Shu Yuan (? -199), Zidao, from Ruyang County (now Shangshui County, Henan Province). At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the warlords were Yuan Ji, the second son, and Yuan Ji, the servant, and Yuan Shao, the half-brother of Jizhou Pastor.
Ju Xiaolian was born and worshipped as a corps commander of Henan Yin and Hu Ben. After Dong Zhuo arrived in Beijing, he became a post-general and went out to Nanyang County for fear of disaster. In the first year of Chuping (190), Yuan Shao, Cao Cao and other Kanto governors joined forces to crusade against Dong Zhuo.
After that, he rebelled against Yuan Shao and Cao Cao, fled to Jiujiang and became independent in Yangzhou. In the second year of Jian 'an (197), it was located in Shouchun and was named Zhong's. Excessive extravagance and excessive expropriation led to the ruin of the Jianghuai area, many people starved to death, many people deserted, and were attacked by Lu Bu and Cao Cao, and their vitality was greatly damaged. In the fourth year of Jian 'an (199), he vomited blood and died.
Extended data
Yuan Shu was born in the famous Sangong IV family in the Eastern Han Dynasty. His family is the second son of Sikong Yuanfeng, Yuan from Runan. Legend has it that when he was born, the fairy gave his mother a dream that the child in her arms had a fate. Because Yuan Shu's ordinary brother Yuan Shao is his uncle's adopted son, history books are generally called Shao's cousins, but they are actually half-brothers.
But Yuan Shao's mother was only a handmaid, and Yuan Shao's position in the family in his early years was quite humble. Zhong Ping six years (189), ten attendants killed blades, Yuan Shu and Wu Kuang jointly attacked the palace, and eunuchs fought with weapons. Yuan Shu burned the east and west palaces of Kowloon Gate and Nangong, forcing ten attendants to abandon the palace and flee.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Yuan Shu