Xu Da was the founding hero of the Ming Dynasty. After Zhu Yuanzhang ascended the throne, he killed them one by one in order not to let the heroes rob him of the world. When Xu Da had carbuncle on his back, Zhu Yuanzhang sent a steamed goose to express his condolences.
It is said that people with gangrene will die immediately after eating steamed geese. But the emperor wanted to eat the steamed goose, so Xu Da had to eat the steamed goose in front of the envoys, tears streaming down her face, and she was poisoned that night.
This story has been circulated as a true historical material, in the Ming history? "Biography of Xu Da" records: In the seventeenth year, Taiyin committed an offence against a general, which was anathema to the emperor. Da suffered from gangrene in his back in Beiping and recovered slightly. The emperor sent his eldest son, Huizu, to work and found a man named. In February of the following year, he died of serious illness at the age of 54. ?
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In the eighteenth year of Hongwu (1385), Xu Da died of gangrene on his back, which has become an established fact. However, from the perspective of modern medicine, there is no scientific basis for gangrenous people to die if they eat steamed geese. The main components of steamed goose are protein and fat. Eating steamed geese will not kill people, but will increase the nutrition of patients.
Furthermore, from the historical documents, it is also unreliable that the steamed goose killed Xu Da. So-called? Zhu Yuanzhang sent steamed geese? There is nothing mentioned in the history of Ming dynasty. It seems true that Xu Da died of gangrene on his back, but it seems nonsense that he was aggravated by steamed geese.
In the early years of the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang gave Xu Da food in a note, Yi Sheng Ye Wen, but did not mention what food he gave.
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Later, Si Ku in Qing Dynasty concluded that the book Win Wild News was not credible. Discipline in books often fails? . Refuting Xu Da's claim that he died from eating steamed goose.
Moreover, after Xu Da's death, Zhu Yuanzhang made him the King of Zhongshan, praised Wuning, bestowed Zhongshan Yin, and enjoyed the ancestral temple and Chen Gong Temple, ranking first. It is obvious that Zhu Yuanzhang valued Xu Da very much after his death, and it is not credible to steam geese for him.
More importantly, Xu Da's tombstone is 8.95 meters high, which is the largest heroic tombstone in the Ming Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang personally wrote an inscription for him, which shows that Zhu Yuanzhang has a deep affection for Xu Da.
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After Zhu Yuanzhang died, his inscription was written by Judy herself. This monument is located 70 meters north of Dajinmen, with a height of 8.78 meters, which is shorter than the tombstone of Xu Da's tomb 17 cm.
The emperor is shorter than the tombstone of the courtiers, which really makes people wonder. In addition, the story of steamed goose given by imperial edict is circulated among the people, and the feud between Xu Da and Zhu Yuanzhang is even more complicated, and the entanglement between them is left for future exploration.