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Is there really a Qiao Feng in history?
No, Qiao Feng is talking about fictional characters in Jin Yong's martial arts novels.

Qiao Feng, also known as Xiao Feng, is the hero of Jin Yong's martial arts novel "Eight Dragons". His ancestral home is Liao Dynasty, and he was raised by Qiao Sanhuai, and his name is Qiao Feng.

But his biological father was a Khitan, so he changed his surname to Xiao. Together with Mu Rongfu, they are called "North Qiao Feng, South Murong", which is the twin peaks among young Jianghu experts.

He has a formidable appearance, is quite weathered, bold and heroic, has great power, is not angry and arrogant, and has both wisdom and courage. He is a rare masculine man in Jin Yong's works.

He used to be the leader of the Beggars' Sect, and was forced to abdicate after learning that he was a descendant of Qidan. Wandering the Jianghu and seeking the truth, he became brothers with Duan Yu and Xu Zhu successively, and made friends with the confidante A Zhu.

After Arjuna died at Feng Xiao's hand to save his father, Xiao Feng was heartbroken. Because he helped Yeluhongji quell the rebellion, he was made king of the South Hospital. Soon, in order to prevent the Liao Emperor from attacking the Song Dynasty, he killed himself by breaking an arrow outside Yanmenguan.

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Eight Dragons is a novel written by Jin Yong, a modern writer in China. This novel was written from 1963 and took four years to complete. Before and after the three editions, the third edition in 2005, six drafts were changed, and the ending changed greatly.

Based on the Song Zhezong era, the novel examines and describes life and society from a philosophical perspective through the Wulin grievances and ethnic conflicts in Song, Liao, Dali, Xixia, Tubo and other countries, showing a magnificent picture of life. Its bizarre twists and turns, involving many people, extensive historical background, huge martial arts scenes and rich imagination are among the best in the "Golden Book".

The title of the book comes from Buddhist scriptures, which means "all sentient beings in the world", symbolizing all sentient beings in the world, and the boundless transcendental Buddhism is shrouded behind it. The theme of the book is "All human beings are evil", and the style of the work is magnificent and tragic. It is an epic masterpiece with strong human nature and tragic color.

In 2005, the full-time Chinese reading materials (compulsory) for ordinary senior high schools were first published by People's Education Publishing House, and two martial arts novels, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon by Wang Dulu and Eight Dragons by Jin Yong, were selected for the first time, ranking in the fifth and sixth lessons respectively, and merged into one unit, named Legend of the Chivalrous Man.

The text is excerpted from the forty-first chapter of Eight Dragons. It tells the story of Xiao Feng saving A Zi in Shaolin Temple and fighting with three masters, Ding Chunqiu, Mu Rongfu and You Tan, on the mountain, which fully shows his peerless martial arts and heroism.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Xiao Feng