Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - When Liu Bowen beheaded Long Mai for Zhu Yuanzhang, he missed here, so the Qing Dynasty rose?

When Liu Bowen beheaded Long Mai for Zhu Yuanzhang, he missed here, so the Qing Dynasty rose?

Liu Bowen, whose real name was Liu Ji, was a politician, strategist and writer in the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasties. He was also a founding hero of the Ming Dynasty and made numerous contributions to the establishment of the Ming Dynasty by Zhu Yuanzhang, the founder of the Ming Dynasty. It is rumored that Zhu Yuanzhang admired Liu Bowen very much and never called him by his first name, but respectfully called him "the old man". According to official records, Liu Bowen was a confidential assistant of Zhu Yuanzhang. He was knowledgeable, good at strategy and art of war, and made important contributions to the establishment of the Ming Dynasty. In folklore, Liu Bowen is a mysterious figure who knows the astronomical calendar of 500 years before and after. It can be seen that among the people, ordinary people have regarded him as a man of god.

However, what I want to introduce today is another stunt of Liu Bowen, that is, dragon cutting. "Dragon" refers to Long Mai. Because geomantic omen was highly valued in ancient times, any place with Long Mai was regarded as a treasure of emperors. The birth of the new emperor means the demise of the old emperor, which is the last thing the current emperor wants to hear. As for Zhu Yuanzhang, he earnestly hoped that the Ming Dynasty would last for generations, so Zhu Yuanzhang paid close attention to Long Mai's beheading.

Once Zhu Yuanzhang had a nightmare at night, in which the northeast was red. Zhu Yuanzhang was surprised and confused, so he asked Liu Bowen to interpret dreams. Liu Bowen calculated that in 200 years, there will be enemies in the northeast to seize Daming's country. This matter is very important, so Liu Bowen didn't dare to tell Zhu Yuanzhang the truth, otherwise Zhu Yuanzhang would kill all the people in Northeast China, whether innocent or not.

Although the truth can be concealed, it must be done. So, Liu Bowen * * * visited all over the country, looking for Long Mai. One day, Liu Bowen came to Lanzhou City. Just as he was looking around, he suddenly found that the Yellow River was rushing away, and the two mountains in the north and south faced each other across the river. The water vapor in the Yellow River has gradually merged with the fog in the north and south mountains. Liu Bowen was taken aback. Aren't two mountains two dragons?

The faucet in the south is in Gaolan Mountain, and the faucet in the north is in Kyushu Station. When two dragons intersect, a real dragon will be born. So, Liu Bowen cut Gaolan Mountain with his sword, and the connected mountains were cut out of the gap. In the future, people will call the place where Liu Bowen chopped the dragon "Huo Daxian", the tail of Gaolan Mountain "Longwei Mountain" and the place where the dragon bled "Hongshan Root".

Since then, Liu Bowen has repeatedly cut off Long Mai for Zhu Yuanzhang in order to keep the splendid rivers and mountains of Daming for more than 300 years. According to legend, he cut down 99 of the 100 Long Mai. But then again, breaking Long Mai is not a good job, it will be cursed. So the descendants of Liu Bowen seemed to be cursed. A son was persecuted because of political conflict and fell into a well and died. Another son, because Judy, the prince of Yan, usurped the throne, vowed not to enter the DPRK, and bluntly said that the usurpation of the throne by the prince of Yan would write history forever. Later, he was arrested and imprisoned, and committed suicide in prison.

What Liu Bowen and Zhu Yuanzhang didn't expect was that they worked so hard to cut down Long Mai. As a result, 200 years later, the Qing Dynasty still rose and the Ming Dynasty still perished. Perhaps it is because Long Mai in the East has not been completely cleared! But in the eyes of future generations, the so-called "Long Mai" is actually an ancient superstition. The real reason for the demise of Daming is the corrupt rule of the Ming emperor, not those few small mountains.