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Which imperial edicts in history were written in vernacular Chinese?
Speaking of imperial edict, everyone knows that it is the highest instruction, and the words used must be high-end and high-grade, based on the standards that people who don't write or speak Chinese can't understand. However, there are really a few emperors in history who said "people talk" and wrote letters in vernacular.

The first one, of course, is the monk emperor Zhu Yuanzhang. Once the Japanese invaders invaded, Zhu Yuanzhang wrote an imperial edict to guide the work of grass-roots organs: "Fengtian carried the emperor Zhao Yue, told the people to prepare knives, and these guys came to kill him. Respect this. " Not only Zhu Yuanzhang himself, but also his son Judy, Ming Chengzu. When Judy was born, his father Zhu Yuanzhang was engaged in revolutionary work and paid little attention to education. Therefore, it completely inherited and developed the vernacular style of Lao Zhu's family.

For example, Genghis Khan wrote to Qiu Chuji. "Mountain fairy don't come to your spring outing, Xia Dao is hot and hard to come. Do you have to ride a horse with a good bottom along the road? There is a lot of food on the road. Coming? Do officials expect you to come when you go to Xuande and other places? Boss, do people have to come? Will you pull yourself together? I often think of you here. I have never forgotten you. Don't forget me. 1 1 5th of the month, last year. " Minister Tian Wenjing made a memorial, and he replied in the memorial: I am such a person! That's nature! That's it, Emperor! If your minister lets me down, I will let you down again. Encourage it!

"Fengtian took the imperial edict:' I told you not to go to Hanzhong, but you insisted on going to Hanzhong, and now you have lost a lot of military forces. Donkey ball, Qin Zai. "