Chen Dao


Chen Dao, courtesy name Shuzhi, was a military general of the state of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period of China. He previously served under the warlord Liu Bei, the founding emperor of Shu Han, in the late Eastern Han dynasty.

Historical sources on Chen Dao's life

Little is recorded about Chen Dao in history; unlike other notable persons of the late Eastern Han dynasty and Three Kingdoms period, he does not have a biography in the 3rd-century text Records of the Three Kingdoms, the authoritative source for that era in Chinese history. Information on him is scattered throughout the biographies of other persons in the Sanguozhi and other sources such as the Chronicles of Huayang and Taiping Yulan.

Life and career

Chen Dao was from Runan Commandery, which covers parts of present-day southern Henan. He started following the warlord Liu Bei sometime in the 190s when Liu Bei held the appointment of Governor of Yu Province.
Chen Dao served under the Shu Han state, founded by Liu Bei, during the Three Kingdoms period. In the early Jianxing era of Liu Shan's reign, he was appointed General Who Attacks the West and Army Protector, and awarded the title of a village marquis. In 226, when the Shu regent Zhuge Liang was preparing to launch a military campaign against Wei, he reassigned the general Li Yan to Jiangzhou and put him in charge of logistics. Chen Dao was ordered to replace Li Yan at his previous post in Yong'an County near the border between Shu and its ally state Wu. Chen must have retired or died by 234 as Deng Zhi was soon stationed there as the new area commander.

Appraisal

, who annotated the Sanguozhi in the 5th century, mentioned that Chen Dao was second to the Shu general Zhao Yun in terms of fame and status, and that he exhibited loyalty and courage throughout his life.
Zhuge Liang, the Shu regent from 223 to 234, mentioned in a letter to his brother Zhuge Jin that Chen Dao led a military unit called "white feathers" which was one of the most elite units in the Shu army at the time.

In ''Romance of the Three Kingdoms''

Chen Dao does not appear in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, which romanticises the historical figures and events before and during the Three Kingdoms period. This is because the fictionalised Zhao Yun in the novel already sufficiently represents both the historical Zhao Yun and Chen Dao, hence there is no need for two separate characters. Which leads many to believe a fair portion of Zhao’s achievement may have been Chen Dao’s who historically was given higher ranks.