First, the peasant emperor Zhu Yuanzhang
Zhu Yuanzhang was born in a peasant family. When he was young, he didn't even have a name, because he was the eighth in the family and his name was Zhu Chongba. Later, when there was a drought in my hometown, my parents and brothers starved to death, and Zhu Yuanzhang became a loner. In order to survive, Zhu Yuanzhang worked as a monk and a beggar. Coincidentally, he took part in the peasant uprising at the end of the Yuan Dynasty and made some achievements, becoming the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty. On the grassroots level, Zhu Yuanzhang is worse than Liu Bang.
Second, the servant emperor Zhu Wen
Zhu Wen is a tyrannical and cruel man, but his life is also a history of grassroots struggle. Zhu Wen's father died young, and his mother took their three brothers to make a living as servants in other people's homes. But Zhu Wen was often beaten by his master because he was disobedient. Later, Zhu Wen took refuge in Huang Chao, the leader of the peasant uprising army in the late Tang Dynasty, and was suspected by Huang Chao, who also took refuge in the Tang Dynasty. In 907, Zhu Wen abolished Tang Aidi, established himself as emperor, and established a girder.
Third, the slave emperor Schleswig-Holstein
Xerox was born in the troubled times of Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties. He is not a Han Chinese, but a Jie, who founded the post-Zhao Dynasty. Schleswig was sold as a slave in his teens and had no formal name. Later, Schleswig-Holstein rose and took the official name "Schleswig-Holstein". In 3 19, Schleswig established the post-Zhao regime. Ten years later, Schleswig destroyed the former Zhao and proclaimed himself emperor. He also became the only slave emperor in the history of China.
In the ancient history of China, many emperors were born well, but some were born at the grassroots level. A person's success or failure is not determined by birth, but by ability.