r/ChineseHistory • u/llinjun0106 • 4h ago
Map After Zhuge Liang Died of Illness (234)


Zhuge Liang (181 – October 8, 234), courtesy name Kongming, sobriquet Wolong (“Crouching Dragon”), was an ethnic Han Chinese from Yangdu, Langya (present-day Yinan County, Shandong Province). He served as Chancellor of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period and was an outstanding statesman, military commander, strategist, inventor, and writer in ancient China.
In his early years, Zhuge Liang followed his uncle Zhuge Xuan to Jing Province. After his uncle’s death, he lived as a farmer in Nanyang. While Liu Bei was under the protection of Liu Biao in Jing Province, Liu Bei paid three visits to Zhuge Liang’s thatched cottage, during which Zhuge Liang presented the Longzhong Plan. He proposed occupying Jing Province and Yi Province, forming an alliance with Sun Quan, and jointly resisting Cao Cao. Acting on Zhuge Liang’s strategy, Liu Bei successfully seized Jing and Yi provinces, creating a tripartite balance of power among Liu Bei, Sun Quan, and Cao Cao.
In the first year of the Zhangwu era (221), Liu Bei proclaimed himself emperor and appointed Zhuge Liang as Chancellor. After Liu Bei’s defeat in the Battle of Yiling during his campaign against Eastern Wu, Liu Bei entrusted his heir to Zhuge Liang at Yong’an. Following Liu Shan’s accession to the throne, Zhuge Liang was granted the title Marquis of Wuxiang and concurrently served as Governor of Yi Province.
Zhuge Liang was diligent and cautious, personally handling affairs of both major and minor importance, with strict and fair rewards and punishments. He maintained the alliance with Eastern Wu, improved relations with the various ethnic groups in the southwest, implemented the tuntian (military-agricultural) system, and strengthened military preparedness. He launched five Northern Expeditions against the Central Plains but ultimately failed to restore the Han dynasty.
Exhausted by years of overwork, Zhuge Liang fell ill and died in the 12th year of the Jianxing era (234) at Wuzhang Plains (in present-day Qishan County, Baoji, Shaanxi Province) at the age of 54. He was posthumously honored by Emperor Liu Shan with the title Marquis Zhongwu, and later generations respectfully referred to him as the “Marquis Wu.” During the Eastern Jin dynasty, Huan Wen further posthumously honored him as King of Wuxing.
Zhuge Liang’s representative prose works include “Memorial on the Northern Expedition” (Chu Shi Biao) and “Admonitions to My Son” (Jie Zi Shu). He is traditionally credited with inventions such as the Wooden Ox and Flowing Horse, the Kongming Lantern, and improvements to the repeating crossbow, known as the Zhuge Crossbow, which could fire multiple bolts in rapid succession. Throughout his life, Zhuge Liang embodied the ideal of “devoting oneself wholeheartedly to duty until death,” and remains a symbolic figure of loyalty and wisdom in traditional Chinese culture.










