Chapter nine hundred and eighty sixth family
Seeing that the two sides were about to quarrel again, someone hurriedly persuaded the fight: "Okay, okay, don't argue anymore. Hua Niang, someone has come from the palace in the capital. The father-in-law in the palace went to the academy and called your husband."
When Hua Gu heard this, she was shocked and was so scared that the pig intestine in her hand fell to the ground: "What, my husband has caused some great disaster? Why was he caught by the people in the palace?"
When the flower butcher saw the large intestine of pigs that fell on the ground, he immediately cursed: "You are the retribution in this life, how did I raise such a broom star like you? You threw a good pig intestine on the ground. It was covered with dust, how could it be washed clean?"
The pig intestine is full of mucus, and it falls on the ground and is stained with soil. The soil adheres to the pig intestine and is indeed difficult to clean.
Hua Gu stomped her feet in anger: "Dad, Chen Wen has caused trouble. Are you still calculating about the pig intestine? People have come to the palace, what should I do?"
Hua Gu thought her husband had said something that shouldn't have said or written something that shouldn't have been written. She actually alarmed the eunuchs in the imperial city, and was afraid that they would come to raise an army to ask for punishment.
Hua Gu still knows how much Chen Wen has, how many pounds he has. He is not a material for studying. If he can do anything good to disturb the capital, it will probably cause trouble.
Any trouble you have caused is naturally unrestrained or written something.
Literary inquisitions have existed throughout the dynasties. It was especially true in the Qing Dynasty, and there were also literary inquisitions in the Ming Dynasty.
The Ming Dynasty's literary inquisition is the general term for literary inquisition cases during the Ming Dynasty. Due to the tyranny of the Yuan Dynasty, Chinese cultural and ideological problems suffered a great blow. This also indirectly led to the contradiction between feudal literati and the new dynasty in the ideological and cultural field of the Ming Dynasty.
The emperors of the Ming Dynasty maintained their own rule, cracked down on dissidents, and suppressed some cases of convicted for speech caused by their reign. Under feudal rule, the Ming Dynasty's literary inquisition was involved during the reign of Emperor Taizu of the Ming Dynasty and Emperor Tianqi of Emperor Tianqi. Especially during the Hongwu period and Jiajing period, it had a profound impact on social and cultural heritage.
After the establishment of the Ming Dynasty, the contradictions within the ruling class gradually emerged. In addition to the contradictions between imperial power and ministerial power in feudal society, there were also fierce struggles between Huaixi Group and non-Huaixi Group, southerners and northerners within the ruling class. This contradiction was particularly prominent in the Hongwu dynasty, which was closely related to Zhu Yuanzhang's own experience.
The emergence of literary inquisition in the Ming Dynasty originated from the dispute between civil and military affairs in the Hongwu Dynasty. At the beginning of its establishment, the Ming Taizu adhered to the famous saying "You can win the world immediately, but you cannot rule the world immediately", and began to use a large number of literati to formulate court rituals, rules, criminal laws, military systems, household registration, schools and other regulations, which made the atmosphere in the early Ming Dynasty and the administration was clear and clear, and the status of literati in Taizu's heart also improved.
These white-faced scholars, who were powerless, naturally did not dare to have any usurpation towards the imperial power. However, their status improved aroused strong dissatisfaction among the ministers from the ranks. They sought various excuses to oppose them, and the scribes' preference for slander became one of their excuses for attacking them.
However, the Ming Dynasty was relatively tolerant of the handling of literary inquisitions, not as cruel and unreasonable as the Qing Dynasty. It is rumored that the victims of "literary inquisitions" were Xu Yikui, who lived to be eighty years old in official historical records, so the Ming Dynasty did not deal with literary inquisitions seriously.
Even so, Hua Gu was still frightened to the point of being earthy.
Chapter completed!