Chapter 951: Inhumane Aggression, No Future!
The nuclear warhead competition was an oolong incident decades ago, which made Zhu Zilong cry and laugh. Pen, fun, and www.biquge.info
As a Chinese, Zhu Zilong did not have time to accompany the Japanese to protest together, nor did he care about what compensation he wanted.
Turning left and right, I came to the Imperial Palace of Japan.
That is, where the emperor lived, and in China it was similar to the imperial palace of the Forbidden City.
To be honest, he hadn't been inside once, but he stopped by, so let's go in and have a look.
Because the emperor of Japan is still alive in the world, unlike the modern Forbidden City of New China, you can go in and see it from anywhere. However, most of the Emperor's palace rooms are still accessible to tourists.
Only, there are rules. The core area of the Imperial Palace in Japan, which is not accessible to ordinary people!
The Imperial Palace in Tokyo is roughly divided into four sections, of which the outer garden, the east garden, and the north garden are open to the public, but the central part of the palace (that is, the large green area) is generally not accessible to visitors.
Travelers traveling in groups will usually visit the Imperial Palace's outer garden, which is open 24 hours a day and has a road running through it.
The Imperial Palace of Japan is the residence of the emperor, which was built by Tokugawa Ieyasu in the 18th year of Tensho (1590 AD), covering an area of 23,000 square meters. And the "inner court fee" is the "pocket money" for the private use of Emperor Akihito's family of five!
For example, after the Great East Japan Earthquake, the emperor donated 15 million yen and spent his "pocket money". Like many traditional families, the Emperor is in charge of the finances by his wife, Empress Michiko.
The Imperial Palace of Japan was formerly known as Edo Castle, the ruling center of the Tokugawa Shogunate, and was later converted into a palace by Emperor Meiji. It was bombed by the U.S. Army during World War II and rebuilt in the 60s of the last century.
In other words, in fact, it is really long gone, but it was imitated later.
In comparison, most of China's Forbidden City is still intact, except for the Old Summer Palace, of course!
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Zhu Zilong walked in, the first to step on a small stone road.
In ancient times, in order to protect the shogun from the ninja legions, the area around Edo Castle was paved with gravel roads, so that even the best ninja could not walk silently without being detected.
The same is true of the Imperial City.
The main entrance stone bridge and Fushimi turret. Every time the emperor summoned foreign envoys, the royal carriage passed through this stone bridge to enter the palace.
Now it has become the entrance to the toll booth, and you can enter and visit for 3,000-5,000 yen per person, about a few hundred yuan.
After passing a small square in front of the stone bridge, Zhu Zilong watched from a distance, the most famous "double bridge" of the Japanese Imperial Palace.
Further inward, it's not the site of a 24-hour development.
After all, the emperor is still alive, not dead.
If the emperor of China has not dismounted and you want to visit the Forbidden City, it is estimated that you can only see it outside, and this is the reason.
However, Zhu Zilong is not an ordinary person in the end.
Along the way, I had already paid attention to those cameras, one dodged, jumped a few in the air, and took advantage of people's inattention, put on a mask, and jumped into the inner city.
Just came, so naturally I had to read enough.
In 1969, when the Imperial Palace opened for the first time on the New Year, Emperor Showa was attacked with a copper bullet, and since then the Imperial Family has been able to meet people behind bulletproof glass.
However, in recent years, the new emperor of Japan has never lived here. Or rarely come here, but the guards are not very powerful, and no one noticed Zhu Zilong's arrival.
The sculpture next to it is called "Matsu no Pagoda", which is an offering to the imperial family by the Japanese people, and can be used as a lighting messenger at night. Due to the recent earthquake, the Emperor ordered that the Imperial Palace must also have a power outage at night.
The interior of the main hall is divided into three major rooms: "pine", "bamboo" and "plum". It is the most important place in Japan to hold various national ceremonies.
The Meiji Imperial Palace was built in 1888 and burned down during the Great Tokyo Air Raid in 1945, so it has been in use for less than 60 years. Zhu Zilong saw some old photos of the Meiji Imperial Palace in the palace, which is okay if you don't look at it, but you will be angry to death when you see it.
There are some photos of war criminals in Jingran, who are obviously sinners of history, and they are still hanging here in a grand manner?
After looking at no one for a while, Zhu Zilong directly took away these photos.
I saw a corner, and a photo inside the glass said that this person was the king of Jing Ke in Japan, and he was also a sinner!
Interesting?
The Japanese also know that Jing Ke assassinated the King of Qin?
Zhu Zilong stepped forward to take a look, and it was written. Lee Bong-chang, 32 years old at the time of his death, was a North Korean. And then here's the account of the incident!
The second time in his life was the Japanese emperor who invaded China was assassinated at the age of 31. The first time was at the age of 22, when he was still the crown prince of the regent. This time it was said that the second assassination was made. It occurred after the 918 Incident of Japan's invasion of China.
In 1931, the Japanese invasion army launched the long-planned Shenyang Incident, invaded and occupied the three northeastern provinces of China, supported the last emperor Pu Yi to establish a puppet regime, and planned to separate Manchukuo from China.
On January 8, 1932, Emperor Hirohito, who was 31 years old and had succeeded to the throne for six years, invited the puppet Emperor of Manchukuo, Pu Yi, to participate in the military parade of the Guards Regiment at the Yoyogi Training Ground in Tokyo. At noon, the parade ended, and Emperor Hirohito got into the royal carriage and returned to the palace.
The assassination occurred when the motorcade drove between the Metropolitan Police Department outside Sakurada Gate and the Attorney General's Residence. A young man on the side of the road suddenly squeezed out of the crowd, broke through the cordon, and threw a grenade at Hirohito's convoy.
The carriage was blown up on the spot, but unfortunately, Hirohito, who followed him, was not injured.
The young man throws another random bomb at the second luxury throne. But sadly, the bomb did not explode.
If the second grenade exploded, the history of Japan's war of aggression against China might really be rewritten because of this young assassin.
The young man who carried out the assassination was North Korean national hero Ri Bong-chang, who was 32 years old at the time.
His family was persecuted by the Japanese invasion and was very poor, and he worked part-time in Osaka, working as a printing factory worker and a fruit shop clerk. In 1931, he joined the "Korean Patriotic League" that used violent and terrorist means to resist Japan.
When he was working in Osaka, Japan, he hid two Japanese-made military grenades in his underwear, (it seems that the underwear hides mines, there is still a historical basis, Khan!) Always looking for an opportunity to assassinate the Emperor of Japan.
After Japan's surrender in World War II, Lee Bong-chang's remains were exhumed and transported back to China by Koreans in Japan, and a state funeral was held in Seoul.
His deeds have been widely praised by Koreans, and he has been featured in Korean elementary school history textbooks, and is still promoted as a hero.
There is no doubt that this is a small person, but also a hero.
If you despise a small person, sometimes, he will counterattack and show you.
Zhu Zilong is in color and salutes this photo. Then he took out a pen from his pocket that could not be washed off, and wrote several large Chinese characters on the glass.
(Lee Bong-chang, a hero of mankind!) )
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After doing this, with respect for the hero in his heart and a bad night for the little devil, Zhu Zilong continued to go deep into the depths of the Japanese Imperial Palace.
The year before last was the 130th anniversary of the First Sino-Japanese War, and last year marked the 80th anniversary of China's victory in the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression.
In these two wars, China lost one and won another. In addition to the difference in victory and defeat, the First Sino-Japanese War was a regional war, while the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression was an all-out war between the two countries in a contest of comprehensive national strength.
To count the wars between China and Japan, China and Japan have fought four times in the past 500 years.
During the Ming Dynasty, there were two Wanli Korean Wars, plus the First Sino-Japanese War and the War of Resistance Against Japan, a total of four times.
In these four wars, Japan must fully bear the responsibility for the wars. China defeated Japan with three wins and one loss!
For comprehensive suppression, little devil, Zhu Zilong has always been full of confidence!
History teaches us that inhumane aggression has no future, only failure.
------- (To be continued.) )