Sun Quan sends Lu Su as an …
Years: 214 - 214
Sun Quan sends Lu Su as an emissary to demand the return of Jing Province after Liu Bei's conquest of Yi Province, but Liu refuses.
Sun Quan then sends Lü Meng and Ling Tong to lead twenty thousand men to attack southern Jing Province and they succeeded in capturing Changsha, …
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Such generals as Zhang Ren fight hard to defend their master, but Liu Bei's forces have the advantage, and by 214 they have surrounded Liu Zhang's capital at Chengdu.
Liu Zhang's advisors Liu Ba, Dong He, and Hu Jing plead to their master to resist at all costs, but Liu Zhang rejects their pleas, saying "I don't want my subjects to suffer any more."
He then surrenders to Liu Bei.
…Guiyang, and …
…Lingling prefectures.
In the meantime, …
...Lu Su and Gan Ning advance to Yiyang with ten thousand men (to block Guan Yu) and take command of the army at Lukou.
Liu Bei personally goes to Gong'an while Guan Yu leads thirty thousand men to Yiyang.
When war is about to break out, Liu Bei receives news that Cao Cao is planning to attack Hanzhong, and he requests a border treaty with Sun Quan as he becomes worried about Cao Cao seizing Hanzhong.
Liu Bei asks Sun Quan to return Lingling prefecture and create a diversion for Cao Cao by attacking Hefei; in return, Liu Bei cedes Changsha and Guiyang prefectures to Sun Quan, setting the new border along the Xiang River.
Empress Fu was apparently never happy about Cao's domination of the political scene.
When Emperor Xian's concubine Consort Dong, whose father Dong Cheng had been killed in a failed conspiracy against Cao, was forcibly executed by Cao in 200 against Emperor Xian's wishes, Empress Fu had become angry and fearful, and had written her father Fu Wan a letter accusing Cao of cruelty and implicitly asking him to start a new conspiracy.
Fu Wan was fearful and did not act on the letter, but Empress Fu's letter is discovered in 214.
Cao is extremely angry and forces Emperor Xian to have Empress Fu deposed.
Emperor Xian is hesitant, and Cao sends his forces into the palace to force the issue.
Empress Fu hides inside the walls, but is finally discovered and dragged out.
As she is led away, she cries out to Emperor Xian for him to save her life, but his only response is that he cannot even know what will happen to him.
She is killed, along with her two sons and family.
Emperor Xian is not, but his status as a puppet is by now fully exposed.
Cao claims Empress Fu had died suddenly and buries her with the ceremony of an empress.
Cao Cao again launches a campaign to conquer Hanzhong in 215.
Initially, Zhang Lu has no hope of standing against Cao Cao's armies, and plans to surrender.
His younger brother Zhang Wei, however, insists on fighting and leads his army against the invading forces.
He is soon killed in battle, and again Zhang Lu considers surrendering.
His advisor Yan Pu tells him that in surrendering so readily, they would have no position to negotiate from.
Instead, Zhang Lu retreats to his fortress at Bazhong.
When leaving his capital, he does not destroy his wealth and treasures, nor attempt to take them with him, instead leaving them behind saying "These things belong to the country, not to me."
Cao Cao is greatly impressed by this, and sends a messenger to Zhang Lu asking him to surrender.
Yan Pu's plan is successful, as Zhang Lu and his forces are warmly welcomed by Cao Cao.
He is given the title General who Suppresses the South and his five sons are granted the rank of marquis.
He marries his daughter to a younger son of Cao Cao, Cao Yu.
As further demonstration of the bad blood between Zhang Lu and Ma Chao, when Cao Cao turns Ma Chao's son Ma Qiu over to Zhang Lu, he immediately executes him.
Following Cao Cao’s defeat of Zhang Lu and subsequent seizure of Hanzhong, Sima Yi and Liu Ye advise him to take advantage of the victory to attack Yi Province, since it is still unstable under Liu Bei's new government and Liu himself is away in Jing Province.
Cao Cao refuses and leaves Xiahou Yuan, Zhang He and Xu Huang to defend Hanzhong.
Clement of Alexandria, living in exile in Cappadocia since 202, produces a number of influential works that marry Christian faith to Platonic philosophy.
One of the founders of the Alexandrine tradition in Christian theology, Clement is best known for three works.
His Protrepticus ("Exhortation to the Greeks"), is an attempt to convert followers of pagan gods; his Paedagogus ("Tutor"), is an explanation of the world in terms of the "logos," or mind of God; and in his Stromata ("Miscellanies"), he maintains that philosophy is God's gift to the Greeks.
He dies in 215 (later considered as one of the Fathers of the Church and, by some, a Christian gnostic).
Origen, a Platonist, emphasizes Bible study as essential to the proper understanding of Christianity.
Master of Alexandria’s Christian Catechetical School from 203, he continues to draw large numbers of students through his manner of life as much as through his teaching.
According to the church historian Eusebius of Caesarea, Origen took the command in Matthew 19:12 to mean that he should castrate himself.
This story will be accepted during the Middle Ages and in the twelfth century will be cited by Abelard in his letters to Heloise.
Scholars within the past century have questioned this, surmising that this may have been a rumor circulated by his detractors.
The 1903 Catholic Encyclopedia does not report this.
However, Peter Brown, a renowned historian of late antiquity, will find no reason to deny the truth of Eusebius' claims.
Origen during the reign of emperor Caracalla had paid a brief visit to Rome in about 211-212, but the relative laxity during the bishopric of Zephyrinus seems to have disillusioned him, and on his return to Alexandria he had resumed his teaching with zeal increased by the contrast.
The school has far outgrown the strength of a single man, however; the catechumens press eagerly for elementary instruction, and the baptized seek interpretation of the Bible.
Under these circumstances, Origen entrusts the teaching of the catechumens to Heraclas, the brother of the martyr Plutarch, his first pupil.
His own interests become increasingly centered in exegesis, and he accordingly studies Hebrew, though there is no certain knowledge concerning his instructor in that language.
From about this period (212-213) dates Origen's acquaintance with Ambrose of Alexandria, whom he is instrumental in converting from Valentinianism to orthodoxy.
Later (about 218) Ambrose, a man of wealth, will make a formal agreement with Origen to promulgate his writings, and all the subsequent works of Origen (except his sermons, which were not expressly prepared for publication) will be dedicated to Ambrose.
In 213 or 214, Origen had visited Arabia at the request of the prefect, who wished to have an interview with him; and Origen accordingly spent a brief time in Petra, after which he returned to Alexandria.
When the inhabitants of Alexandria heard Caracalla's claims that he had killed his brother Geta in self-defense, they had produced a satire mocking this as well as Caracalla's other pretensions.
Caracalla savagely responds to this insult in 215 by slaughtering the deputation of leading citizens who have unsuspectingly assembled before the city to greet his arrival, and then unleashes his troops for several days of looting and plunder in Alexandria.
According to historian Cassius Dio, over twenty thousand people were killed.
The schools are shut and foreigners expelled.
Caracalla, in 215, introduces the antoninianus, a "double denarius" weighing 5.1 grams and containing 2.6 grams of silver—a purity of fifty-two percent.
A temple built on Quirinal Hill and dedicated to Serapis was, by most surviving accounts, the most sumptuous and architectonically ambitious of those built on the hill; its remains are still visible between Palazzo Colonna and the Pontifical Gregorian University.
This is one of a number of colossal temples built by the Severan emperors and dedicated to exotic foreign deities.
The sanctuary, which lies between today's piazza della Pilotta and the large square facing Quirinal Palace, is built by Caracalla on the western slopes of the hill, covering over thirteen thousand square meters (3.2 acres), as its sides measured one hundred and thirty-five meters by ninety-eight meters.
It is composed by a long courtyard (surrounded by a colonnade) and by the ritual area, where statues and obelisks have been erected.
Designed to impress its visitors, the temple boasts twelve columns 21.17 meters (69 feet 5 inches) tall and two meters (six feet seven inches) in diameter, visually sitting atop a marble stairway that connects the base of the hill to the sanctuary.
An enormous fragment of entablature, weighing approximately one hundred tons and thirty four cubic meters in volume (the largest in Rome), belongs to the original temple, as do the statues of the Nile and the Tiber, moved by Michelangelo to the Capitoline Hill in front of the Senate building.
Zhang Lu, who dies not long after surrendering to Cao Cao, is created a marquess.
The Five Pecks of Rice religion is continued by his sons, eventually to evolve under the Tang Dynasty into the Taoist religion known as Zhengyi Dao, or the Way of Complete Orthodoxy.
