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Results for "虎鲸虎" — Found 26 novel(s)
Nan Jin worked hard for half her life, finally pulling together the investment to open a large shopping mall.
Just when she was about to enjoy her success, a cocktail party transported her to the late 1970s.
Wait a minute, isn't the original host's life way too miserable?
Her husband is clamoring for a divorce so he can marry his childhood sweetheart, he even had her sent to jail, bullied so badly she lost her child too?
What? A fake divorce? Remarry in six months? You say I'm vicious?
Fine, then I'll go all the way and empty your entire family.
While everyone else uses connections to return to the city, I was a workhorse for a lifetime and I'm tired; this lifetime, I just want to go to the countryside, laze around, and become a rich woman.
But wait, why are all these people following me to the countryside?
The ex-husband's uncle says he feels guilty and wants to take care of me?
How come he's crawling into my bed?
And this old commander, why is he clinging to my door, insisting I'm their long-lost biological daughter?
Plus three incredibly capable older brothers forcing me to be the pampered baby of the family?
The scumbag ex-husband is filled with regret, begging to remarry every day.
The ex-husband's uncle holds her tightly in his arms and scoffs, "Shao Xuan, call me uncle!"
In the year 1627 of the Ming Dynasty, raw iron costs 9 wen per jin, wheat costs 0.7 liang per dan, and millet costs 0.5 liang per dan.
In the year 1627 of the Ming Dynasty, central government revenue is approximately 10 million liang of silver plus 4 million dan of tribute grain. Local revenues including junyao silver, minzhuang silver, lijia silver, and post station silver amount to about 10,000 to 20,000 liang per county.
In the year 1627 of the Ming Dynasty, the population is roughly 150 to 200 million, far from the Qing Dynasty's 400 million. Large tracts of land lie fallow in North Zhili, Henan, and Shandong, while Hunan, Hubei, Yunnan, Guizhou, and Sichuan are far from being developed to their limits.
In the year 1627 of the Ming Dynasty, after three consecutive years of favorable weather in Shaanxi, a slight drought begins this year. Overall, the south experiences slight flooding, while the north has slight drought, though large-scale natural disasters have not yet begun.
In the year 1627 of the Ming Dynasty, Huang Taiji of the Later Jin has just ascended the throne for one year. He alleviated domestic famine by attacking Korea, but this also made General Amin, who led the expedition to Korea, too powerful to control. The co-governance system of the Four Beile still seems unbreakable.
So, why does such a promising situation gradually spiral toward catastrophic collapse?
So, when a time traveler arrives at this juncture, how difficult is it truly to turn the tide? Is it really as many claim—that by 1627, the Ming Dynasty's fate is already sealed beyond redemption?
If you share these questions, join this grand historical simulation scenario, entirely based on real historical materials.
To date, this work references 531 academic papers and the lives of 7,188 Jinshi (advanced scholars) after the eighth year of the Wanli era, as well as 4,657 Juren (provincial graduates) whose biographies can be traced.

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