The Lu family relied on this army of hundreds of thousands.
The army base was bombarded by King Qin, and tens of thousands of people were captured. Those who were willing to go home would make an offer, and those who were unwilling to surrender, let them join the Da Zhou army.
The Northern Qi was already a territory of the Great Zhou, and there was no shame in joining the Zhou army instead.
Except for a small number of requests to return home, most of them are willing to join the Zhou army.
So a magical scene happened.
King Qin led one hundred thousand troops to attack the Lu family, not only did not lose a single soldier and one general, but when he returned, he had seven or eighty thousand more. All the people in the city went out to watch.
Of course, King Qin did not really bring all these seventy or eighty thousand prisoners to Kyoto.
Kyoto is so big, it can't hold so many people at once. On the way back from Beiqi, King Qin scattered the returning Lu family army and stayed there every time he passed by.
Most of them are divided into various health centers.
In this way, it will not cause too much pressure to raise the army in a certain place, and even if the scattered Lu Jiajun occasionally has different intentions, he will not be able to overcome any storms.
This is the same way that the Jiuli people were treated.
The Jiuli people are allowed to live in, that is to protect them from being bullied, but not too many. So that they don't obey the discipline and cause any trouble.
This method still works very well.
The people of Jiuli still stand by themselves.
Of course, one of the important reasons they are willing to keep themselves safe is because they believe that their saint is the second princess of the Great Zhou Kingdom.
The saint let them integrate into the lives of the people of Da Zhou, and they obeyed.
It can be said that what the Jiuli people surrender is not the Emperor of the Great Zhou, nor the empress, but their second princess.
King Qin returned with a complete victory.
The Lu family was defeated.
But the centipede is dead but not stiff. With the huge size of the Lu Family, even if their army is destroyed, the Lu Family cannot be destroyed in a short time.
What's more, so far, the Lu Family still holds Xiao Ziliang in his hands.
Although Da Zhou didn't care about Xiao Ziliang, the people of Northern Qi did.
In their hearts, Xiao Ziliang was the Emperor of the Xiao family and the master they wanted to be loyal to.
If Da Zhou really ignored the life and death of Xiao Ziliang, it would inevitably cause dissatisfaction among the people of Northern Qi.
Stability is more than everything.
The imperial court has always been tolerant of the rule of the Northern Qi, and it has given many benefits to the people.
Now that the prince of Northern Qi has been arrested, can the court leave it alone?
It must be managed.
The emperor and prince led the civil and military officials and personally greeted the king of Qin triumphantly.
King Qin was riding on the back of dark clouds, wearing heavy armor, and handsome and handsome, which drew cheers from the crowd.
Everyone believed that the King of Qin was the mighty **** of war, and without a single soldier, he quelled the rebellion in the Lu family of Beiqi.
However, King Qin knew in his heart that although he sent troops to the Lu family this time, although he did not lose his troops, it still cost millions of taels of silver.
Mainly spent on artillery.
The production of artillery is extremely expensive, and every cannonball thrown out is nothing but silver.
When the ministers of the Military Aircraft Department discussed this matter, they once asked a question whether the money spent on shells was more important, or the soldiers' lives were more important.
In the war, the deaths and injuries of the bottom soldiers are also included in the cost.
Is it expensive to raise soldiers or to make shells?
The arsenal has clear accounts, and the cost of raising a soldier is easy to figure out.
The comparison result is amazing.
The cost of an artillery shell far exceeds the money needed to raise a soldier.