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The famous saying of national hero Qi Jiguang is

1. A sword crossed the sky and the stars were fighting against the cold, and he followed Pingbei to conquer the barbarians again. He was granted the title of Marquis in his year, and wanted to learn from You people and live in this mountain.

2. A man is determined to serve his country.

3. I know that hundreds of countries are far away, but I don’t dare to forget the dangers and dangers of the years.

4. There is no better way to nourish one’s mind than to have few desires, and there is no better happiness than reading.

5. Traveling north and south to report the love of the Lord, laughing at the life of the river. Three hundred and sixty days a year, they are always on the march.

Qi Jiguang’s life:

Qi Jiguang fought against Japanese pirates on the southeast coast for more than ten years, eliminating the Japanese pirates that had plagued the coast for many years and ensuring the safety of lives and property of the coastal people.

Later, he fought against the Mongolian tribal invaders in the north for more than ten years, safeguarded the security of the northern territory, promoted the peaceful development of the Mongolian and Han peoples, and wrote the eighteen-volume "New Book of Jixiao" and ten Famous military books such as the four-volume "Records of Military Training", as well as "Zhizhitang Collection" and memorials and amendments submitted to the imperial court in various historical periods.

In the 42nd year of Jiajing (1563), he won a great victory over Haiwei with Yu Dayou, the commander-in-chief of Fujian, and Liu Xian, the commander-in-chief of Guangdong. From then on, the Japanese invasion was finally eliminated. Qi Jiguang once wrote a poem: "I drive north and south to report my love for the Lord, and the moonlight smiles beside the river all my life. Three hundred and sixty days a year, most of the horses are marching." In the eleventh year of Wanli (1583), after Zhang Juzheng's death, he was succeeded by Yang Fearing rejection, he was transferred to Guangdong and served as a guard. He died in depression. In his later years, his family was destitute, he was unprepared for medicine, and he was abandoned by his wife. He died in his hometown of Penglai on the eighth day of December in the fifteenth year of Wanli (1588).