside of the Heavenly Lake in Changbai Mountain.
  • Santai Beating the Tiger

    Santai Beating the Tiger
    Once, Emperor Kangxi encountered a fierce tiger when he was hunting in the wild.
  • Fishing of Shen Wan San

    Fishing of Shen Wan San
    Shen Wan San is a man of nabobism at the end of the Yuan Dynasty and at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty
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