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In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

Speaking of the Shu Han established by Liu Bei, many people are particularly interested in the Five Tiger Generals of the Shu Han Dynasty. However, in 229 AD, all the five tiger generals of the Shu Han Dynasty died, and the Northern Expedition of the Shu Han still had to continue. So if the State of Shu wants to fight against the State of Wei, who will fight the vanguard, and who will serve as the pillar of force of the Shu Han? In fact, in the late Shu Han Dynasty, there were five people who could be called "The Five Tiger Generals", although their overall strength was weaker than that of the Five Tiger Generals, but they were by no means idle people, and it was their existence that allowed the Shu State to persist for decades.

<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > fifth, Zhang Bao</h1>

Zhang Bao was the son of Zhang Fei, who defeated Xie Yu in thirty rounds, captured Cui Yu in one round, and the Battle of Yiling rushed the Wu army into no man's land, stabbed Xia Ke to death with a spear, killed Xue Ze and Cui Yu, and later died after pursuing the Wei general Guo Huai accidentally fell into the mountain and broke his head.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

Zhang Bao was able to kill many rookies in a second, but he was powerless against a military general at Zhang Gao's level, and he once led a large army that could not stop Zhang Gao from charging, so he ranked fifth among the "Last Five Tigers".

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > fourth, Wang Ping</h1>

Wang Ping was the commander of the Shu Han Wudang Flying Army, and was highly valued by Zhuge Liang.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

Wang Ping fought Zhang Gao in the Street Pavilion for dozens of rounds, and then retreated due to military defeat; one round killed Cen Wei, one round captured Xiahou Shu, and later joined forces with Zhang Yi to defeat Jiang Wei in five rounds, and the strength could at least reach the top level among the second-rate martial artists.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > third, Guan Xing</h1>

Guan Xing, the son of Guan Yu, once killed Li Yi, Yang Ling, Yue Ji, Tan Xiong, Zhou Ping, and Dong Xi with one sword, drew Zhang Gao, and defeated Sun Huan in thirty rounds.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

Guan Xing was able to defeat Zhang Hao for a short time, and repeatedly killed the general Jian Gong, and his strength in the later three kingdoms could not be underestimated.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > second, Wei Yan</h1>

Wei Yan was highly regarded by Liu Bei and Zhuge Liang, and was one of the witnesses of the succession of the Three Kingdoms before and after, he was once an alternate candidate for the Five Tiger Generals, and was given the titles of Taishou of Hanzhong, General of Zhenbei, and Marquis of Southern Zheng.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

Wei Yan defeated Ma Dai in ten rounds, captured Ling Bao in three rounds, drew with Pound in Hanzhong, shot Cao Cao, captured Meng Yu in three rounds, killed Cao Zun in three rounds, killed Wang Shuang in one second, and ranked second in the second of the five tigers.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > first, Zhuge Shang</h1>

Zhuge Shang was Zhuge Liang's grandson, but he was not good at strategy but good at martial arts.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

At the Battle of Mianzhu, Zhuge Shang struggled to kill Deng Zhong, Shi Lu, and 10,000 Wei soldiers, and After Deng Ai came to reinforcement, Zhuge Shang died heroically. There is no doubt that it can be ranked first among the last five tigers with one enemy.

In the late Shu Han Dynasty, the "Last Five Tiger Generals" ranked, Wei Yan was second, Jiang Weijin was fifth on the waiting list, Zhang Bao was fourth, Wang Ping was third, Guan Xing was second, Wei Yan was first, and Zhuge Shang was

The last five tigers will substitute 6 people: Jiang Wei: Zhi Yong shuangquan, but pure force is not more than five people, although the short-term battle was equal to the elderly Zhao Yun, defeated Sima Shi and Wang Jing, and shot Guo Huai, but was defeated by Wang Ping and Zhang Yi in a few rounds; Ma Dai: killed Busy Tooth Chang, killed Wei Yan, but he was assassinated from behind, can not be regarded as real strength, was defeated by the Wei general Niu Jin; Zhang Yi: once joined forces with Wang Ping to defeat Jiang Wei, and repelled the Wei general Shi Lu, but was defeated by the Wei general Xu Qian; Fu You: When the Shu kingdom was about to perish, he fought to the death. After killing the Wei general Li Peng with a whip, Xiahou Ba: defeated Guo Huai in ten rounds; Liao Hua: killed the Wei pioneer Zheng Lun and the general Qin Liang, but the overall record was not good, and he was defeated by Xu Qian and Chen Taishi.

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