Liu Bei Xuande, a native of Zhuozhou City, Hebei Province, was born in 161 A.D., is the descendant of Liu Sheng, the son of Emperor Jing of the Western Han Dynasty.
When he was 15 years old, Liu Bei and Gongsun Zan worshiped Jiujiang Taishou Lu Zhi as a teacher, Liu Bei didn't like to read, and he didn't like to talk, but he treated people very well and liked to make friends with heroes.
After the outbreak of the Yellow Turban Uprising, Liu Bei raised troops in the township to resist the Yellow Turban Rebellion.
Here, Liu Bei got acquainted with Guan Yu and Zhang Fei, regarded them as right-hand men, and slept with the two of them, like brothers. And Guan Zhang and the others also followed Liu Bei to fight in the south and the north, never avoiding danger, and became a model for brothers of the opposite sex for thousands of years.
Because of his own limited strength, Liu Bei suffered repeated defeats in the melee of the princes, and successively attached himself to Gongsun Zhan, Tao Qian, Cao Cao, Yuan Shao, Liu Biao and other princes.
In 207 A.D., Liu Bei visited the thatched house in Wolonggang, Nanyang, and invited Zhuge Liang, the first strange man of the Three Kingdoms, to come out of the mountain and set a grand strategy for him.
In 208 AD, Cao Cao pacified northern China and marched south to begin a war to unify China, but was defeated by the combined forces of Sun Quan and Liu Bei in the Battle of Chibi.
After the Battle of Chibi, Liu Bei took the opportunity to seize Jingzhou, and spent another ten years successively taking Yizhou and Hanzhong, and established the Shu Han regime, which became an important level in the world.
In 219 AD, Guan Yu was defeated and killed by Eastern Wu.
Two years later, Liu Bei proclaimed himself emperor, in order to avenge Guan Yu's revenge, insisted on launching a war against Wu, but the army was defeated and Yiling, Zhang Fei also died in this campaign, perhaps destined to live and die together, send away the two righteous brothers, Liu Bei finally died of illness in 223 AD in the White Emperor City, at the age of sixty-three.
Liu Bei has four sons, namely Liu Feng, Liu Chan, Liu Yong, and Liu Li, and the last word of the names of the four sons is connected: Feng Chan Yongli.
Feng Chan can only be done by emperors, Yongli means to govern the country forever, and the name given to his son shows Liu Bei's ambition.
Before Liu Bei's death, his eldest son Liu Chantuo was isolated from Prime Minister Zhuge Liang.
Liu Chan was the second and last monarch of the Shu Han regime, so later generations also called Liu Bei the first lord and Liu Chan the later lord.
In 263 AD, Wei sent Zhong Hui and Deng Ai to divide their troops to attack Shu, Liu Chan surrendered to Deng Ai, Shu Han perished, and eight years later, Liu Chan died in Luoyang at the age of sixty-five.
Since then, Liu Bei has sealed Mount Tai, and the dream of Yongli the world has finally been shattered.