Jump to content

Ming campaign against the Uriankhai: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 29: Line 29:
The Ming army comprised 200 thousand soldiers,<ref name=ts01-467/><ref name=dre82-1412/> including the 50,000 soldiers that garrisoned four fortresses.<ref name=dre82-1412/> General Feng Sheng and General [[Fu Youde]] commanded the front army, while General [[Lan Yu (general)|Lan Yu]] commanded the rear army.<ref name=ts01-467/> Prince [[Yongle Emperor|Zhu Di]] commanded the princely guard, but saw relatively limited action.<ref name=ts01-467/>
The Ming army comprised 200 thousand soldiers,<ref name=ts01-467/><ref name=dre82-1412/> including the 50,000 soldiers that garrisoned four fortresses.<ref name=dre82-1412/> General Feng Sheng and General [[Fu Youde]] commanded the front army, while General [[Lan Yu (general)|Lan Yu]] commanded the rear army.<ref name=ts01-467/> Prince [[Yongle Emperor|Zhu Di]] commanded the princely guard, but saw relatively limited action.<ref name=ts01-467/>


In January 1388, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army to T'ung-chou, where he send General Lan Yu with a cavalry unit to attack a Mongol force at Ch'ing-chou (near Lin-hsi in present-day Liaoning).<ref name=lang98-1578/> Lan Yu defeated the Mongol force, capturing the Mongol governor, many Mongol people, and their horses.<ref name=lang98-1578/> On 20<ref name=dre82-1412/> March 1387, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army northward through the Great Wall.<ref name=dre82-1412>Dreyer 1982, 141–142.</ref><ref name=lang98-1578/>
In January 1388, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army to T'ung-chou, where he sent General Lan Yu with a cavalry unit to attack a Mongol force at Ch'ing-chou (near Lin-hsi in present-day Liaoning).<ref name=lang98-1578/> Lan Yu defeated the Mongol force, capturing the Mongol governor, many Mongol people, and their horses.<ref name=lang98-1578/> On 20<ref name=dre82-1412/> March 1387, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army northward through the Great Wall.<ref name=dre82-1412>Dreyer 1982, 141–142.</ref><ref name=lang98-1578/>


Fortresses were constructed at Ta-ning, Fu-yü, Hui-chou, and K'aun-ho (near the [[Great Wall of China|Great Wall]]) and completed at the end of the summer of 1387.<ref name=ts01-467/> In Ta-ning, a regional military commission was established to command the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Prince [[Zhu Quan]] (Prince of Ning) would later be stationed at Ta-ning and take command of the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Millions of piculs of foodstuff were stored at the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Beiping, Shangdong, Shanxi, and Henan provinces dispatched the peasantry to transport grain to the north.<ref name=dre82-1412/>
Fortresses were constructed at Ta-ning, Fu-yü, Hui-chou, and K'aun-ho (near the [[Great Wall of China|Great Wall]]) and completed at the end of the summer of 1387.<ref name=ts01-467/> In Ta-ning, a regional military commission was established to command the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Prince [[Zhu Quan]] (Prince of Ning) would later be stationed at Ta-ning and take command of the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Millions of piculs of foodstuff were stored at the four fortresses.<ref name=ts01-467/> Beiping, Shangdong, Shanxi, and Henan provinces dispatched the peasantry to transport grain to the north.<ref name=dre82-1412/>

Revision as of 14:56, 17 October 2018

Ming campaign against the Uriankhai
Date1387
Location
Result Decisive Ming victory
Territorial
changes
Ming conquest of Manchuria
Belligerents
Ming China Uriankhai Mongol horde
Commanders and leaders
General Feng Sheng
General Fu Youde
General Lan Yu
Zhu Di, Prince of Yan
Naghachu  Surrendered
Units involved
150,000 soldiers in the field
50,000 soldiers at the fortresses
unknown
Strength
200,000 soldiers unknown

The Ming campaign against the Uriankhai of 1387 was an offensive military expedition campaign of Ming China's army led by General Feng Sheng against the Uriankhai horde of the Mongol chieftain Naghachu in Manchuria. Later that year, the military campaign concluded with the surrender of the Uriankhai.

Background

During the 1380s, the Mongol commander Naghachu had organized the many Mongol tribes of Manchuria into the Uriankhai.[1] They frequently clashed with the Chinese along the northeastern frontier regions of Ming China.[1][2]

Course

In December 1386, the Ming Hongwu Emperor ordered General Feng Sheng to lead an army of 200,000 soldiers against the Mongols.[3] In early 1387, Feng Sheng was commissioned as the Grand General, assigned Fu Youde and Lan Yu to assist him, and raised a large army.[2] The Hongwu Emperor drew the plans with the ultimate objective to conquer Jinshan.[3]

The Ming army comprised 200 thousand soldiers,[1][2] including the 50,000 soldiers that garrisoned four fortresses.[2] General Feng Sheng and General Fu Youde commanded the front army, while General Lan Yu commanded the rear army.[1] Prince Zhu Di commanded the princely guard, but saw relatively limited action.[1]

In January 1388, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army to T'ung-chou, where he sent General Lan Yu with a cavalry unit to attack a Mongol force at Ch'ing-chou (near Lin-hsi in present-day Liaoning).[3] Lan Yu defeated the Mongol force, capturing the Mongol governor, many Mongol people, and their horses.[3] On 20[2] March 1387, General Feng Sheng led the Ming army northward through the Great Wall.[2][3]

Fortresses were constructed at Ta-ning, Fu-yü, Hui-chou, and K'aun-ho (near the Great Wall) and completed at the end of the summer of 1387.[1] In Ta-ning, a regional military commission was established to command the four fortresses.[1] Prince Zhu Quan (Prince of Ning) would later be stationed at Ta-ning and take command of the four fortresses.[1] Millions of piculs of foodstuff were stored at the four fortresses.[1] Beiping, Shangdong, Shanxi, and Henan provinces dispatched the peasantry to transport grain to the north.[2]

General Feng Shen led his main army further eastward.[2][3] He left about 50,000 troops at Ta-ning.[3] On 7 July 1387, Ch'en Yung (Marquis of Lin-chiang) and his division had become separated from the main army and was ambushed, resulting in the killing of Ch'en.[2]

In July 1387, the Ming army advanced further and crossed the Liao River.[1] Within a few days after crossing the Liao River, they surrounded the Mongol stronghold of Jinshan.[1] That month, the Ming army also made their encampment west of Jinshan.[3]

General Feng Sheng returned Nayira'u (Naghachu's former lieutenant, captured in 1376) to Naghachu with a letter that stated that he should surrender and accept the suzerainty of Ming China.[3] Meanwhile, General Lan Yu and his army inflicted much destruction to portions of the Mongol horde in the northern vicinity of the Great Wall.[1] All whilst rice, weapons, and other supplies were transported across the Great Wall into Manchuria for the Ming army.[1]

Naghachu and his Mongol horde surrendered to the Ming army.[1][2][3] Dreyer (1982) stated that this was on 14 July 1387,[2] while Langlois (1998) stated that this was in October 1387.[3] The lesser Mongol chieftains regarded Naghachu's surrender as a defection and continued resisting.[2] While the Ming army was returning to the Great Wall, the rear guard was ambushed and suffered losses, including Chief Commissioner P'u Ying, who was the commander of the rear guard.[2]

Aftermath

The campaign concluded with the capture of Naghachu and his horde, their families, and their domesticated animals.[2] Naghachu, his 6500 officers, and their families were sent to Nanjing.[3] In the period after his surrender to the Ming, Naghachu was given a marquisate with a stipend of 2000 piculs of grain, an estate of public fields in Jiangxi, and a mansion in Nanjing.[3] He ultimately died (probably due to his excessive alcohol consumption) near Wu-ch'ang on 31 August 1388 and was buried outside Nanjing.[3]

Bolstered by this successful campaign, the Hongwu Emperor ordered General Lan Yu to lead 150,000 men on a military campaign against Toghus Temur, the Khan of the Mongols, culminating in the Ming victory over the Mongol horde at Buir Lake in 1388.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Tsai 2001, 46–47.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Dreyer 1982, 141–142.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Langlois 1998, 157–158.

Bibliography

  • Dreyer, Edward L. (1982). Early Ming China: A Political History, 1355-1435. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804711050.
  • Langlois, John D., Jr. (1998). "The Hung-wu reign, 1368–1398". The Cambridge History of China, Volume 7: The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521243322.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Tsai, Shih-shan Henry (2001). Perpetual Happiness: The Ming Emperor Yongle. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295981093.