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  • Join Date: December 10, 2023
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Replying to PeachBlossomGoddess Dec 8, 2025
Good guess but the Marshal Jiu (or the Ninth Marshal) that Ms Su referred to should be Zeng Guoquan, the 9th brother…
Ofc., that's the obvious reason but it doesn't explain why GPY and not some other more reknown and experienced businessman/money maker. Ms Su explained GPY was chosen by Jiu because GPY has no powerful backers in Bejing. Why would he care about the backers if his only goal was to make cash and disband the troops? If the person tasked with money making had a powerful backer, wouldn't it be even better and more certain that potential obstacles can be removed in an easier way? So, the only logical explanation is that he wants GPY and not some other person is bc he wants people from central power(s) at bay. The question is why he wants to avoid their involvement
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Replying to PeachBlossomGoddess Dec 8, 2025
Good guess but the Marshal Jiu (or the Ninth Marshal) that Ms Su referred to should be Zeng Guoquan, the 9th brother…
yes, the author created this character (Rui Lin) in order to make us think these 7 provinces were ruled by a civil, not military officer as it was in real history. But he (the marshal) still must have smth to do with the management of Liangjiang, otherwise, with what kind of authority would he asked GPY to be his (Rui Lin's) economic advisor?
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Replying to PeachBlossomGoddess Dec 8, 2025
Good guess but the Marshal Jiu (or the Ninth Marshal) that Ms Su referred to should be Zeng Guoquan, the 9th brother…
btw. what's your opinion why he wants GPY as a post war economic management advisor?
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Replying to PeachBlossomGoddess Dec 8, 2025
Good guess but the Marshal Jiu (or the Ninth Marshal) that Ms Su referred to should be Zeng Guoquan, the 9th brother…
Oh, tnx, I didn't connect "Jiu" with 9. I've ruled him out exactly bc he was Zeng Guofan's bro and responsible for the Nanjing massacre (Zeng the Butcher). He indeed served as viceroy of Liangjiang but 2 decades later (1884).
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Replying to Megumi-H Dec 8, 2025
Yes, Ms Su’s arrogant has a big part to do with her status. She is also fortunate that despite her father’s…
I was initially sceptical about the role of her character in this story, it looked unrealistic how freely she moved with 300 horses across half of China to be delivered to the rebels or her disguise as servant at prince Gong's mansion during the tea competition in order to poison Cixi... Her dangerous, arrogant and unpredictable actions somehow didn't match the description LWT gave to LQ about her: "the smartest person I've ever met..." and that her dealings with people always meet what the other person desires the most and cannot refuse the deal with her. Later I've thought she is just functional for story-telling, bc she often provides "enlightments" on the background of certain issues and persons. But now I think it was just a prejudice in my head to connect smartness with modesty and caution. In real life actually there are very smart persons who are arrogant and unpredictable in their speech and action. That means I've started to see this character believable, realistic.
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Replying to Suuy Dec 7, 2025
I am at ep 11. I am really confused at the scheme of Gu and the money withdraw/deposit of banks. At first the…
That business was sunked by Li Qin's father. Go back to ep 5 to the dialogue LQ and LWT had in the family vault, before LQ departing...
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Replying to Jingq1 Dec 7, 2025
I am intrigued by your knowledge and wanted to say how impressed I am with the insight you bring to this drama.…
Thank you for such a huge compliment. Actually, I'm a European (so, a foreigner as well), I'm just completely thrilled by this drama that's why I write so many comments, lol.
It touches practically all my weak points:
- I love a well-told interesting story
- I love history (actually, I've studied the history of warfare, the contemporary history of Asian countries and although the latter only superficialy addresses the reasons of the downfall of Qing, I've passionately researched Cixi's life and regency on my own...)
- I love to travel, so I love its stunning visuals of different parts of China, I feel like I am traveling, feeling a joy of learning a lot about the unknown places I see. With this story, we space- and time-traveled from Ningguta, historical harsh NE place for exiled people to today's UNESCO protected Pingyao at the moment first draft banks started to flourish in it, incredibly enriching this town (and turning it to a financial heart of the empire) and Shanxi province, then to Mongolian grasslands... We enjoyed stunning views of tea planted Anhui hills, saw Hefei's fortification distruction, went to Beijing, crossed the border on Amur river and went to the Russian region some Chinese still consider "theirs" being this region "Manchurian homeland", ceded to the Russian empire under the "unequal treaties" and a slap to the Qing court. We've seen Shanghai's port when it started to take over the role Guangzhou had till the cession of Hong Kong to the UK (always under the unequal treaties) of the main export-import hub. And now we are on the boat on Yangtze river directed to Nanjing, another place of enormous historical and spacial importance.
- I love the seventh art (extended to dramaworld) in general but feel frustrated by the Western and in particular European incapacity to tell compelling, epic and - for humakind - truly important stories, independently of their genre. Asian movies and dramas also greatly fail to satisfy such a high requirement of mine but occasionally they succeed making me feel so... thrilled. 😌
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Replying to AnastasiaWun Dec 7, 2025
LOL only the naive brother is smiling and happily nibbling the food and drinking when everyone at the dinner table…
complete anti-talent in "reading the room", lol
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Replying to Salwa Nice Dec 7, 2025
Well received. This drama is Airing on CCTV-8 & IQIYi, both datas are fine ( Dramas that are aired on CCTV…
This drama is waaay more engaging and better paced than This Thriving Land. TTL initial eps were interesting and engaging as well, but at a certain point the pace was lost, I've put it on hold after 9 eps.
Tnx for giving us these infos
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Replying to Nahlabee4 Dec 7, 2025
I’m glad they didn’t create the cliche of making Miss Su fall in love with Mr Gu.
Ms Su is so arrogant that can't fall in love with anybody else but herself. Dangerous and vindictive, hardly any man will fall her, either (remember GPY-Li Qin guys' talk at Ningguta about her?). But we somehow like (or better, admire) her despite her being a b**ch, because she is smart, informed and... extremely intuitive (she even smelled smth fishy about LWT relationship with GPY), capable and committed to her goal of distrupting the imperial court/palace in every possible way.
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On Legend of the Magnate Dec 7, 2025
Ms Su, talking about Marshal Jiu: "he isn't even qualified to wash my feet".
Now we know why she is so arrogant and so well informed about the politics: being "qualified" to enter the Palace at the age of 12 (destined to become a consort to the emperor) means she belongs to the Manchu's high nobility, as the emperor could marry (as consorts) only members of high (Manchu or integrated Mongol) noble clans. A marshal (being a Han, thus viewed as of "servile mentality" by the Manchus' nobility) is barely qualified to serve her, independantly of how powerful he is. And this marshal Jiu is really powerful: certainly not because he is showered with titles, privileges and important imperial tasks but because he possesses his own army of soldiers who serve under the principle "army belongs to a general" (a precursor to the later warlordism and fragmentation of the central power). The disruptive potential of decentralized powers is the reason why she supports him without joining "his forces" as she said to GPY.
Searching among possible persons who might have inspired Marshal Jiu's character, Li Hongchang matches fictional Jiu character the most, having Li HC been a stand-in for Zeng Guofan as provincial governor of Jiangsu and viceroy of Liangjiang in 1865-1866 period. The author split the historical character in two fictional: Marshal Jiu and Rui Lin (governor of Liangjiang in the drama). Although there was a real historical person (a minister of interior) at the time named Rui Lin, this real person had no connections with the area or with the administration of 7 provinces of Liangjiang devastated by the civil war with Taiping. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Hongzhang
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Replying to FunnyBunny1026 Dec 7, 2025
That scene between Mr Liao and Mr Bai at the latter’s deathbed was so profound and is one of my fav Cdrama scenes…
Truly memorable
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Replying to Lilybilly Dec 7, 2025
Can you please explain the reason why Li Wan Tang and the other non-Mr. Hart official knew they ultimately lost…
The key for understanding this whole tea sale is in GPY's first question to the captain of the warship: "do you sell this ship?"
Ofc he knew such a ship is not for sale, but he asked such an apparently stupid question (even his stupid bro understood it was stupid) to convey another meaning: "I am here to buy smth from you, captain". The things he "bought" from the captain are: 1. transportation service of tea to India 2. the persuasion power of the British flag and the dissuasion power of that big black cannon on the board. Why? Bc. these "suasion tools" are necessary and sufficient to put down the weakened power of the imperial court and Qing's institutions. In history, it was called "the gunpowder diplomacy". Prince Gong (who btw. personally signed the unequal treaties with Western powers + Japan representing the Qing during Xianfeng's reign) established that Foreign Trade Office in Shanghai in order to milk money from the export fee on goods traded towards these countries through LWT, appointed with exclusive right to negotiate tea export deals with foreign trade companies, such as East India Company (and LWT was concluding such deals with EIC agent Mr. Richard generously bribing the latter). But GPY is too smart not to understand that under the unequal treaties, no foreigner can be prosecuted by Qing's institutions. That's why he won the argument against Mr. Hart on the ship (a genial dialogue): "British captain bought privately the Anhui tea and will transport it privately to his home in India. If you think he violated the law, bring him to the court, I have nothing to do with it", knowing Mr Hart, as a head of customs office had no power to do such a thing.
Transaction papers in the deal were: purchase agreement between Anhui Tea Ass. and Shanxi Merchant Association (GPY is the nominal "head" of), which ceded it to Mr. Li (one of the 8 families and the biggest tea merchant in the North) who asked (pigeon message) his buddy Mr. Wu (silk merchant of 8 families) to pay Anhui Tea Ass. with "silver bullion" (ie., with legally issued money). As a tea merchant, experienced in selling it even abroad ("in the North" probably includes Qing's protectorate and tributary countries), Mr. Li then made a fictional "private" agreement with the captain making him a nominal owner to pass the costums controls and then embarked onto the ship in order to sell it in India. Once sold there, captain will receive a generous dividend deriving from much higher price there in comparison to the tea price in China and be a rich man.
The entire (brillianty written with brilliant details) scene at Foreign Trade Office was made to expose the weakness of the Qing institutions, not only in front of the foreigners (they can't prosecute) but also in front of the rising local (provincial) powers of the businessmen (able to buy the offices in order to enjoy official privileges and exemptions, like Mr. Wu).
And ofc. to show how GPY's brilliant idea to borrow the power of the "gunpowder diplomacy" (= "the foreigners") works in practice
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Replying to EtoileNoire Dec 6, 2025
His older brother got all the brains in that family, for sure! Pingwen never listens, never stops talking, and…
I am truly humbled ❤️❤️❤️
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Replying to EtoileNoire Dec 6, 2025
His older brother got all the brains in that family, for sure! Pingwen never listens, never stops talking, and…
you're totally right.
But the ML wouldn't be GPY we know if he haven't had someone like his brother to protect and help him grow up.
Thinking about the real life, I personally function way better when taking care/protecting other people, especially those who have no clue, like Ping Wen
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Replying to AleksandraSucur Dec 6, 2025
the algorithm counts even the drop of initial 19 votes per ep to 3 per ep, no matter the vote is higher, it will…
I also didn't figure it out, just noticed, as a person who notice numbers...
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Replying to EtoileNoire Dec 6, 2025
His older brother got all the brains in that family, for sure! Pingwen never listens, never stops talking, and…
me too, lol, 👍
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Replying to nycfoodie Dec 6, 2025
Apparently, some MDL reviewers didn't think this C-drama deserves even a lowly 8.2 & decided to downrate it…
the algorithm counts even the drop of initial 19 votes per ep to 3 per ep, no matter the vote is higher, it will downrate it, bc, it counts the missing ones as people who don't watch it any more. And ofc., many people who've tried, decided not to watch any more and dropped, they are into romances whatever... so that's it for the algorithm.
But don't worry, the final verdict of votes is what counts MORE, the votes expressed are less than the 11th share of the viewers (and whose overall number actually rises), I personally never rated a drama before it ended or I've dropped it somewhere around the ending
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Replying to EtoileNoire Dec 6, 2025
His older brother got all the brains in that family, for sure! Pingwen never listens, never stops talking, and…
I actually feel the same about him as you, from the first moment I've seen him: omg, this bro is so frustrating.
But, such characters are necessary and functional for the pacing
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Replying to EtoileNoire Dec 6, 2025
GPY should have known about the tea merchants' association though. Even with his nose in his books, growing up…
I've also feared the plot hole when he gave them the recipe for Orchid Snow: I've expected the association would betray him and sell the tea to LWT. But the author smartly used this detail to rise the tension and our expectation in a bad exit of the whole "best tea under heavens" adventure, keeping us at the edge of our seats till the last moment.
Translated: whether he knew the tea association or forgotten how their mind can work or how much they can be scared during his exile years is irrelevant. He didn't make a deal with all the members of the association. He made a deal with their chief. He passed the honorary plaque to the association and gave them the receipe how to produce a pro version of the tea they were growning without asking anything for himself, without asking any change in their associative structure. Just by accepting these 3 things, they've OWNED him and if he asked for backing (actually, he asked foor just a day more), they could not say no any more. The association chief understood this, as well as he understood GPY is not a fool and has other "backers"
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