Water Margin
One of the Chinese Classic Novels
Summary
Water Margin, also called Outlaws of the Marsh or All Men Are Brothers, is a Chinese novel from the Ming dynasty that is one of the preeminent Classic Chinese Novels. Attributed to Shi Nai'an, Water Margin was one of the earliest Chinese novels written in vernacular Mandarin Chinese.
Originally created by 208.58.1.83
8/11/2003, 6:45:41 PM
Modified
6/11/2026, 4:51:40 PM
Recent revisions
remove copyvio from https://ebin.pub/snakes-legs-sequels-continuations-rewritings-and-chinese-fiction-0824828127-9780824828127.html
/* Fictional stories and novels about Yue Fei */
/* Sequels and spinoffs */
/* Xin Shuihu */
Modify as required.
Undid revision [[Special:Diff/1358876358|1358876358]] by [[Special:Contributions/SKBNK|SKBNK]] ([[User talk:SKBNK|talk]])
/* Sequels and spinoffs */ Modify as required.
remove copyright content copied from "Snakes' Legs: Sequels, Continuations, Rewritings, and Chinese Fiction", visible at https://ebin.pub/snakes-legs-sequels-continuations-rewritings-and-chinese-fiction-0824828127-9780824828127.html
/* Fictional stories and novels about Yue Fei */ fixed typo
Indeed, but it’s enough to simply change the linked page. Furthermore, I suggest keeping the original term "ultraconservative", because these two concepts are distinct, especially in the era of all-round transformation in which Yu Wanchun lived.”
Link to Dangkou Zhi
The meaning of this word likely mean very differently in the Qing dynasty, when this sequel was written
I think adding 'primarily' is not needed, since it is known to be different things to many.
/* Politics */
/* */ It would also be better to change this back, because the original text of the cited source is "known primarily"
/* Dangkou Zhi */