The top scorer of Huainan referred to a person with outstanding performance or special achievements in Huainan. Huainan's Big Brother could refer to many people, such as Zhang Bing, the winner of the title of Huainan's Good Man, and Zhang Bing, the Huainan YTO courier, who became the torchbearer of the Hangzhou Asian Games. However, the specific name of Huainan's Big Brother needed to be further confirmed according to the context.
The younger brother of Huainan referred to Yuan Shu. Yuan Shu was a warlord at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty. He was the cousin of Yuan Shao, the younger brother of Yuan Ji and Yuan Shao. He was once appointed as the general of the Tiger Troop and later fled to Nanyang County. Yuan Shu proclaimed himself emperor in the Huainan area and carved the emperor's seal. However, his rule was extravagant and licentious, causing the people to starve to death and the troops to be alienated. In the end, Yuan Shu died of illness in the fourth year of Jian 'an (Year 199).
The "Huainan Di" in "Haoli Xing" referred to Yuan Shao's cousin, Yuan Shu. Yuan Shu proclaimed himself emperor in Huainan and carved the emperor's seal. This poem depicted the social reality of the war-torn times, the suffering of the people, and the struggles between the warlords. The armor was full of lice, and countless people were killed or injured. White bones were scattered all over the wilderness, and there was no sound of chickens for thousands of miles. This poem criticized the social phenomenon of the time in the form of folk songs, expressing the poet's sympathy for the sufferings of the people and exposing the culprit.
Huainan brother referred to Yuan Shao's half-brother Yuan Shu.
The title of Huainan Di referred to Yuan Shu.
The title of Huainan Di referred to Yuan Shu.
Lice grew on the armor, and all the people died.
The title of Huainan Di referred to the title of Yuan Shao's half-brother, Yuan Shu, who became emperor in Huainan. This title came from Cao Cao's " Walking in the Wormwood " of the Han Dynasty. After Yuan Shu proclaimed himself emperor in Huainan, Yuan Shao plotted to carve the emperor's seal in the north. The meaning of this title was that Yuan Shu proclaimed himself emperor in the Huainan region and carved the emperor's seal in the north.
The title of Huainan Di referred to Yuan Shu. Yuan Shu was Yuan Shao's cousin. In the second year of Jian 'an (197 AD), he became emperor in Shouchun, Huainan, and was named Zhong. This information came from Cao Cao's Haoli Xing in the Han Dynasty.