<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > the Three Kingdoms period, it can be described as a hero, many people are paying attention to those brave and good warriors, such as Guan Yu who cut Huaxiong with warm wine, Zhao Yun who went in and out of seven, and Zhang Fei who scared off Cao Cao's army. If you compare martial arts to brothers and sisters. Then the strategists are the minds, and their strategic thinking is actually an important factor in determining war. In history, there have been many strategists in Hebei. </h1>
1. Tian Feng

Tian Feng (?-200) was a native of Julu (钜鹿; present-day Xingtai Julu Pingxiang). At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Yuan Shao's subordinates were famous strategists, and the official went to Jizhou to drive, and was the most famous strategist in Hebei of the Three Kingdoms. He was a man of integrity, and had repeatedly spoken to Yuan Shao without being taken in, and Xun Yu, a subordinate of Cao Cao, once commented that he was "just committed". Later, he was imprisoned by Yuan Shao's orders for obstructing His conquest of Cao Cao. After the Battle of Guandu, Tian Feng was killed by Yuan Shao.
Tian Feng's conspiracy:
1. The first person to propose to blackmail tianzi to order the princes (Yuan Shao did not adopt it, and later Cao Cao adopted it)
2. With Tian Fengmou, Yuan Shao destroyed Gongsun Zhan and pacified Hebei
3. Propose protracted war (Yuan Shao did not adopt)
4. Proposed a surprise attack on Xu Du (Yuan Shao did not adopt it)
5. The Battle of Guandu put forward the strategy of "sticking to the danger and dividing the troops to plunder"
2. Jane Yong
Jian Yong (birth and death year unknown), character Xianhe. A native of Zhuo Commandery (涿郡; present-day Zhuozhou, Hebei Province). The original surname was Geng, and the Youzhou people said that Geng was Jian and changed it to the surname Jian. From the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty to the Three Kingdoms period, Liu Bei was a strategist under his account.
Jian Yong met Liu Bei when he was young and followed him. Often as a negotiator, when Liu Bei besieged Chengdu, Jian Yong persuaded Liu Zhang, the mu of Yizhou, to surrender. Soon, Guan Bai zhaode was a general, and his status was second to that of Lu Zhu.
Jian Yong is good at debate and deliberation. The temperament is simple and direct, informal. When sitting with Liu Bei, he also sat cross-legged and ignored Wei Yi. When dealing with people except Zhuge Liang, he occupies a bed exclusively, talks in a lying position, and never succumbs to people.
3. Frustrated
Frustrated (?) –200), a native of Guangping, was the overseer of Yuan Shao in the late Eastern Han Dynasty.
Frustrated with "few ambitions, more power". He once drove for Jizhou, raised Maocai, and served as a county order twice. Later, when Han Fu was not driving, he was made a knight lieutenant by Han Fu. He proposed a good policy to Han Fu, but it was not adopted.
After Yuan Shao entered Jizhou, he was appointed to oversee the three armies of Neihe and Weizhen, helping Yuan Shao to capture Qingzhou, Hezhou, and Youzhou and unify Hebei. Frustrated Zhi had proposed to Yuan Shao to welcome the Heavenly Son, oppose the separation of the sons, and put forward a strategy of three years of fatigue, which was not adopted by Yuan Shao, but was weakened by the military power.
In the Battle of Guandu, Frustrated Zhi proposed a slow-forward tactic, which was not adopted. On the eve of the burning of the Wuchao, Frustrated Zhi proposed to protect the food on the outside, but it was not adopted. After Yuan Shao's defeat, Frustrated Zhi was captured and refused to surrender. Later, frustrated to return to Hebei, he was defeated and killed. Cao Cao once sighed: "Loneliness and early acquaintance, the world is not worried."