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Taizhou coastal defense propaganda slogan

The history books contain anti-Japanese stories, "I am no longer right, and the thief who burned the boat vowed to win, and everyone will go to Taizhou." General Jianrui took 1500 people, talking about Qi Jiguang.

The enemy is introduced as follows:

Japanese pirates (わこぅ) refer to the Japanese pirate groups that invaded Korea, China coastal areas and Nanyang from the 3rd century to the 6th century. They are mainly engaged in smuggling trade between China and China except coastal looting. Because Japanese ancient books call Japan a Japanese country, it is called an enemy.

The development of the enemy is introduced as follows:

At first, Japanese pirates were only famous ship owners, officials and unemployed people in the coastal areas of Kyushu. At the beginning of14th century, Japan entered the split period of the Northern and Southern Dynasties, and the defeated southern feudal main organization samurai plundered the coastal areas of China and North Korea. In the late Qing Dynasty, in the imperial edicts of Emperor Guangxu, "the enemy" was widely used to refer to the Japanese army, and the words "the enemy army, the enemy soldiers, the enemy guns and the enemy court" were derived.

From the Hongwu period, the Ming Dynasty devoted itself to strengthening coastal defense. In the seventeenth year of Yongle (14 19), the Ming army invaded the Japanese army in Wanghai, Liaodong. Since then, coastal defense has been relatively calm. After Jiajing, Japan entered the Warring States Period. With the support of feudal princes, Japanese pirates colluded with China pirates Wang Zhi and Xu Hai.

In the coastal areas of Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Fujian, towns and cities were attacked and plundered, and the Japanese suffered great losses in the southeast of the Ming Dynasty. The Ming court appointed officials to manage coastal defense many times, which was difficult to be effective because of government corruption. In the late Jiajing period, Qi Jiguang, Yu and other generals successively put down pirates in Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian and Guangdong, and the pirates were at peace.

The background of the enemy is as follows:

/kloc-at the end of 0/3, Japan implemented the sea ban policy. However, Japanese businessmen were determined to search for goods from China, and they were forbidden to do business in Zhejiang and Fujian in the Yuan Dynasty. The Yuan government received Japanese businessmen by collecting taxes from Qingyuan (now Ningbo) and Quanzhou Shipping Company. Most of these businessmen are armed businessmen who robbed the west coast of Japan.

They "tried to rob Tosa and Hou Feng with a small boat, hid on a desert island and watched merchant ships plunder it", and induced Ibn to promise China. Japanese businessmen in China were "dissatisfied with what they wanted, but they left." . Therefore, "in the end, the world will not come, and the thief has slept."