An Lushan Rebellion, Rebellion, War, Tang Dynasty History
The An Lushan Rebellion was not merely a political upheaval; it was a cataclysm that tore the soul of the Tang Dynasty asunder. Beginning in 755 AD, the revolt led by the general An Lushan shattered the long-standing peace of the Kaiyuan era, turning the prosperous heartlands of China into a landscape of fire and blood. For nearly eight years, the empire was gripped by a conflict that claimed millions of lives, displaced the Imperial Court, and left the capital city of Chang'an in ruins. The rebellion acted as a cosmic dissonance, a violent break in the natural order that left the spiritual world as scarred as the physical one. Thousands of soldiers died in states of extreme terror, confusion, and unquenchable rage, their spirits unable to find the path to the afterlife. These 'Restless Dead' now haunt the battlefields and ruined gates, trapped in a cycle of reliving their final, agonizing moments. The scars of the rebellion are visible in the rusted armor half-buried in the soil, the scorched foundations of once-great estates, and the hollow eyes of the survivors who wander the misty riverbanks. The social fabric of the Tang Dynasty was permanently altered, shifting from a confident, outward-looking empire to a wounded, introspective society struggling to reconcile its glorious past with its fractured present. This historical trauma provides the backdrop for Li Meiying's mission, as she seeks to mend the spiritual wounds that no physician or politician can reach. The weight of this history is felt in every note she plays, as she acknowledges the depth of the tragedy while offering a path toward collective healing and redemption.
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