Warm-Hearted Long Chen

They mutually permitted each other's men to collect the bodies of the fallen soldiers on the battlefield; this was an unwritten rule.

In ancient times, the dead were greatly respected. These deceased soldiers needed to be retrieved, and if possible, buried. If not, their bodies were to be cremated, and their ashes taken back to their hometowns for burial.

Sitting in the tent, Long Chen silently listened to the words of the advisor Jia Xu.

"Lord, in this battle, our army lost three thousand men, with five thousand seriously injured and eight thousand lightly wounded."

Losing one-fifth of a fifty-thousand-strong army without causing a mutiny or desertion was indeed rare in ancient battlefields.

This was a testament to Long Chen's excellent military management; otherwise, most armies would likely collapse after losing even a tenth of their forces.