Datong Zhengde Education Consulting Recruitment Information

Ming Wuzong? Yingzhou triumph? Later, the collective resignation of civil servants was due to Wu Zong's extremely risky behavior and lucky victory. Civil servants are dissatisfied with this and can only make such silent protests.

Ming Wuzong? The Battle of Yingzhou? It happened in the twelfth year after he ascended the throne. At that time, Emperor Zheng De was only 25 years old. Because of fun, he went to the border to fight and called himself a general.

15 17 From August to 10, Wuzong wandered in Datong for more than two months before he met Mongolia. Little prince? The troops are here? Grass valley? . I have to say, General Wu still has some military talent. Under his command, Wang Xun, the company commander stationed at that time, led reinforcements to arrive in time and won the battle.

However, North Korean officials do not agree with this matter. After all, the king of a country is personally involved in risks. What should I do if something goes wrong?

Three generations ago? The change of civil fort? Yingzong was captured and vividly remembered. National humiliation, loyal subjects die. Yingzong and Daizong were brothers, and Yu Qian, a famous minister, died miserably, but only once.

Zhu Yuanzhang finally drove away the Yuan Army and restored Chinese orthodoxy. It's just that Daming almost made the same mistake decades later. The shame of Jingkang? The answer.

Vala threatened the Ming army to surrender with Yingzong. Fortunately, thanks to the efforts of loyal generals such as Yu Qian, Daming established a sect in time, so as not to end up like the Northern Song Dynasty. Who knows that now there is another absurd Ming Wuzong.

Based on the above reasons, it is completely reasonable for civil servants to refuse to accept rewards. Not because they were born rebellious and deliberately opposed to the emperor.

In recent years, many scholars of folk history have great dissatisfaction with the civil service groups in Ming Dynasty. I always feel that the Ming Dynasty was bad in the hands of civil servants (as long as the literati were still officials, the demise of any dynasty could be attributed to the literati), so the emperors of the Ming Dynasty were all good and the bad were all literati?

Moreover, there are some problems in the description of this battle in history books and the statistics of casualties on both sides, which are all attributed to the deliberate smearing of civilian groups.

In this regard, my personal opinion is: this time? Yingzhou triumph? The real situation, or indeed tampered with by civil servants. But what about them? Objection? Because, but not without reason.