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I have removed "the most brilliant poet" and "He was clearly not good at politics". This is not NPOV. Who considers him to be the most brilliant? What did he actually do in politics? These are questions which should be answered in a NPOV way in the article... -- Oliver P. 23:32 14 Jun 2003 (UTC)
- About "the most brilliant poet", it may be POV, but nowadays he became the most recognised Chinese poet during his time. About politics: He was the first born, he should be the successor of Cao Cao, but he lost the political struggle to his younger brother Cao Pi.
- agree partially. He was the most recognised Chinese poet during his time and a school of poetry style stemmed from him and remained popular until the Tang dynasty. However, he was the third son, not the first, from his mother. kt2 03:43 18 Jun 2003 (UTC)
Indeed, Cao Ang was oldest, but died at Wan Castle, and Cao Pi was second oldest and therefore inherited Cao Cao's land. Cao Wei 17:35, 19 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Again with these small damned errors.
Cao Cao didn't declare himself emperor, Cao Pi did. -_-
It's sad because you can tell it's a mistake if you re-read the same line.