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Folk tale: Qin Qiong sells horses

In the last year of the Sui Dynasty, Qin Qiong of Jinan Province was delayed for a few days on an errand in Luzhou, and all the silver around him was spent, and unfortunately he was infected in the shop, so in desperation, he led his beloved mount Huang Biao horse to Erxian Zhuang outside the West Gate to sell.

Qin Shubao tied the yellow horse under the large locust tree in Zhuangnan.

Shan Xiongxin heard that someone was selling horses, so he went to Soma. Qin Shubao had heard as early as Shandong that Shan Xiongxin was a good man, but at the moment he was poor and destitute, ashamed of his face, and difficult to report his real name and surname.

Folk tale: Qin Qiong sells horses

When Shan Xiongxin heard that the horse seller was from Jinan, he invited him to the palace for tea, and also inquired about The good Han Qin Shubao in Shandong who had long been admired.

Qin Shubao lied: "The person who inquired outside the staff was the little brother and his friend. Xiongxin heard that he and Shubao were friends, and then repaired a letter to Shubao, and paid the horse price thirty-two silver, plus Cheng Yi three two, not including the horse price, and also took two horses of Lu silk to give away.

Folk tale: Qin Qiong sells horses

However, it is said that Qin Shubao hid Shan Xiongxin, but met another good man in the Luzhou restaurant, his name was Wang Bodang.

Wang Bodang informed Shan Xiongxin, causing Xiongxin to look for Qin Shubao everywhere. Later, the two heroes finally met, and Shan Xiongxin was gracious and let Shu Bao carefully recuperate in Erxian Zhuang for eight months.

Folk tale: Qin Qiong sells horses

At the time of parting, Shan Xiongxin equipped his yellow-chested horse with a gold stirrup and silver saddle, and gave it to him with silk and heavy gold, and the two of them have since formed a friendship. Subsequently, the two fought against each other in the peasant uprising that overthrew the Sui Dynasty, creating indelible achievements for the rebel army.

After the rise of the Tang Dynasty, Qin Qiong protected the Tang Dynasty for life, and Shan Xiongxin resisted the Tang to the end. Although Shan and Qin later parted ways, the brotherhood forged during the tribulations remained the same.

"Qin Qiongjian Ancestral Hall Report Xiongxin" in "Speaking of Tang" is that Qin Qiong smelled Xiongxin and flew to save it. When I came to the front, my head had landed on the ground. Shu Bao hugged Xiongxin's head and knelt on the ground, grief-stricken. Later, Xiongxin and his wife were buried together outside the south gate of Luoyang, and an ancestral hall was built, named "Ancestral Hall", to repay the kindness of Luzhou's knowledge.

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