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The destruction of the Jin Dynasty was ten times worse than the shame of Jing Kang

How tragic was the demise of the Qing Dynasty? The body was slashed in half by emperor Jin Aizong and allowed to be ravaged by soldiers, and was slaughtered by the male males of the Imperial Family of the Golden Empress who had drawn a picture of the aftermath, and the women of the Imperial Family were insulted, and basically none of the Jurchen nobles of the Jin Kingdom escaped the tragic end of being killed, and their tragic situation was even worse than the shame of Jing Kang. Why was the once invincible Golden Kingdom destroyed? So how miserable was the Jin Dynasty when it was destroyed? First of all, let's talk about the feud between the Jin Dynasty and the Song Dynasty. The Jin Dynasty and the Song Dynasty were already familiar and could not be familiar anymore. The shame of Jingkang more than 100 years ago made the Song Dynasty taste the humiliation brought by the Jin Dynasty. In 1127, the Jin army attacked Kaifeng, Henan, and in addition to burning and looting, it also captured more than 3,000 people, including Emperor Huizong of Song, father and son of Emperor Qinzong of Song, as well as a large number of Zhao royalty and harem concubines. The city of Tokyo in the Jin Kingdom was looted by the Jin army, and history called jing kang a shame. The Jin Dynasty gradually expanded after gaining power. He always felt that his country was the most powerful, so he tried to annex the Northern Song Dynasty and annex other countries like the Liao State, and hit the Mongols with the idea. The ancestors of the Mongols were short, and they also shouted that the Jin people crucified the wooden donkey, the strategy of reducing the number of people, the oppression and plundering of the entire Mongolian tribes, and the destruction of all the Mongols. At the same time, in order to prevent the emergence of strong and unified tribes, the Jin Dynasty often instigated the Mongol tribes to fight against each other. In 1206, Genghis Khan unified the Mongol ministries, established the Great Mongol State, and began a conquest. While the Southern Song Dynasty and the Jin Dynasty had been in a state of confrontation between the north and the south, the Mongol tribes in the north of the Jin Dynasty were gradually rising. Although the Jin army was strong, the Mongolian iron was not vegetarian, and the general was caught off guard by the long drive. In 1233, the Mongol army sent troops again, directly beating the Jin army to the ground, and finally the Jin kingdom was destroyed in the middle of the Mongols and the Southern Song Dynasty, and the debts were always to be repaid. The tragedy of history finally happened to the Jin Dynasty, the once invincible Jin Dynasty. How tragic was it when the country was destroyed? In the Jingkang Rebellion, the Jin Dynasty destroyed the Northern Song Dynasty, more than 100 years later, the army was destroyed by the combined forces of Mongolia and the Southern Song Dynasty, when the Mongol Iron Horse stepped into the capital city, the scene of the Jin Steel Ruler began to repeat itself, which was also regarded as the reincarnation of the world. Moreover, the tragedy and tragedy of the fall of the Jin Dynasty were even worse than those of the Northern Song Dynasty at the time of Jing Kang's shame. After a long period of oppression, the Mongols rose little by little under the leadership of their leader Temujin. Mongolia and the Jin Dynasty are feuds, and they have never forgotten their ancestor Baba Baohan. Temujin, who was crucified on a wooden donkey by the Jin Dynasty, had a deep resentment towards the Jin Kingdom, and after unifying the Mongol tribes, he started from a small tribe and gradually led the Mongol city, in order to make the opponents very afraid of the Turban, until the death of Genghis Khan, the Mongols did not give up the attack on the Jin Kingdom. In 1233, the Mongol army approached the capital of the Jin Dynasty, Bieliang City, and after forcing Emperor Jin to seek peace without success, the Mongol army besieged the city of Bieliang. In desperation, Jin Aizong tried to kill him with his lips. According to the theory, the southeast sent grain and players from the Southern Song Dynasty, but the Southern Song Dynasty refused, and sent the famous general Meng Jue to unite with the Mongols to destroy the gold. The arrogant and unenterprising Jin Aizong did not expect the punch to come so quickly. The Southern Song Dynasty and the Mongolian army joined forces to begin to encircle and suppress the Jin Kingdom, and eventually Jin Aizong left the female relatives of the imperial palace and the Jurchen nobles in the city, and fled to Caizhou with only a few retinues, and the empresses, princesses, concubines, and more than 500 people of the clan who remained in the palace were loaded into carts and sent to the allied camps, and the rest of the male royals were all killed, ten times worse than the shame of Jing Kang. How tragic was the destruction of the Jin Dynasty? After Emperor Aizong of Jin fled to Caizhou, the Southern Song Dynasty sent the general Meng Gu to lead an army with the Mongolian army to meet under the city of Caizhou to prepare a joint project. Seeing that the tide had passed, Jin Aizong hanged himself after passing the throne to the general Yan Chenglin, and ordered his soldiers to burn the corpses, and the coalition forces broke through the city gates and shared the spoils of war. The Southern Song Dynasty was eager to take revenge, and even the corpse of Jin Aizong was not spared, so he prepared to bring it back to the Southern Song Dynasty to pay tribute. Qing Erzong, but the Song Dynasty and Mongolia all had a feud with the Jin kingdom, and the two families who agreed to destroy the gold and divide the spoils of war together, the Mongols naturally had to participate. Therefore, the Song general Meng Jue split the Jin Aizong in half, took half of it himself, and threw half of it to the Mongols. The Emperor of the Golden Kingdom was still so miserable, then let alone the Jurchen nobles of the Golden Kingdom. The newly succeeded Yan Chenglin also died in the rebellion during the fight against the Mongol army. After the deaths of the two emperors one after another, the Mongols also began to carry out a map of exterminating the Jurchens, all the male Jurchens were killed on the spot, and the remaining princesses, concubines, and more than 500 people in the clan were loaded into carts and sent to the Allied camp. After these women were escorted to the Mongolian camp, they were all reduced to the slave playthings of the Mongols, allowing them to wantonly trample and humiliate, and finally as cheap commodities exchanged with cattle and sheep, such a scene is like the shame of Jingkang in those days. It's just that the nobles of the Jin Dynasty are even more miserable than the royals of the Northern Song Dynasty, and the tyrants are brutal and destroyed, and it is most appropriate to use this sentence to interpret the end of the scarf. It's not so much the reincarnation of history. Saying that this is karma, what do you think about the destruction of the Jin Dynasty?