Is there really a court robbery in history?
It is said that before Yue Fei was executed, his subordinates had thought about saving him, or robbing the prison or robbing the court. But in the end, because of Yue Fei's loyalty and sincerity, he felt that since the emperor wanted to die by himself, he had to die. Adhering to such loyalty, he refused the help of his subordinates and strictly ordered everyone not to rob the almsgiving court.
I have to say that the simplified TV series is just a joke and an insult to the real history and the real charity field. If the giving ground in ancient China was really as simple as the performance in the TV series now, wouldn't it be possible for everyone to escape and rob? That is a contempt for imperial power and a neglect of state punishment. The real court is far stricter than you think. Generally, it has a fixed place of use and will not be executed on a street corner of the food market. It is even more impossible to execute it in downtown areas.
Because there are many people in downtown areas, problems are easy to occur, and ancient officials are not fools. They were all admitted by reading poetry and reading books layer by layer.
Those who are really executed at the corner of the vegetable market are often villains who are guilty of the most heinous crimes and need to be punished urgently. Everyone will applaud when they see them.