


There are Orders that stem from a Ruler's style, strategy that must now take into account 'Key Points' scattered throughout the land, War Councils where the best plans of your strategists come to life, and scaled up battles between heroes. With 'Prestige,' which might be called an officer's defining title and with Comrades to aid you in carrying out your desires, players will experience greater freedom and plumb greater depths with their Officer Play. 此本僅存圖四十二幅,第一幅題:「新安黃誠之刻」,第七幅題:「黃誠之刻」,第八幅題:「黃士衡刻。」按遺香堂本三國志,馬廉有殘本,孫楷第與馬氏均定為清刻,然頗疑黃誠之為明末人也.Live the Three Kingdoms with extreme Officer Play! 'Romance of the Three Kingdoms 13' celebrates the 30th Anniversary of the series and building on the concept of 'A Further Gathering of Heroes,' it has achieved the greatest advance in the history of the series. In case with an incomplete edition of San guo zhi printed by Yi xiang tang. Luo, Guanzhong,-approximately 1330-approximately 1400.-San guo zhi yan yi-Pictorial works World Digital Library.Ĭhinese Rare Book Collection (Library of Congress). Ma Lian and the literary critic Sun Kaidi (1898-1985) both considered this copy a Qing edition, but it is more likely from the Ming dynasty, as the engraver, Huang Chengzhi, lived in the late Ming dynasty. The inscription in the first illustration reads: "Engraved by Huang Chengzhi of Xin'an." The seventh illustration has a similar inscription: "Engraved by Huang Chengzhi." The inscription of the eighth illustration reads, "engraved by Huang Shiheng." The famous book collector, Ma Lian (1893-1935), also had a fragmented copy of this work in the Yi xiang tang edition.

This San guo zhi (History of three kingdoms) in the Yi xiang tang edition is imperfect, containing only 42 illustrations. Includes an incomplete edition of San guo zhi printed by Yi xiang tang. The first illustration has the seal of Huang Cheng of Xinan the seal of the seventh illustration indicates that it was also printed by Huang Chengzhi. Printer Huang Chengzhi probably lived in the late Ming Dynasty, but Sun Kaidi and Ma Lian believed printing was done in the Qing Dynasty.
