A century of war that became legend

From 184 to 280 CE, warlords, strategists, and warriors tore China apart and reshaped it. This wiki covers the Three Kingdoms period through Chen Shou's historical records and Luo Guanzhong's literary epic — fact and fiction, clearly separated.

The Three Kingdoms

Three kingdoms rose from the ashes of the Han dynasty. Each claimed to be its rightful successor.

Cao Wei (220–266)

曹魏

Founded by Cao Pi on the strength his father Cao Cao built, Wei controlled northern China's wealthy heartland. The dominant power of the three kingdoms, it fell not to a rival state but to the Sima clan from within.

Shu Han (221–263)

蜀汉

Liu Bei built Shu Han in the mountainous west, claiming descent from the Han imperial line. Zhuge Liang's brilliance kept a smaller kingdom punching above its weight — but it was the first to fall.

Eastern Wu (222–280)

东吴

The Sun family held the south behind the natural barrier of the Yangtze. Wu outlasted both rivals and commanded formidable naval power, but fell to the Jin dynasty's invasion in 280, ending the era.

Battles and events

The campaigns and turning points that shaped the Three Kingdoms

  1. Yellow Turban Rebellion 184 CE

    The peasant uprising that shattered the Han dynasty's authority and set the warlord era in motion

  2. Campaign against Dong Zhuo 190 CE

    A coalition of warlords marched on the tyrant who held the emperor hostage

  3. Battle of Guandu 200 CE

    Cao Cao's decisive victory over Yuan Shao that secured his dominance over the north

  4. Battle of Red Cliffs 208 CE

    The allied forces of Sun Quan and Liu Bei destroyed Cao Cao's fleet and forged the tripartite division

  5. Battle of Yiling 222 CE

    Liu Bei's catastrophic defeat at the hands of Eastern Wu that crippled Shu Han

  6. Zhuge Liang's Northern Expeditions 228–234 CE

    Five gruelling campaigns to restore the Han — and the death of the Sleeping Dragon

  7. Fall of Shu 263 CE

    The conquest that ended Liu Bei's dream of restoration

  8. Fall of Wu 280 CE

    The final campaign that reunified China under the Jin dynasty

Explore

Timeline of the Three Kingdoms period

  1. End of the Han Dynasty (184–196)

    The Yellow Turban Rebellion exposed the Han dynasty's fatal weakness. Regional warlords seized power as the imperial court crumbled.

  2. The Warlord Era (196–208)

    Cao Cao, Liu Bei, Sun Ce, Yuan Shao, and dozens of rivals fought for supremacy. Alliances shifted and territories changed hands.

  3. Formation of the Three Kingdoms (208–229)

    The Battle of Red Cliffs shattered Cao Cao's bid for total conquest. Three distinct states crystallised — Wei in the north, Shu in the west, Wu in the south.

  4. The Northern Expeditions (228–234)

    Zhuge Liang launched repeated campaigns to restore the Han, each ending in frustration. His death at Wuzhang Plains ended Shu Han's offensive capability.

  5. Decline and Reunification (234–280)

    The Sima clan seized Wei from within, conquered Shu, and overwhelmed Wu. China was reunified under the Jin dynasty in 280.

History and literature

The Three Kingdoms period is documented through two very different traditions. This wiki treats both with equal care — and keeps them clearly separated.

Historical records

Chen Shou's Records of the Three Kingdoms (三国志), completed around 289 CE, supplemented by Pei Songzhi's annotations and Sima Guang's Comprehensive Mirror in Aid of Governance (资治通鉴). These sources record what happened — as accurately as any ancient history can.

Romance of the Three Kingdoms

Luo Guanzhong's 14th-century novel (三国演义) transformed history into epic literature — dramatising real events, inventing famous scenes, and turning historical figures into cultural icons. The Oath of the Peach Garden, the Empty Fort Strategy, and Zhuge Liang's borrowing of arrows are all literary creations.

Every article in this wiki clearly distinguishes between historical record and literary portrayal, so readers always know where fact ends and legend begins.