WebNovels

明朝中兴实录

Edmondsen
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
17k
Views
Synopsis
The Restoration Records of the Ming is a work of speculative “historical reenactment” built on the late-Ming/early-Qing fault line. It asks a single, unforgiving question: when the same collapse, the same invasion, and the same bureaucratic net descend again—does history still end in the same place? The book is not driven by a simplistic calculus of victory and defeat. Its core is an inquiry into where humiliation comes from, and how it can be erased. Humiliation is never the work of an external enemy alone; it is also born from the collapse of internal order—institutions that fail, rules that stop working, and a people who can no longer trust one another. Accordingly, “erasing” humiliation is not only a counteroffensive on the battlefield. It is the rebuilding of a rule-set that can reconnect a shattered society—what the novel calls Gates, Routes, and Rosters. Gates are the nodes through which people and goods must pass; Routes are repeatable procedures that make passage possible without begging or bribery; Rosters are the network’s eyes—structured knowledge that replaces rumor, panic, and arbitrary accusation. Rebuilding them means restoring predictability where terror thrives: ensuring that ordinary people are no longer called out by name at will, stripped at will, killed at will; ensuring that the state no longer depends on the lucky appearance of a single hero, but endures through sustainable institutions and coordination. In the end, the “Restoration of the Ming” becomes a rebuttal to historical inevitability. The novel argues that if, at the first moment of breakdown, we can preserve the skeleton of order, then history does not have to repeat its most humiliating chapters.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Prologue | Fragments from The Veritable Record of the Great Ming’s Restoration

序言 | "大明复辟实录"

当我着手撰写本书时,距离那一年已经过去了很多年.

在集市上,说书人喜欢用几句生动的话来概括一个国家的兴衰:"崇祯死,明灭;吴三桂开门,清进;之后就是势头了——该投降的投降,该逃的逃亡."

然而,我始终觉得这种说法过于片面——就好像把奔腾的河流仅仅看作是一滴水的流向一样.历史从来不是由一个人的突发冲动推动的,也不是由一扇门的开合所决定的.

有一次,我在长江以南的一座旧仓库里,发现了一本破旧的军账.书页因潮湿而膨胀,摸起来软软的,但仍然能辨认出几行墨迹:"六月四日,京城换旗.然而,人民的心并未死;从此以后,正义的旗帜高高飘扬."

在山顶寺庙里,我看到一根断矛.矛杆上刻着两个字:坚韧不屈.

后来我才明白:那一年真正改写命运的,并非帝王将相,也并非将军.而是无数在最黑暗的时刻,做出了所有人意想不到的决定——拒绝下跪.