laitimes

Is King Jun a tyrant?

author:Qi Xiaoer's wine

Di Xin (c. 1105 BC-1046 BC), surnamed Zi, given name Shou (一作守德), a native of Moyi (present-day Qi County, Henan), the last monarch of the Shang Dynasty, the young son of Di Yi, known as King Yin and King Shang. The Xia Shang and Zhou Dynasty Project set the reign of Di Xin as 1075 BC-1046 BC.

Is King Jun a tyrant?

Than the cause of death

As we all know, the emperor of Yin Shang was called a tyrant since ancient times, but there are records in the history of the wild that the king of Shang was the first to create a legalist, why is it said that he pioneered a legalist? In the Shang Dynasty, there was an unwritten rule that the law was not subject to the doctor, which meant that the doctor could not be punished for committing a crime, which directly or indirectly led to the arbitrariness of the Shang Dynasty.

King Feng used punishment on Bigan, which is equivalent to abolishing the law in disguise, some people are going to say, King Feng used the punishment of cannon burning, but if you think about it, the Shang Dynasty only had bronze, iron chains made of bronze, bronze was not very pure at that time, which led to the melting point of bronze being the lowest two hundred degrees, but the Shang Dynasty really had the technology to heat bronze to two hundred degrees?

The answer is no, the technology of the Shang Dynasty can support them to heat bronze to about ninety degrees, this temperature can burn people, but it will not die, so Bi Gan is really a loyal courtier?

Is King Jun a tyrant?

The God of Wealth is more than Gan

No, Bi Gan ate the rice of the Shang Dynasty, and was an official of the Shang Dynasty, but what did he do? He released Ji Fa, who was the biggest threat to King Jun! The beautiful name is that Ji Fa is a great sage in the world, it is not good to kill, but compared to Gan Tiantian in the imperial court, will he not know that Ji Fa is a threat to King Jun?

He knew, knew that he still let Ji Fa go, what kind of crime was this? Treason! Until now, Bigan is a proper traitor, and the last Bigan tomb is still set up by Ji Fa, can we think that Bigan is an undercover agent sent by Ji Fa to the side of King Jun?

King Ji Fa of Zhou Wu

King Jifa of Zhou Wu (?) ―c. 1043 BC), surnamed Ji, given name Fa (often referred to as King 珷 [wǔ] in bronze inscriptions of Western Zhou), second son of Ji Chang and Tai Ji [sì] of Zhou Wen, a native of Qi Zhou (present-day Qishan, Shaanxi), and the founding monarch of the Western Zhou Dynasty.

Is King Jun a tyrant?

According to the historical description of several pieces of evidence that Ji Fa felled to the king of Jiu, first, Jiuchi Meat Forest: Does Ji Fa do things without brains? The Shang Dynasty had no surplus grain, and the meat was placed in the bamboo forest, and it would stink in a few days, and no matter how stupid the King of Shang was, he couldn't possibly want to smoke himself to death, right?

There is a wine pool, but it is not wine inside, the alcohol will volatilize in a few days, is the king stupid to put the wine inside? And there are records in the history books that the Shang Dynasty brewed three hundred buckets of wine every year, which translates to thirty liters, that is, 0.3 cubic meters, no matter how small a pool is, there are three cubic meters, right? Is the king stupid to use ten years to fill the wine pool? Wine pools do have in history,

But the king is used to train the water army! Why did King Jun train the water army? In order to conquer the land of Yan Zhao, Yan Zhao has a lot of water, and the water army must be trained, so the Jiuchi Meat Forest is just a means to touch the black king.

Is King Jun a tyrant?

Second: listen to women, do not sacrifice ancestors, do not trust relatives, and lure slaves from all directions. Do you know? That sounds ridiculous. I listen to women, it is my own business, not to sacrifice ancestors is also my own business, I don't trust the clan is also my own business, what do you care about your old Zhou family?

Is King Jun a tyrant?

epilogue

To sum up, the Zhou rites touted by Confucianism, as well as the virtues of King Wen of Zhou, are actually empty words. King Wu has no virtue, only interests. The benevolence and righteousness touted by later generations of Confucianism, used to package King Wu as a benevolent and righteous saint Mingjun, is actually a lie, an outright lie. They firmly believe in benevolence and righteousness and are invincible. But in reality? King Wu did not win in benevolence and righteousness, but in strategic planning and preparation.