míng dài zuòzhělièbiǎo
tānɡ xiǎn Tang Xianzu(míng dài)zhū quán Zhu Quan(míng dài)míng shì zōng Ming Shizong(míng dài)
xià wán chún Xia Wanchun(míng dài) wèi Xu Wei(míng dài)táng yín Tang Yin(míng dài)
chén Chen Jiru(míng dài)zhào yǒu tóng Zhao Youtong(míng dài)fāng xiào Fang Xiaoru(míng dài)
chén dào Chen Daofu(míng dài)xuē xuān Xue Xuan(míng dài)tōng rùn Tong Run(míng dài)
huá Li Rihua(míng dài)gāo Gao Qi(míng dài)wáng 'ào Wang Ao(míng dài)
liú Liu Ji(míng dài)chén lóng Chen Zilong(míng dài)yáng shèn Yang Shen(míng dài)
wáng shì zhēn Wang Shizhen(míng dài) guān Gu Qiguan(míng dài)xiè zhēn Xie Zhen(míng dài)
yòu Qu You(míng dài) biàn Yu Bian(míng dài) Dou Mu(míng dài)
dōng yáng Li Dongyang(míng dài) shí yōng Liu Shiyong(míng dài) zhēn qīng Xu Zhenqing(míng dài)
wáng shì mào Wang Shimao(míng dài)zhū chéng jué Zhu Chengjue(míng dài) yuán qìng Gu Yuanqing(míng dài)
luó guàn zhōng Luo Guanzhong(míng dài) zhòng lín Xu Zhonglin(míng dài)wáng yáng míng Wang Yangming(míng dài)
Wu Ne(míng dài) lóng Tu Long(míng dài)guī Gui Zimu(míng dài)
qiān Yu Qian(míng dài) xiān fāng Li Xianfang(míng dài) zhèn hēng Hu Zhenheng(míng dài)
zhū kuí Zhu Kui(míng dài)chù náng zhāi zhù rén Chunangzhaizhuren(míng dài)ān pán An Pan(míng dài)
chén tíng Chen Ting(míng dài) yàn Yu Yan(míng dài)
liú Liu Ji
míng dài  (1311niánqīyuè1rì1375niánsìyuè16rì)
jíguàn: zhè jiāng qīng tián

wén scribble
Historical writingsguó chū xián
jūn shì lèi Military classbǎi zhàn lüè
shīcíshī xuǎn Poetry anthology》   

yuèdòuliú Liu Jizài散文天地dezuòpǐn!!!
yuèdòuliú Liu Jizài百家争鸣dezuòpǐn!!!
yuèdòuliú Liu Jizài诗海dezuòpǐn!!!
刘基
刘基
   wēnwǎn hào méi gōngshēng yuán zōng zhì nián( 1311) liù yuè shí míng hóng nián( 1375), zhōng nián 65 suìzhè jiāng shěng wēn zhōu shì wén chéng xiàn nán tián zhèn yáng cūn rénjiù shǔ chù zhōu qīng tián xiàn), míng dài zhèng zhì jiāshī wén jiājūn shì jiā wén xué jiā wēnmíng guó kāi guó gōng chén shí rén chēng wéi liú qīng tiánmíng hóng sān nián( 1370) fēng chéng rén men yòu chēng wéi liú chéng hòu 139 nián míng zōng zhèng jiǔ nián( 1514), bèi zhuī zèng tài shīshì hào wén chéngyīn 'ér hòu rén yòu chēng liú wén chéngwén chéng xiàn shì 1948 nián zhì de xīn xiànxiàn míng jiù shì wèile niàn liú
  
   liú chū shēn míng mén wàng yòu cōng míng hàoxuéyòu shén tóng zhī yuán zhì shùn nián {1333 nián )23 suì de liú kǎo zhōng jìn shìkāi shǐ rén shì shēng zhì bào guódàn cháo tíng hūn yōng bàishǐ 20 nián de huàn hǎi shēng zāo nán biǎn yuán zhì zhèng 'èr shí nián (1360 nián ) sān yuèjiē shòu zhū yuán zhāng de yāo qǐngchéng wéi cān zàn jūn de móu shìwéi míng wáng cháo de jiàn zhǎn xià hàn gōng láo wéi rén gāng zhídǎn shí guò rénzhū yuán zhāng zūn wéi fáng ( zhāng liáng ) mín jiān yòushàng yòu zhū kǒng míngxià yòu liú wēnde chēng dào
  
   zhì zhèng 'èr shí nián yuèchén yǒu liàng gōng xià liǎo nán jīng wài wéi de zhòng zhèn tài píngshā liǎo zhū yuán zhāng de yǎng zhū wén xùn shǒu jiāng huā yún hái zài tài píng guó chēng huáng diào zhōu shīcóng jiāng zhōu xiàng dōng zhí zhǐ yìng tiānshēng chēng yòu zhāng shì chéng pèi gōng xiàn yìng tiānzhǐ dàizài chén yǒu liàng de 'áo zhāng yàn miàn qiánzhū yuán zhāng de jiāng gǎn dào shì jǐn zhāngyòu de zhù zhāng chū chéng jué zhànyòu de zhù zhāng chéng zhuǎn yòu de zhù zhāng xiàn chéng tóu jiàngzhū shuō fēn yún zhōng shìzhū yuán zhāng shí dìng zhù biàn wèn zhàn zài biān zuò de liú liú zhǎn dīng jié tiě huí xiān zhǎn zhù jiàng zhě yán táo zhěcái néng huò shèng shuōchén yǒu liàng jié zhù chēng jiāo héng shì xīn wàng jīn língxiàn zài shì xiōng xiōngshùn jiāng dōng xiànǎi shì xiàng shì wēi tuì ràng men néng ràng chěngzhǐ yòu jiān jué kàng yòu shuōcháng yán dàohòu zhě shèngchén yǒu liàng suī bīng jiāo jiāng hàndàn men xíng jūn qiān lái fàn shì jūnyòu shì ér men hòu zhì rén dài láodài shēn hòu bīng zhī dāng shèngzhè zhàng duì men lái shuō guān zhòng dìng yào hǎoliú de fān huàjiān dìng liǎo zhū yuán zhāng kàng de jué xīn cǎi liǎo liú de qiǎo chū bīng bài liǎo chén yǒu liàng de jìn gōngzhū yuán zhāng jǐn liǎo bǎo wèi yìng tiān de shèng hái zuò shōu liǎo tài pínggǒng liǎo jīn líng zhè kuài gēn jǐn zài liú tóubèn hòu de liǎng yuè chōng fēn xiǎn shì liǎo liú zhuó yuè de jūn shì cái néng
  
   chén yǒu liàng suī tuì shǒu jiāng běi dàidàn zhāng shì chéng réng rán shì zhū yuán zhāng de zhù yào jìngdíwèile sǎo píng qún xióngběi dìng zhōng yuánzuì hòu tuī fān yuán cháo zhèng quánzhū yuán zhāng jūn zhōng duì dōng zhāng chén liǎng zhàn lüè fāng xiàngchí yòu tóng de kàn duō shù jiànglǐng zhù zhāng xiān hòu nán xiān zhāng shì chéngzhè zhàn lüè xiǎng duì zhū yuán zhāng chǎn shēng liǎo yǐng xiǎng
  
   liú de zhù zhāng xiāng fǎn rèn wéi zhāng shì chéng shēng xìng qiè ruòxiōng zhìzhǐ qiú bǎozhè zhǒng rén bùzúwèi chén yǒu liàng xīn liàng qiángyòu cháng jiāng shàng yóuduì wēi xié zuì ruò xiān zhāng shì chéngchén yǒu liàng dìng huì chéng gōng shì guǒ xiān tǎo chén yǒu liàngzhāng shì chéng dìng gǎn qīng wàng dòng dāng xiān chú chénchén shì mièzhāng shì cún wáng biàn yóu liǎochén zhāng píngjiù yōng huī běi shàngxíjuǎn zhōng yuán biàn gào chéng liǎoliú de fēn gāo zhān yuǎn zhǔyīnggāi shuō shì zhū yuán zhāng sǎo píng hǎijiàn de wéi zhèng què zhàn lüè fāng 'ànzhū yuán zhāng cǎi liú zhī jué dìng xiān zhēng chén yǒu liàngzài gōng zhāng shì chéngzài quán miàn shèng de dào shàng mài chū liǎo qīng zhòng de
  
   zhì zhèng 'èr shí nián (1361 nián ), zhū yuán zhāng qīn shuài sān jūn cháng jiāng zhēng chén yǒu liàngxiān gōng 'ān qìng liú zhī chén yǒu liàng zhòng bīng zhù fáng 'ān qìng lǎo cháo jiāng zhōu ( jīn jiāng jiǔ jiāng shì ) dìng kōng biàn jiàn yán shàng zhuǎn gōng jiāng zhōuguǒ rán 'ér xiàchén yǒu liàng táo chāng jiǔchén yǒu liàng chén jiāng xíng shěng chéngxiàng tíng ruì bǎo liú duì wéi tiáo jiàn qián lái jiàngzhū yuán zhāng cóng liú quànjiē shòu de tiáo jiàn jiàng shǒu jiāng jiàn fēn fēn qián lái kuǎnzhěng jiāng hěn kuài bìng zhū yuán zhāng de bǎn zhì zhèng 'èr shí sān nián (1363 nián ) yuèchén yǒu liàng chéng zhū yuán zhāng běi shàng jiě xiǎo míng wáng hán lín 'ér 'ān fēng bèi wéi zhī cóng chāng shuài jūn qīng chéng 'ér chūwéi gōng hóng xiǎng shǒu huí zhè zhòng zhènshǒu jiāng zhū wén zhèng kàngliǎng jūn xiāng chí duō yuèzhū yuán zhāng shuài jūn nán xià chén yǒu liàng jué zhàn yáng shàngliú shì suí zhū yuán zhāng zuǒ yòucānyù jūn liǎng jūn 'áo zhànxuè rǎn shuǐshuāng fāng shāng cǎn zhòngzuì hòu zài miàn shàng xiāng chí xiàzhè shí liú xiàng zhū yuán zhāng xiàn jiàn pài zhòng bīng 'ě shǒu yáng zhōu chū kǒu zhī chù kùn chén yǒu liàng jiǔchén yǒu liàng shuài cán jūn wéixiǎng cóng xiǎo gǎng chà kǒu chù táo cuànjiēguǒ bèi zhū yuán zhāng jūn 'ě zhùchén yǒu liàng zhàn jūn kuìxiāo miè chén yǒu liàng shì hòuzhū yuán zhāng tíng yòu huī dōng jìnzhēng zhāng shì chéngzhì zhèng 'èr shí nián (1367 nián ) jiǔ yuègōng zhàn píng jiāng ( jīn jiāng zhōu shì ), zhāng shì chéng zǒu tóu shēn cháng jiāng zhōng xià yóu jìn guī zhū yuán zhāng suǒ yòuzhū yuán zhāng duì liú shuō:“ xiān shēng shì chuàng jiāng shān de děng gōng chén。”
  
   liú hái yòu duō chū de zhàn shùměi zhàn shì wǎng wǎng zhì shèngzài jiāng zhōu shí jiàn jiāng zhōu chéng qiáng yán jiāng 'ér zhùyòu hěn 'ǎibiàn shòu zài zhàn jiàn shàng jiàn zào yún tiān qiáo jiān shǐ dào chéng qiáng jiǎo xiàjiāng tiān qiáo jià zài chéng qiáng shàngshì bīng yuán 'ér shàngshùn chéngzhì zhèng 'èr shí sān nián (1363 nián ) bēn sàng cóng chù zhōu fǎn jīn líng jīng yán zhōu ( jīn zhè jiāng jiàn xiàn ), zhèng shì zhāng shì chéng lái fànyán zhōu shǒu jiāng wén zhōng yào chū bīng yíng liú quàn shuō chū sān rén huì tuì zǒudào shí chū bīng zhuī huò shèng wén zhōng tīng cóng liǎo liú de quàn shuō sān tiān míng jūn guǒ tuì wén zhōng chū shèng 'ér guī
  
   liú de yùn chóu wéi shén miào suàn jǐn shǐ tóng liáo xià shǔ qīn pèi liǎo zhū yuán zhāng de xìn rèn zūn jìngzhū yuán zhāng jiāng zuò hàn dài móu chén zhāng liángzūn chēng lǎo xiān shēngér míngjīng cháng shāng liàng jūn zhèng shìyòu shí yòu zhòng jué jǐn zhào rén jìn shì xiāng tán biàn shì bàn zhū yuán zhāng yòu shí duì jīhū dào liǎo lài de chéng liú qīn shì xiǎng gàojià huí xiāng bēn sàngzhū yuán zhāng shěbùdé kāiwǎn yán wǎn liú 'ér zhǔn jiǎhòu lái miǎnqiǎng zhǔn liǎohái shí xiě xìn dào qīng tián xiāng qǐng jiào jūn zhèng liú xiáng fēn zǒng shǐ zhū yuán zhāng fēi cháng mǎn jìn guǎn zhè yàngzuì hòu zhū yuán zhāng hái shì qián zhào huí láijiàn rén zhù chéng dài liú zhū yuán zhāng wéi shì zhī xīn zuǒzhī yánwéi zhū shì míng wáng cháo de jiàn zuò chū liǎo miè de gòng xiàn
  
   de zhù zuò yòu děng,《 quán shū 'èr juànfán shí piān bǎi jiǔ shí tiáoměi tiáo duō qiān yánshǎo bǎi zhù yào shì zhēn biān shí zhèng de yán huò shì wén gòu jīng qiǎowén qíng rén shēnxǐngzuò zhě jiè jiǎ tuō rén zhī kǒu biǎo duì shè huìshì tài rén qíng de kàn yòu xiē jiàn jiězhì jīn réng néng gěi zhě shēn de
  
  【 liú wéi kāi jiān。 1311 nián 6 yuè 15 liú shēng ; 1375 nián 4 yuè 16 xiàn cún yòu liú 48 suì guān guī yǐn hòu xiū jiàn fáng shè bēi zhìshí jiù děng yòng 。《 míng shǐ liú chuánzài:“ hóng nián zhēngyuè lǎo guīwéi yǐn jiǔ kǒu yán gōng lìng qiú jiàn wēi wéi rén jiàn fāng zhuó lìng cóng yǐn máo shè。” yóu jiàn liú dāng shí zhù fáng de jiǎn lòupǐn de gāo shàng
  
   liú zuò pǐnbǎi zhàn lüèbiān xiě shuō míng
  
   bái huà bǎi zhàn lüèyóu shì wényuán wénzhù shì fēn chéngxiàn zhú xiàng shuō míng xià
  
  ( )、“ shì”: bāo kuò liǎng fènnèi róng shì 'ě yào gài kuò měi piānlùn shùde zhōng xīn nèi róng jīng shén shí zhìzhǐ chū suǒ lùn diǎn bīng xué lùn de yuān yuán guān xìng huò xiàn xìngèr shì zhuózhòng pōu měi piānshǐ zài zuò zhàn zhǐ dǎo shàng de shī zuò zhàn chéng bài de guān gōng jiè jiàn de jīng yàn jiào xùnyóu gāi shū suǒ yǐn shǐ duō shù jiào jiǎn lüè zhě bān shǐ yuán zhù jìn xíng fēn ér fēn zhōng de yǐn wénfán bǎi zhàn lüèxiāng tóng de zài zhù míng chū chù tóng huò wéi suǒ zhějūn kuò zhù chū chù
  
  ( èr)、“ wén”: zài zhōng shí yuán de qián xià qiú zuò dào zhǔn què tōng chàng shēng dòng jūn shì yòng yīn yuán wén chéngfèn cán quē huò guò jiǎn lüè 'ér yǐng xiǎng wén lián guàn chùsuǒ zhī wén fēn bān jiā yuán kuò hào“( )”。
  
  ( sān)、“ yuán wén”: míng hóng zhì shí nián nián jìn jīng zǒng yào · bǎi zhàn běn wéi běnjiǎn chēng běn”), míng wàn 'èr shí nián(15 niántáng chūn jīng zǒng yào · bǎi zhàn běnjiǎn chēngtáng běn”) wáng míng dēng tán jiū · bǎi zhàn běnjiǎn chēngwáng běn”, dàn gāi běn jǐn cún bǎi zhàn qián zhī shí zhàn)、 chóng zhēn jiǔ nián(1 niánsuǒ tāo lüè shì cóng shū shōu debǎi zhàn zhī wāng cān dìng běnjiǎn chēngwāng běn”) wéi cān xiào běnduì zhào yòu guān zhèng shǐ yuán zhù jìn xíng jiàokān defán shì zhòng yào jiàozhèng chùjūn zài běn shūzhù shìzhōng jiā shuō míng lìng chū xiào yuán wén jiàokān zhōng yào qiáng diào shuō míng de wèn yòu 'èr
  
   gāi shū suǒ yǐn dài bīng yuēnèi róng), fán yuán zhù tóng qiě yǐng xiǎng yuán dejūn yuán zhù jiàogǎibìng zàizhù shìzhōng shuō míng jiàogǎi yóuyǐn wén suī yuán zhù tóngdàn yǐng xiǎng yuán de bān zhǐ zhù míng yuán wén zuò wén gǎi dòngfán yǐn wén tuō lòu chéngfèn hòu jiā fāng kuò hào  ”。
  
   'èrgāi shū suǒ yǐn de shǐ fán yǐn wén shǐ xiāng bèi zhějūn yuán zhù dìng zhèngyǐn wén suī yuán zhù tóngdàn bìng wèi gǎi biàn yuán de bān zài gēnggǎiyǐn wén fán yòu zhòng yào tuō lòu yǐng xiǎng wén lián guàn wán zhěng huò zhě jiǎn shā gāi shū jūn shì de shǐ shū yuán zhù zēng suǒ chéngfèn jiā fāng kuò hào“〔 〕”。
  
  ( )、“ zhù shì”: qiú zhǔn quèjiǎn míng bān zuò yuán yuán kǎo zhèngzhù shì de zhù yào nèi róng shìshēng shì zhòng yào zhuān yòng shù bīng yǐn wén shǐ chū chù shǐ rén míngzhòng yào jiàokān zhù wén zhèng míng chéng shū shí dài de huì wén zhè yào zhuózhòng shuō míng deshǐ zhōng suǒ shè de shǐ rén bān jiā zhù shìdàn tóng rén zài tóng piān zhōng duō chū xiàn shízhǐ zhù shì shǒu zhàn zhōng suǒ shè de shǐ míng bān zhù míng jīn míngdàn tóng cháo dài de tóng míngsuī zài tóng piān shǐ zhōng duō chū xiànzhǐ zhù shì shǒu tóng cháo dài de tóng míng fēn bié zhù shì
  
  ( )、“ ”: wéi biàn zhě liǎo jiě gāi shū de chéng shū shí dài zuò zhě děng wèn běn shū zhuō wén 'èr piān:1、《 bǎi zhàn lüè shì míng dài liú de zhù zuò、《 bǎi zhàn lüè biàn wěizhì


  Liu Ji (July 1, 1311 — 16 May 1375), style name Bo​wen and posthumous name Wen​cheng (文成), was a military strategist, officer, statesman and poet of the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasty period of Chinese history. He was born in Qingtian County (present-day Wencheng County, Zhejiang). He was the main advisor to the Yuan Dynasty era rebel leader Zhu Yuanzhang (1328–1398), who later became the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty. (r. 1368-1398). Liu Ji is also known for his prophecies, as he has been described as the "Chinese Nostradamus". With his contemporary general and scholar Jiao Yu, he was one of the co-editors of the military treatise known as the Huolongjing (the Fire Dragon Manual). His most famous military treatise is known as the Lessons of War.
  
  Career
  
  Liu Ji served Zhu Yuanzhang in his rebellion against the Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty in China, which had ruled since the conquest of the Southern Song Dynasty in 1279. Liu Ji dabbled in many fields of statecraft, philosophy, scholarly works, and technology. His philosophical outlook was that of a skeptical naturalist, and he became interested in astronomy, calendrical science, magnetism, and fengshui. He was known to be a friendly associate of the mathematician and alchemist Zhao Yuqin, and collaborated with his contemporary general and scholar Jiao Yu to edit and compile the military-technology treatise of the Huolongjing, which outlined the use of various gunpowder weapons. He was very interested in the latter, and once said that "thunder is like fire shot from a cannon".
  
  Early Service in the Yuan Dynasty
  
  Liu Ji earned his Jinshi degree in the final years of the Mongol Yuan Dynasty, and spent much of his early career attempting to save the dynasty from collapse. Liu served the Yuan as an official for 25 years, gaining a reputation for integrity and honesty, and became known as a distinguished scholar and strategist. In 1348, Liu was appointed to a military position and assigned to put down a southern rebellion against the dynasty. The leader of the rebellion attempted to save himself by offering Liu a bribe. When Liu refused, the rebel went to Beijing and succeeded in bribing his way into favour there.
  
  Once the secessionist had bribed his way into the regime's favour, he was given a public office and a salary. Liu Ji's relationship with the Yuan deteriorated after this event. Liu attempted to resign twice, in 1349 and 1352. He was demoted in 1358, and finally left service to retire in his ancestral homeland. In 1366, when he was fifty-five, Liu was introduced to Zhu Yuanzhang, a former leader of a radical White Lotus Buddhist rebellion who was then the leader of a broad anti-Yuan rebellion.
  
  Service to Zhu Yuanzhang
  
  Liu Ji served not only in the administration of Zhu Yuanzhang, but also in many battles as a commanding officer on land and water, leading the early Ming naval forces. Zhu Yuanzhang placed Liu Ji in charge of the campaign to conquer all of Zhejiang from Yuan forces. Liu was also responsible for military ventures against opposing Chinese rebel groups, as well as coastal Japanese pirates. His forces owed much of their success to the use of the medieval Chinese firearm known as the fire lance. It was during this period that he wrote the books Extraordinary Strategies of a Hundred Battles (百戰奇略) and Eighteen Strategies and Affairs (時務十八策). Later in the rebellion Zhu only rarely relied on Liu to personally command his armies in the field, as he acquired other capable generals, including Xu Da, Deng Yu and Chang Yuchun. Liu was most often consulted for his strategic advice during this period.
  
  In 1368, after eight years of Liu Ji's service, Zhu Yuanzhang unified China. When Zhu founded the Ming Dynasty, Liu was one of his most trusted advisors, but the relatiohship between Zhu and Liu eventually deteriorated in a manner similar to the way that Liu had become estranged from the Yuan government. In 1375, Liu rejected a man, Hu Weiyong, for appointment to high office. Hu later obtained an audience with Zhu Yuanzhang and slandered Liu by telling Zhu that Liu was plotting to establish his own power. After convincing Zhu of Liu's treachery, Liu was ejected from office, and Hu Weiyong was promoted.
  
  Death
  
  The shock and shame of being groundlessly dismissed from office destroyed Liu's health, and he quickly died. Within five years of Liu's death the man who had slandered Liu to achieve office was himself suspected of plotting against Zhu Yuanzhang. In the subsequent orgy of Zhu's paranoid efforts to root out conspiracy, 30-40,000 people were executed.
  
  The precise cause of Liu Ji's death is considered uncertain by modern scholars. Some scholars believe that Liu was poisoned by emperor Zhu Yuanzhang himself, not because Liu failed his duty, but because the emperor was envious and even fearful of his knowledge and influence. Other sources have pointed out that the emperor did kill many people shortly after Liu lost his official position, but they are uncertain about whether Liu was part of this group.
  
  Prophecy
  
  Liu Ji's most famous prophecy to Zhu Yuanzhang, written down in a lyrical style, is called the Shaobing Song (燒餅歌). The poem is written in cryptic verse and is difficult to understand. Some people believe that the Shaobing Song has predicted future events in China, including the 1449 Mongol invasion, and the 1911 founding of the Republic of China.
  
  Biographical work
  
  Liu Ji's official biography is found in the 128th chapter of the Ming Shi. The author Chong Tai also wrote a biography on him.
  
  In popular culture
  
  Shenji Miaosuan Liu Bowen (simplified Chinese: 神机妙算刘伯温; traditional Chinese: 神機妙算劉伯溫; pinyin: Shénjī Miàosuàn Líu Bówēn; literally "The Divine Witted and Marvelous Predictor Liu Bowen"), a 404 episodes long television drama about Liu Bowen, was aired on Taiwan's TTV from 23 August 2006 to 12 March 2008, starring Taiwanese actor Huang Shaoqi (黃少祺) as Liu Bowen.
    

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