Before I knew it, I have reached the seventh volume, which is the later stage of the book.

The plan for this book is clear from the beginning.

In the early period, Grand Tutor Dong became the "pillar of the Han Dynasty" in an objective sense, maintaining the continuation of the Han Dynasty court while protecting Liu Xie's growing power.

The middle period is about the much-loved recovery of the empire... Compared to other Three Kingdoms literature, this part of the book is shockingly short!

There is certainly a reason for this.

Whether it was Liu Xie's initial wish to prevent the Five Barbarians from invading China, or his later desire to "revive Zhou rituals" and enfeoff princes on a large scale, he would not allow too many people to die in the civil war of the Han Dynasty.

The later stage is what Liu Xie should really do as a time traveler.

Compared with ideological emancipation and technological reform, Liu Xie's approach is undoubtedly more simple and crude.

expansion!

Keep expanding!

The land that allows the Han nationality to thrive and multiply is not limited to the traditional Han areas!

This was also the fastest way for the Han people to gain benefits under the conditions of limited productivity at the end of the Han Dynasty.

Therefore, the last volume of this book, which is about 30 words in length, will always revolve around this core and eventually come to an end.

Maybe this is not a perfect work, but as an author, I must make it a complete work.

Tomorrow the last volume of this book, "The Tribute of All Nations", will be released. We will strive to finish it before the end of this year and give you a perfect ending! (End of this chapter)

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