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Which dynasty did Zhao Zilong come from?

Zhao Zilong was a general of Shu during the Three Kingdoms period. Generally refers to Zhao Yun.

Zhao Yun (? -229), the word Zilong, was born in Zhengding, Changshan (now Zhengding, Hebei). Eight feet long and imposing, he is a famous Shu Han.

Zhao Yun followed General Liu Bei for nearly 30 years, participated in Bowangpo Campaign, Changbanpo Campaign and Jiangnan Pacification Campaign, and commanded the Battle of Entering Sichuan, Hanshui Campaign and Ji Gu Campaign alone, all of which achieved very good results. In addition to fighting everywhere, Zhao Yun also took the partial general as the prefect of Guiyang, leaving Sima to stay in the camp and supervise Jiangzhou with the general of Yijun. In addition, when Zhao Yun pacified Yizhou, he quoted the story of Huo Qubing to persuade Liu Bei to return the farmland to the people. After Guan Yu and Zhang Fei were killed, he advised Liu Bei not to cut Wu. He was praised by later generations as a Confucian general with a large number of ministers, and even considered a perfect figure in the Three Kingdoms period.

After his death, he was chased as "Shunping Hou" and widely circulated among the people with the image of "ever-victorious general".

Anecdotal allusions:

ever-victorious general

The title of General Zhao Yunsheng is widely circulated among the people, and the earliest source is difficult to verify. Some scholars in Ming and Qing dynasties also mentioned it in their personal works, but they did not directly say the word "ever-victorious general", but used words such as "invincible general" and "invincible general".

General Wu Hu

General Five Tigers is widely circulated, but Professor Yi Zhongtian of Xiamen University put forward the theory of General Four Tigers in the lecture room column, which made Zhao Yun cry foul.

When Chen Shou wrote the History of the Three Kingdoms, he combined,, and Zhao into one biography. Although these five people have their own brave evaluations, they did not say that there were five tigers generals. The evaluations of the five people are all compared to "the minions of the country."

It is impossible to prove when the five tigers will appear. They are called "Five Generals" or "Five Brothers" in Yuan Zaju, "Five Tiger Generals Army" in Three Kingdoms Pinghua and "Five Tiger Generals Army" in Romance of Three Kingdoms.

In addition to folk art, the five tigers and generals can also be found in some historical books, such as "Mountain Hall Examination" and "Records of Famous Ministers in Past Dynasties". In the Qing dynasty, the five tigers and generals were included in the "Sikuquanshu".