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At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

A Lee Dai

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Daijué said què (?) –198), the word naïve. A native of Niyang County, Beidi County (present-day Yao County, Shaanxi Province), he was one of the heroes of the late Han Dynasty. Warlords and courtiers at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty during the reign of Emperor Xian of Han, officials to the Great Sima (大司馬), che riding generals, Kaifu (開府), Lingsi (令司) lieutenants, and false festivals. Li Dai was originally a general of Dong Zhuo's army, but was later sent by Dong Zhuo's son-in-law Niu Fu to Zhongmu to engage Zhu Juan, destroy Zhu Juan, and then plunder Chen Liu, Yingchuan and other places. After Dong Zhuo and Niu Fu were killed in the third year of Chuping (192), Li Daigui had nothing to rely on, so he adopted Jia Xu's strategy and joined forces with Guo Feng, Zhang Ji, Fan Chou and other former Dong Zhuo to attack Chang'an. Defeat Lü Bu, kill Wang Yun and others, occupy Chang'an, and control the power of the imperial court. After the generals disagreed, Li Dai killed Fan Chou at the meeting, and then kidnapped Emperor Xian of Han and his ministers separately with Guo Feng, and fought with each other, Zhang Ji led his troops to reconcile, so the two men boycotted, Li Dai left Tunchiyang Huangbaicheng, and Guo Feng, Zhang Ji and others returned to Hongnong with Emperor Xian of Han. After that, Li Dai, Guo Feng, and Zhang Ji rebelled and joined forces to pursue Emperor Xian of Han, fighting yang feng, Dong Cheng, and others several times. Emperor Xian of Han fled all the way, and arrived at Anyi to make peace with Li Dai and others. Soon, Emperor Xian of Han was welcomed by Cao Cao to Xu Capital. Subsequently, Cao Cao sent his servant Pei Mao to summon the Kansai general Duan Sheng and others to recruit Li Dai and exterminate his three tribes. In the third year of Jian'an (198), Li Dai was beheaded by Liang Xing and others in Huangbaicheng, and passed on xu du.

Two Li Dian

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Dian (born and died unknown), character Mancheng. A native of Juye County, Shanyang Commandery (present-day Juye County, Shandong Province), he lived in Chengshi County. A famous general of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty.

Li Dian was studious since childhood, not happy with military affairs, first governing the people, and later joining the army. And from the conquest of Hebei, Jingzhou, Xiliang and other places, many military achievements. In the Battle of Bowangpo, he discovered Liu Bei's false plan and saved Xiahou Huan and Yu Ban. He also participated in the Battle of Xiaoyaojin.

Li Dian understood the great righteousness, did not compete with others for merit, respected Confucianism, respected erudite people, had the style of an elder, and was an official to a general who broke the law, and died at the age of thirty-six.

After The establishment of Cao Wei, he posthumously honored Li Dian as the Marquis of Huan. Li Dian was neither killed nor a king, and the meaning of his title should be the same as that of Geng Yi and Kou Zhun, that is, "in the country even worried about the worries".

Three Li Ru

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Ru (李儒), a native of Liu Lizuo Feng Yi Guoyang (present-day Heyang County, Weinan City, Shaanxi Province), was a doctor in the late Eastern Han Dynasty and the Prince of Hongnong Langzhong. During Dong Zhuo's dictatorship, Li Ru entered the palace on Dong Zhuo's orders and poisoned Liu Jie (King Hongnong). After Dong Zhuo's death, Li Dai attacked Chang'an and took control of the imperial government, and Li Dai elected Li Ru as a servant, but was rejected by Emperor Xian of Han. In 198, Li Dai was defeated by Cao Cao, and li Ru's deeds and whereabouts are not recorded in the history books thereafter.

Four Li Su

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Su (?) –192), a native of Wuyuan (in present-day northwestern Baotou, Inner Mongolia). In April of the third year of the Yonghan Dynasty, Situ Wang Yun, Shangshu servant Sun Rui, and Zhuo General Lü Bu conspired to accuse Zhuo. At that time, the Son of Heaven had a new cure for the disease, and the assembly was not in the temple. Bu envoys to the same county riding capital Wei Su and other generals more than ten people, disguised as guards to guard the gate. The Book of the Bouhuai Edict. Zhuo Zhi, Su and other Ge Zhuo. Cho exclaimed where the cloth was. Bu Yue "had an edict" and killed the Zhuo and Yi tribes. Hou Zhuo's son-in-law Zhonglang sent Niu Fudian to Beitun Shaan and dispatched the lieutenants Li Dai ( Li Dai , Guo Feng , Zhang Jiluo , Chen Liu , and Yingchuan to the counties. After Zhuo's death, Lü Bu sent Li Su to Shaanxi, intending to be assisted by an edict. Auxiliary and other rebellions and sue battles, purged defeats and took Hongnong, and bu sued.

Five Li Feng

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Feng(?) ~February 254) was a native of Feng Yidong County (present-day Dali County, Shaanxi Province). A chancellor of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period. Son of Wei Wei Li Yi.

Li Feng was famous for his character evaluations, and during the reign of the Wei Ming Emperor Cao Rui, he successively held the positions of Huang Menlang, Zhi Shizhong, and Yongning Tai servant, which were rarely reused because of their exaggerated names. During the first year of the reign, he was promoted to the rank of Servant of The Servant and Servant of the Shang Shu. Because of the oscillation between Cao Shuang and Sima Yi, he was flattered on both sides and despised by the world. After Sima Yi's death, he paid homage to Zhongshu Ling.

In the sixth year of Jiaping (254), he joined forces with his foreign relative Zhang Ji and others to prepare to overthrow Sima Shi and install Xiahou Xuan as an auxiliary general, but the matter was known to Sima Shi. When questioning Li Feng, Li Feng refused to admit it, and Sima Shi killed him in anger.

Six Li Tong

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Tong (168-209), character Wenda, small character trillion. A native of Jiangxia Pingchun (present-day Xinyang, Henan), he was a figure in the late Eastern Han Dynasty and a Taishou of Runan. In his early years, he was famous as a ranger in Jiang Ru, who murdered Zhou Zhi and dominated Langling County. Later, he led the crowd to defect to Cao Cao, replenished the source of troops with meritorious service, and worshiped as the governor of Yang'an, during which he did not forget his official duties because of his private interests, and did not ask the dharma writers because of his wife's request. The Battle of Guandu was not only not tempted by profit, but at that time the people south of Xu Du were unstable, but Li Tong's Yang'an still existed. In the fourteenth year of Jian'an, he rescued Cao Ren, and before the war, he died of illness on the way. Yu Gang hou.

Seven Li Yan

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Yan (?) –234), later renamed Li Ping (李平), also spelled Zhengfang, was a native of Nanyang. During the Three Kingdoms period, Shu Han was a heavy subject, and zhuge liang was also a vassal of Liu Bei before his death. In 231 AD, during the Northern Expedition of the Shu army, Li Yan escorted grain and grass to be delayed due to rain and muddy roads, and in order to shirk his responsibility, he blamed Zhuge Liang's Northern Expedition, so that Zhuge Liang had to retreat, so he was convicted, and finally deposed as a civilian and moved to Zitong County (梓潼, in modern Sichuan). In 234 AD, Zhuge Liang died of illness, and when Li Yan learned of this news, he thought that no one would be able to use him in the future, so he died of anger.

Eight Li Hui

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, during the Three Kingdoms period, there were eight Li people

Li Hui (?) ~231), courtesy name Deang, was a native of Yuyuan County, Jianning County (present-day Chengjiang County, Yuxi, Yunnan). A general of the Shu Han Dynasty during the Three Kingdoms period.

At the beginning, he was the governor of Jianning County. After Liu Bei attacked and occupied Yizhou, he worshiped Cao Shuzuo and the main bookkeeper, and moved to drive away. After the establishment of the Shu Han Dynasty, he served as the governor of The Capital of Yu and the Assassin of Jiaozhou, followed the chancellor Zhuge Liang in the rebellion of the four counties in southern China, and made great military achievements, such as the general of Bai'an Han, the Marquis of Hanxingting, and the Taishou of Jianning County. As the second governor of shu han, he actively allocated materials to Nanzhong after the war, effectively supporting the finances of the Shu Han government.

In the ninth year of Jianxing (231), he died.