Zhuge Liang, Wade-Giles romanization Chu-ko Liang, courtesy name Kongming, (born 181, Yangdu [now Yinan, Shandong province], China—died August 234, Wuzhangyuan [now in Shaanxi province], China), celebrated adviser to Liu Bei, founder of the Shu-Han dynasty (221–263/264). There are a number of memorial temples built in many places to memorize him. What happened to Zhuge Liang happens to everyone who’s human - he just sped it up by overworking himself. It was led by Zhuge Liang, the Imperial Chancellor of the state of Shu Han, against opposing forces in the Nanzhong region (covering parts of present-day Yunnan, Guizhou and southern Sichuan). Zhuge Liang, imo, wanted fame. Qin Shi Huang wanted immortality and while that is impossible, leaving your name in history and being remembered is as close as you get. Zhuge Liang fell ill and died during the stalemate and subsequently the Shu forces retreated. Zhuge Liang's Southern Campaign, also known as the War of Pacification in Nanzhong, was a military campaign which took place in 225 during the early Three Kingdoms period (220–280) of China.

This has no bearing on any other part of the story, but the narrator needed just a couple more lines to fill in Zhuge Liang’s last page. First of all first understand Guan Yu in Fancheng is how to defeat the city of wheat. In 234, during the last northern expedition battle with the general of the Wei Sima Yi, Zhuge Liang died of exhaustion at Wuzhang Plain (currently southwestern of Mei County in Shaanxi Province). Indeed, later in Chapter 104, after Zhuge Liang's death in the Battle of Wuzhang Plains, Wei Yan does revolt. For Guan Yu’s death, there are two kinds of argument, one is Shu can not rescue, the time can not send reinforcements. He wanted to be like the greats like Guan Zhong, and Yue Yi. The other is, Guan Yu died in Zhuge Liang and Liu Bei’s murder. Historicity [ edit ] Historically, Han Xuan surrendered to Liu Bei as part of the Battle of Jiangling in 208 without conflict, and Wei Yan was one of Liu Bei's personal retainers and rose through the ranks to become a general; he had nothing to do with Han Xuan and Huang Zhong.

Zhuge Liang died in the Wuzhang Plains, on his fifth invasion attempt on Wei that eventually ended in defeat. Hundreds of miles away, Li Yan was killed in a blast of Zhuge Liang’s residual narrative energy, and a rando named Liao Li was knocked flat on his ass.