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This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 6 September 2020 and 6 December 2020. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): 八路军被服厂李厂长.
Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignmentbyPrimeBOT (talk) 02:45, 17 January 2022 (UTC)Reply
Known for his vitue and his desire to restore order for the Han Dynasty, Liu Bei could've made China into a land of justice and righteous rule if he didn't fade away into the heveans from the Battle of Yi Ling. Liu Bei, to me, will always remind many people of what it takes to be vituous when so much chaos is around in the lands of China.
I believe he could've done more for China even with all odds standing against him and when the chances are so slim that there would be no tomorrow for him, his brother, his generals, and the people that believed in him.
--Sho Luo 20:58, 15 Jan 2005 (UTC)From Bigboss
There is conflict between the Liu Bei article and the Three Kingdoms article. The latter acknowledges Guan and Zhang as Liu's sworn brothers while he former dismisses the brotherhood as fictional.
Additionally, I am glad the article itself does not credit Liu Bei with any sort of virtue, as outside of fiction he is no more virtuous or noble than Cao Cao, a much villified historical figure.
Can anyone provide a source for this claim? i've never heard of it before, but i'm rather ignorant. --Plastictv 16:53, 24 August 2005 (UTC)Reply
The last editor added this: "The most popular shoe which resembles Liu Bei is that of a white woolen slipper with a wolf head at the toes." i'm not sure how a pair of slippers could resemble Liu Bei, so i moved it here first. If you're the anonymous editor or if you know what he/she was talking about, please contribute. Cheers! :) --Plastictv 12:40, 25 August 2005 (UTC)Reply
"His arms were said to be so long that they reach beneath his knees and his ears so huge that he could see them himself."
Should this be in Liu Bei in Romance of the Three Kingdoms section instead? Does not sound like historical fact. --theorb April 15, 2006
Some people have longer arms and bigger ears than others. It happens. Cao Wei 20:59, 17 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Ok, shoot me. I've played Dynasty Warriors. I came to wiki to learn more about the Three Kingdoms after DW gave me a tantalizing amount of info. Anyway, in DW Liu Bei has a horse called the Hex Mark. Is this a real horse, something made up by RoTK, or something else entirely?
It's a real horse.
If there is anyone, from the ROTK novel, who is fit for being the emperor of China, it would most definity be Liu Bei. From the events of Changban to the wars he participated in, Liu Bei may be the better man, but Cao Cao, Hero of Chaos, is the better military fighter. More or less, Liu Bei deserves credict for being as virtues as he can be regardless of others who are no better or worse at virtue than him. (Suggestion: Cao Cao, Sun Quan, Sun Jian, Sun Ce, and Yuan Shao) --Zhang Liao 03:52, 27 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
Your arguments of Cao Cao and Liu Bei are very well viewed Aranherunar; however, I should be able to still plus myself from what I know from the novel. (Even though it is not 100% accurate) For Cao Cao, rather than see him as a Hero of Chaos, I see him as the man who saved China from its time in chaos thus he receives the title: Hero of Chaos. Liu Bei, on the other hand, receives his title "Hero to the People" due to his humane attitude that is seen in the novel. As you and I know, many people died when they followed him, but at the time, people wanted a hero or emperor that will do what is either right by bringing them peace or doing justice according to the people's eye without creating such a fright. As for the battle of Yiling, Liu Bei made the mistake that every human would make once his or her sworn brother or sister dies at the hands of your enemy or former ally. (Liu Bei's mistake at Yiling: Crossing the line between reckless aggression and righteous avengence.)
Moreover, you are right about Cao Cao and how he is viewed, but Liu Bei, without a doubt, was as the novel shows too humane and that lead him to great success. The ability to make people believe in your cause and bring the people together. The same can be said for Cao Cao only he used a different approach to the matter.--Zhang Liao 14:12, 9 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
Hero of Chaos is such a poor translation of the original term in chinese. Luan Shi Jian Xiong, the first two characters could be very loosely translated to "chaos". The last character could be loosely translated to "hero". But the key character in this word is Jian, which means conniving under a general connotation. When talking about Cao Cao, Jian also implies a degree of treachery, treachery as in Cao Cao usurped his liege and lord, the Han Emperor's power in all but name. Let's face it. Cao Cao killed a family of his kinsmen on a misunderstanding; he hogged the emperor's bow and arrow; he executed queens; he tricked Xu Shu away from Liu Bei. That's all pretty down and low. However, in Luo Guan Zhong's original "Popular Romance of San Guo Zhi", Cao Cao was shown to have many many "humane moments". When he bested Yuan Shao at Guandu against the odds, he burned all the letters his troops wrote to Yuan's side discussing defection. When he sacked Xia Pei, Cao Cao ordered his troop to not pillage the city. He even tried to recruit Chen Gong back. When Chen Gong would have none of that, Cao Cao made arrangements to take Chen's Family back to his place to live. The Mao edition, the most widely circulated edition and the edition upon which most translations are based and the edition most modernizations are based on, abridged much of Luo's characterization of a much less biased Cao Cao.
Hero of the People takes no root in any term Chinese historians coined on Liu Bei. However in parallel with Cao Cao's Jian Xiong is Liu Bei's Xiao Xiong. Xiao is a type of eagle. Eagles represent great ambition, which is the first layer of Xiao Xiong's meaning. Xiao Xiong also implies a degree of hyprocricy, cunning and Machiavellianism. The most famous example is Liu Bei tossing Adou after Zhao Yun saved it from Changban. Everyone knows about Guan Yu killing Yan Liang and Wen Chou. The interesting thing is that Liu Bei was serving under Yuan Shao at the time. To be able to talk his way out alive after his sworn brother decapitated Yuan Shao's two best generals shows Liu Bei at a Xiao Xiong's best, knowing fully well how to manipulate people around him.
But the very very essense of both Liu Bei and Cao Cao's success was simply their ability to recognize, attract, retain and use talent. Cao Cao would order his troops to stop shooting at Zhao Yun; Liu Bei would visit Zhuge Liang three times; Cao Cao would walk out of his camp uncompanied to greet Zhang He. Just like the last line of Cao Cao's Duan Ge Xing: "Zhou Gong Tu Pu, Tian Xia Gui Xin". --64.180.11.169 06:00, 12 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
While I'd rather believe that Liu Bei in history was a virtuous and good ruler like in the novel, it's also true that he resorted to techniques used by other warlords (trickery, warfare, politics, etc.) to establish his kingdom. However, we should also keep in mind that even in history, for most of his early carrier he had few bases to back him up while facing pressure from rival warlords with larger territories and better trained armies. He was consistently outmatched and outnumbered before he founded Shu Han, yet he actually did it. This at least offers the possibility that he was quite popular with the people and his men, because otherwise, how else would he have gotten far enough to get control of Shu? As a leader he was able to inspire his subordinates to get him that far, or at least inspired great loyalty in his subordinates who in turn inspired everyone else to get him that far. I mean, there has to be SOME basis to the idea of his virtue if his MEN fought so hard that they actually FOUNDED Shu Han, right? Of course, nobody's denying that he lost it at Yi Ling...heck, it's even cited as poor management skills. XD —Preceding unsigned comment added by 218.111.207.193 (talk) 04:25, 16 April 2008 (UTC)Reply
That's what Adolf Hitler did, and he's been vilified throughout history. Where is the factual basis for constantly stating the virtuousness of Liu Bei? Impact009 (talk) 23:12, 9 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
In my opinion, virtuosness is hard to be quantified as it is a set of values, and everyone can have different say on what is virtuous; but I would say that Liu's behavior pattern largely fitted a subjectively defined set of beliefs/values of the masses (ancient and modern). If you need factual basis or inline citation, I am able to provide; but I always believe any successful rulers (in most developed civilizations) LOOKS MORE virtuous than their calculating mind. So I personally won't add so much virtuousness stuff in a ruler article (unless his "virtuousness" can be explained by a political reason or did generate return for him). -EkmanLi (talk) 18:04, 19 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
I am surprised that none of the wiki articles pertaining to the Romance of the Three Kingdoms mentions the Chinese allegory/proverb "Liu Bei borrows Jingzhou" which was due to his "borrowing" Jingzhou as a base and subsequent refusal to return Jingzhou to Sun Quan.
Could someone research this allegory and place it somewhere appropriate in these articles? Is this allegory of modern development or classical? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hence Jewish Anderstein (talk • contribs) 19:58, 20 March 2008 (UTC)Reply
Yes, this issue is weakly addressed in related articles. Basically the reason why Liu was said to have borrowed Jing Province was that the 4 commanderies were taken by the allied forces during the battle of Jiangling (the 4 commanderies in southern Jing below Jiangling formally submitted to the Governer of Jing Province, Liu Qi.) Liu Bei married Sun Quan's sister and asked Sun to lend him Nan Commandery under the rationale that his domain was not sufficient to maintain a large army likes the one he controlled. Sun listened to Liu, and awaited the latter to expand or develop agriculture. Meantime, Sun invited Liu Bei to take Yi Province with him, but the latter strongly rebutted the former by saying he would retire from social life and became a hermit in the deep hills if Sun must attack his clansman, Liu Zhang. That's why Sun gave up on his project to take over Yi; BUT we all know Liu ate his words and even used trickery on his beloved kinsman. However, Sun was not that angry when he heard Liu seized Yi province, he just sent envoys to ask Liu for the return of Jing; Liu replied his former sponsor he would return Jing province for sure, BUT on the condition after he conquered Liang Province. Now, Sun was extremely furious and immediately sent troops to "reclaim" his interest. -EkmanLi (talk) 18:33, 19 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
In the "Romance of the Three Kingdom" Liu Bei is a kind and soft man. In history however Liu Bei is quit different, for instance it was Liu Bei who whipped the inspector and not Yide. Also in RotK when Che Zhou was ordered to kill Liu Bei but instead was killed by Guan Yu, in accual history Liu Bei killed Che Zhou after Liu rebelled against Cao Cao. —Preceding KingDavid47 comment added by 68.190.121.79 (talk) 02:07, 26 July 2009 (UTC)Reply
Erm, and yet Guan Yu is deified? It retracts a little bit of Liu Bei's tact, but it was still his decision, and a valid one at that. Being kind doesn't necessarily mean nice. Add the fact that execution is due course in an era where average soldiers are singed and trampled. They very well could have chosen to eat Che Zhou if they wanted. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.252.182.231 (talk) 18:36, 26 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think people need to start citing sources. While the content is certainly debatable due to its age, there are many elements that come solely from R3K and have no basis in Chen Shou's ZZTJ. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Oafah (talk • contribs) 13:03, 10 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
I'm attempting to follow the SGZ to rewrite or add details to the article. 99.60.231.234 (talk) 18:11, 14 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
I had made changes and corrections on the article, and I believe it's largely accurate now. -EkmanLi (talk) 17:42, 19 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
...his height is written in ancient Chinese measurements. Perhaps we could also convert them into modern units and put this information in the section? I'd do it myself, but I'm unsure of both a) whether or not this is a change we should make, and b) the exact conversions. Randomnessu (talk) 14:12, 5 March 2015 (UTC)Reply
may well have been Liu Bei's teacher. On the other hand, I've now seen a few of Lu's biographies that do not include that interesting detail and the only sources I can find online for the claim in pinyin or Wade are ROT3K wikis and the Romance of the Three Kingdoms itself, with nothing scholarly. Kindly do not reinsert the link without some scholarly source for the idea. Ideally, source the whole section, since it seems to be lacking at the moment. — LlywelynII 04:20, 17 December 2017 (UTC)Reply
年十五,母使行學,與同宗劉德然、遼西公孫瓚俱事故九江太守同郡盧植。
Translation: At the age of 15 (byEast Asian age reckoning), his mother sent him away for studies. Along with his relative Liu Deran and Gongsun Zan of Liaoxi, he studied under the former Administrator of Jiujiang, Lu Zhi, who was from the same commandery as him.
"In 175 Liu Bei's mother sent him to study with Lu Zhi, a distinguished man of the commandery who was an Academician at the University in Luoyang. One of his fellow-students was Gongsun Zan of Liaoxi, whom Liu Bei admired and treated as an elder brother, and another was his kinsman Liu Deran."[1]
References
We all have clear about Liu Bei was in the family tree of the royal family. He spent his entire life of escaping from Cao Cao, and finally become the emperor of Shu Han at 60 years old. His life journey were basically across the entire China in 40 years. Liu Bei named his son called Shan 禅 (the latter emperor of Shu Han),and he named his adopted son Feng 封. 封禅(Feng, Shan) means becoming emperor in China. Whenever Liu Bei named his two sons, the emperor of the Han dynasty still control by Cao Cao, which means shall we assume that Liu Bei doesn't want to save the emperor from Cao Cao, and just want to become the next emperor? --八路军被服厂李厂长 (talk) 01:10, 21 September 2020 (UTC)Reply
So the current picture of Liu Bei mention that it's from the Eido Period, so I'm assuming it's a Japanese picture. Which is weird to put as his main portrait on the wikipedia page considering he's Chinese. Shouldn't we put a chinese picture and push this one elsewhere? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Zamarak (talk • contribs) 18:25, 7 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
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