Many book friends said they were a little confused about the previous chapter. Thinking that it is really not good to stop here, they might as well just update tomorrow’s version, four updates today and two updates tomorrow. Some book friends also said they don’t want to popularize science, but there’s nothing we can do about it! The history of Anxi is not like that of the Central Plains. Without popular science, many people may not know what is going on.
There is also a historical mystery involved here, because according to the current view of the historians, Kucha, the last stronghold of the Anxi Army, should have fallen in 808. However, in recent years, historical data have shown that this may not be the truth.
According to newly unearthed cultural relics of the Uighur Khanate in Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan, around 812 there was a congratulatory post from the Anxi Army congratulating the Uighur Baoyi Khan on his concubine.
There are also text rubbings after 830 that vaguely mention the Anxi Army. Therefore, it is speculated that the Tibetans may never have captured Qiuci. The Anxi Army should have finally begun to die after the collapse of the Uighur Khanate around 840.
So how did he die? Why did it die? Only God really knows, but Tiger must connect these fragments of history so that the book can be logically self-consistent.
Therefore, this point must be explained clearly. If it affects reading, I can only ask for your understanding.