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Battle of Bang Bo (Zhennan Pass)

Battle of Bang Bo (Zhennan Pass)
Part of the Tonkin Campaign, Sino-French War

Chinese fortifications at Zhennan Pass
Date24 March 1885
Location
Result Chinese victory[1]
Belligerents
 France  China
Black Flag Army
Commanders and leaders
François Oscar de Négrier (WIA)
Paul-Gustave Herbinger
Lieutenant Colonel Godart
Lieutenant Colonel Donnier
Lieutenant Colonel Schoeffer
Captain Roperh
Captain de Saxcé
Captain Martin
Captain Patrick Cotter 
Captain Brunet 
Pan Dingxin
Feng Zicai
Wang Debang
Wang Xiaochi(王孝祺)
Su Yuanchun[2][3][4][5]
Chen Jia (陈嘉)
Jiang Zonghan(蔣宗汉)
Fang Yousheng (方友升)
Wei Gang(魏刚)
Strength
2,137 men[6] 30,000 men[7][6]
Casualties and losses
74 killed[6]
213 wounded[6]
1,650 killed or wounded[6]

The Battle of Bang Bo, known in China as the Battle of Zhennan Pass (Chinese: 鎮南關之役), was a major Chinese victory during the Sino-French War (August 1884 – April 1885). The battle, fought on 23 and 24 March 1885 on the Tonkin-Guangxi border, saw the defeat of 1,500 soldiers of General François de Négrier's 2nd Brigade of the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps by a Chinese army under the command of the Guangxi military commissioner Pan Dingxin (潘鼎新).[8]

The battle set the scene for the French retreat from Lạng Sơn on 28 March and the conclusion of the Sino-French War in early April in circumstances of considerable embarrassment for France.

The Tonkin military stalemate, March 1885 edit

On 17 February 1885 General Louis Brière de l'Isle, the general-in-chief of the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps, left Lạng Sơn with Lieutenant-Colonel Laurent Giovanninelli's 1st Brigade to relieve the Siege of Tuyên Quang. On 3 March, at the Battle of Hòa Mộc, Giovanninelli's men broke through a formidable Chinese blocking position and relieved the siege. Before his departure Brière de l'Isle ordered General François de Négrier, who remained at Lạng Sơn with the 2nd Brigade, to press on towards the Chinese border and expel the battered remnants of the Guangxi Army from Tonkinese soil. After resupplying the 2nd Brigade with food and ammunition, de Négrier defeated the Guangxi Army at the Battle of Đồng Đăng on 23 February and cleared it from Tonkinese territory. For good measure, the French crossed briefly into Guangxi province and blew up the 'Gate of China', an elaborate Chinese customs building on the Tonkin-Guangxi border. They were not strong enough to exploit this victory, however, and the 2nd Brigade returned to Lạng Sơn at the end of February.

By early March, in the wake of the French victories at Hòa Mộc and Dong Dang, the military situation in Tonkin had reached a temporary stalemate. Giovanninelli's 1st Brigade faced Tang Jingsong's Yunnan Army around Hưng Hóa and Tuyên Quang, while de Négrier's 2nd Brigade at Lạng Sơn faced Pan Dingxin's Guangxi Army. Neither Chinese army had any realistic prospect of launching an offensive for several weeks, while the two French brigades that had jointly captured Lạng Sơn in February were not strong enough to inflict a decisive defeat on either Chinese army separately.[9] Brière de l'Isle and de Négrier examined the possibility of crossing into Guangxi with the 2nd Brigade to capture the major Chinese military depot at Longzhou, but on 17 March Brière de l'Isle advised the army ministry in Paris that such an operation was beyond their strength. Substantial French reinforcements reached Tonkin in the middle of March, giving Brière de l'Isle a brief opportunity to break the stalemate. He moved the bulk of the reinforcements to Hưng Hóa to reinforce the 1st Brigade, intending to attack the Yunnan Army and drive it back beyond Yen Bay. While he and Giovanninelli drew up plans for a western offensive, he ordered de Négrier to keep the Chinese in respect around Lạng Sơn.

Meanwhile, behind the Chinese border, the Guangxi Army was also building up its strength. The French, whose Vietnamese spies in Longzhou had been conscientiously counting the company flags of every Chinese battalion that passed through the town, estimated on 17 March that they were facing a Chinese force of 40,000 men. This was an exaggeration, based on the assumption that each Chinese company was at full strength. In fact most of the Chinese commands were considerably understrength with 300 to 400 men, and the strength of the Guangxi Army at the Battle of Zhennan Pass was probably around a couple thousand men, while all of Longzhou had 25,000 to 30,000 men under arms. Even at this lower strength, it fearfully outnumbered the French.[10]

French and Chinese forces edit

 
Chinese regular soldiers photographed during the Sino-French war
 
Bang Bo, Ky Lua and the Retreat from Lạng Sơn, March 1885

By the middle of March nine separate Chinese military commands were massed close up to the Tonkinese border around the enormous entrenched camps of Yen Cua Ai and Bang Bo. There were six main Chinese concentrations. The entrenched camp of Yen Cua Ai was held by ten battalions under the command of Feng Zicai (冯子材) and a slightly smaller force under the command of Wang Xiaochi (王孝祺). These two commands numbered perhaps 7,500 men in all. Two to three kilometres (1.2 to 1.9 mi) behind Yen Cua Ai, around the village of Mufu, lay the commands of Su Yuanchun and Chen Jia (陳嘉), perhaps 7,000 men in all. Fifteen kilometres (9.3 mi) behind Mufu the commands of Jiang Zonghan (蔣宗汉) and Fang Yusheng (方友升), also 7,000 strong, were deployed around the village of Pingxiang (known to the French from its Vietnamese pronunciation as Binh Thuong). The commander of the Guangxi Army, Pan Dingxin (潘鼎新), lay at Haicun, 30 kilometres (19 mi) behind Mufu, with 3,500 men. Fifty kilometres (31 mi) to the west of Zhennanguan, 3,500 men under the command of Wei Gang (魏刚) were deployed around the village of Aiwa. Finally, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) to the east of Zhennanguan, just inside Tonkin, Wang Debang occupied the village of Cua Ai with 3,500 men.[11]

De Négrier's 2nd Brigade numbered around 1,500 men. The brigade's order of battle in March 1885 was as follows:

  • 3rd Marching Regiment (Lieutenant-Colonel Herbinger)
    • 23rd Line Infantry Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel Godart)
    • 111th Line Infantry Battalion (chef de bataillon Faure)
    • 143rd Line Infantry Battalion (chef de bataillon Farret)
  • 4th Marching Regiment (Lieutenant-Colonel Donnier)
    • 2nd Foreign Legion Battalion (chef de bataillon Diguet)
    • 3rd Foreign Legion Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel Schoeffer)
    • 2nd African Light Infantry Battalion (chef de bataillon Servière)
  • 1st Battalion, 1st Tonkinese Rifle Regiment (chef de bataillon Jorna de Lacale)
  • 3 artillery batteries (Captains Roperh, de Saxcé and Martin).

Roussel's battery, of Giovanninelli's 1st Brigade, was also at Lạng Sơn. The battery had lagged behind during the Lạng Sơn Campaign, and Giovanninelli had left it at Lạng Sơn when he set out with the 1st Brigade to relieve Tuyên Quang.

Not all of the 2nd Brigade was stationed at Lạng Sơn and immediately available for action. The four companies of Servière's 2nd African Battalion were echeloned between Lạng Sơn and Chu, guarding the vital French supply line up to Lạng Sơn and labouring to improve the miserable paths over which the expeditionary corps had advanced in February into a surfaced wagon road.

The battle of Bang Bo, 23 and 24 March 1885 edit

 
General François Oscar de Négrier (1842–1913)
 
Chef de bataillon François Léon Faure (1845–c.1906), 111th Line Battalion

On 22 March, Chinese forces under the command of Feng Zicai(冯子材) raided the French forward post at Dong Dang, a few kilometres north of Lạng Sơn. The French post, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Gustave Herbinger, was held by chef de battalion Diguet's 2nd Foreign Legion Battalion, and the legionnaires repelled the Chinese assault without difficulty. De Négrier, who had been forced to bring the bulk of the 2nd Brigade up from Lạng Sơn to support Herbinger, decided to hit back immediately. Hoping to take the Chinese by surprise, he decided to cross the frontier and attack the Guangxi Army in its entrenchments at Bang Bo, near the frontier pass of Zhennanguan. He had no intention of launching a major offensive into Guangxi. His aim, in the military phrase of the day, was simply to 'take some air' (se donner de l'air) around Dong Dang. After giving the Chinese a bloody nose at Bang Bo and clearing them away from the approaches to Dong Dang, he would return to Lạng Sơn with the 2nd Brigade.[12]

Leaving chef de bataillon Servière to hold Lạng Sơn with a single company of the 2nd African Battalion and Martin and Roussel's batteries, and stationing the 23rd Line Battalion at Dong Dang to protect his supply line, he advanced to the Chinese frontier at Zhennanguan on the morning of 23 March with a force of only 1,600 men and 10 guns (the 111th and 143rd Line Battalions, the 2nd and 3rd Legion Battalions and Roperh and de Saxcé's batteries). Substantial reinforcements for the 2nd Brigade were already on their way up to Lạng Sơn, but de Négrier decided not to wait for them. He judged it more important to attack the Chinese while they were still discouraged by Feng Zicai's repulse on 22 March.[13]

On 23 and 24 March the 2nd Brigade fought a fierce action with the Guangxi Army near Zhennanguan. This engagement, known as the Battle of Zhennan Pass in China, is normally called Bang Bo in European sources, after the name of a village in the centre of the Chinese position where the fighting was fiercest. The French took a number of outworks on 23 March, and defeated a hesitant Chinese counterattack against their right flank launched by Wang Debang from Cua Ai.[14]

On 24 March de Négrier attacked the Guangxi Army's main positions around Bang Bo. His plan called for a simultaneous frontal and rear attack on Feng Zicai's troops, who were holding a line of trenches in front of Bang Bo known to the French as the 'Long Trench'. The frontal attack would be delivered by Faure's 111th Battalion and the rear attack by Diguet's 2nd Legion Battalion and Farret's 143rd Battalion. Herbinger, who was instructed to guide Diguet and Farret to their attack positions, led the two battalions in a wide outflanking march in thick fog, and lost his way. De Négrier, unaware that Herbinger had failed to reach his positions, and mistaking a column of Chinese troops moving up to the Long Trench for Herbinger's two battalions, ordered chef de bataillon Faure's 111th Battalion to deliver its planned frontal attack.

The men of the 111th laid down their haversacks, formed up, and charged. The battalion came under heavy frontal fire from Feng Zicai's infantry and flanking fire from Chinese units on the nearby hills, and lost several company officers within seconds. Two of the four companies of the 111th Battalion reached the trench, but after a short spell of hand-to-hand fighting were thrown back by a Chinese counterattack led personally by Feng Zicai.

The senior surviving French company officer, Captain Verdier (who later wrote a detailed account of the campaign, La vérité sur la retraite de Lang-Son, under the pseudonym Jacques Harmant), was able to disengage and rally the battalion. The Chinese, intent on beheading the French wounded and plundering the abandoned French haversacks, did not seriously pursue the 111th Battalion, and Verdier was able to withdraw its shredded companies to safety.

Among the officers who fell during the 111th Battalion's attack on the Long Trench was 2nd Lieutenant Rene Normand, shot in the throat and mortally wounded. Normand had only recently arrived in Tonkin, and had distinguished himself on 10 February 1885 at the engagement at Pho Vy during the Lạng Sơn Campaign. A collection of his letters from Tonkin, including a number of vivid descriptions of the February campaign to capture Lạng Sơn, would be published posthumously in France in 1886.

 
Combat at Bang Bo: a Chinese view

On the right of the battlefield, the 143rd Battalion and 2nd Legion Battalion went into action several hours later than expected, and captured a Chinese fort. It was the only French success of the day. At 3:00 pm Pan Dingxin, seeing the 111th Battalion in full retreat and Herbinger's men exhausted from their exertions, counterattacked along the entire front. Herbinger's command was nearly cut off. Captain Gayon's company of the 143rd Battalion was surrounded by the Chinese. Captain Patrick Cotter, an Irish officer in Diguet's Legion battalion, ignored an order from Herbinger to leave Gayon to his fate and led his Legion company to the rescue. The legionnaires charged and successfully disengaged Gayon's men, but Cotter was killed in the attack. Diguet and Farret's battalions fell back by echelons, constantly turning and firing to keep the Chinese in respect.

Meanwhile, Schoeffer's 3rd Legion Battalion, which had been ordered to remain on Tonkinese soil around Dong Dang to protect the flanks of the French column, fought desperately to keep open a line of retreat for the 2nd Brigade. Schoeffer's men beat off strong Chinese attacks on both French flanks, enabling the other three infantry battalions and the two artillery batteries to make good their retreat. General de Négrier fought with the French rearguard, setting an example of personal courage, and the Chinese were unable to convert the French retreat into a rout. In the final flurry of action, just before nightfall, Captain Brunet of Schoeffer's battalion was shot dead.[15]

There were ominous scenes of disorder as the defeated French regrouped after the battle, and de Négrier had to intervene sharply to quell them. As the brigade's morale was precarious and ammunition was running short, de Négrier decided to fall back to Lạng Sơn. On the evening of 24 March the brigade marched back to Dong Dang, where it camped for the night. Hungry, exhausted, and shocked by their defeat, many French troops found it difficult to credit what had happened. Sergeant Maury of Diguet's 2nd Legion Battalion was overcome by a nervous reaction:

The night was very dark. The soldiers marched in complete silence. We felt cheated, ashamed, and angry. We were leaving behind us both victory and many of our friends. From time to time, in low murmurs, we established who was missing. Then we relapsed into the silence of mourning and the bitterness of loss. And so we reached Dong Dang, without being disturbed. We slept in the field hospital huts, after drinking some soup. We were harassed and hungry. We had not eaten all day, and had drunk nothing since morning except a single cup of coffee. In spite of my weariness, I spent a troubled night. My spirits were haunted by the day's memories, by images of the fighting and phantasms of our misfortunes. I was shaken with spasms. I trembled as I have never done on the battlefield. I lay down, but was unable to sleep.[16]

Casualties edit

Although the French made a fighting withdrawal from the battlefield and prevented the Chinese from piercing their line, casualties in the 2nd Brigade during the two-day battle were relatively heavy: 74 killed (including 7 officers) and 213 wounded (including 6 officers). Most of these casualties (70 killed and 188 wounded) were suffered on 24 March. The heaviest casualties were suffered by the 111th Battalion (31 killed and 58 wounded) and the 2nd Legion Battalion (12 killed and 68 wounded). There were also appreciable casualties in the 143rd Battalion (17 killed and 48 wounded) and the 3rd Legion Battalion (12 killed and 34 wounded).

The dead and mortally wounded officers included Captain Mailhat, Doctor Raynaud, Lieutenant Canin and 2nd Lieutenant Normand of the 111th Battalion, Lieutenant Thébaut of the 143rd Battalion, Captain Cotter of Diguet's Legion battalion and Captain Brunet of Schoeffer's Legion battalion. The wounded officers included chef de bataillon Tonnot of the Tonkinese Rifles, Lieutenant de Colomb of the 111th Battalion, Lieutenant Mangin and 2nd Lieutenant Bruneau of the 143rd Battalion and Lieutenant Durillon and 2nd Lieutenant Comignan of Diguet's battalion. Lieutenant Mangin died several days after the battle in Lạng Sơn, from shock following an operation to amputate a wounded limb.[17]

French officers killed in action at Bang Bo, 24 March 1885 edit

Significance edit

The French defeat at Bang Bo on 24 March 1885 shook the nerve of several French politicians who had earlier supported France's war against the Qing Dynasty. More importantly, it convinced Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Gustave Herbinger, de Négrier's second-in-command, that the 2nd Brigade was dangerously isolated at Lạng Sơn. On 28 March de Négrier was seriously wounded in the battle of Kỳ Lừa,[18] in which the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps defeated an attack by the Guangxi Army on the defences of Lạng Sơn. Herbinger assumed command of the 2nd Brigade, and immediately ordered a retreat to Kép and Chu. The battle of Bang Bo therefore paved the way for the Retreat from Lạng Sơn and the collapse of Jules Ferry's administration on 30 March in the Tonkin Affair. The battle, before the war ended due to negotiations, made the Qing Dynasty seem to be almost victorious in the entire war in light of the French defeats at Zhennan and Langson.[1]

Film portrayal edit

The story of Feng Zicai and the victory of the Chinese troops was made into the 2017 film The War of Loong.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b John King Fairbank; Kwang-Ching Liu; Denis Crispin Twitchett, eds. (1980). Late Ch'ing, 1800–1911. Vol. 11, Part 2 of The Cambridge History of China Series (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 251. ISBN 0-521-22029-7. Retrieved 18 January 2012. In 1885, the Chinese defeated French forces at Chen-nan-kuan on the China-Annam border (23 March), and went on to recapture the important city of Langson and other points in Annam during the next two weeks. In the eyes of some, China was on the verge of victory when peace negotiations forced the cessation of hostilitties on 4 April 1885.
  2. ^ "Archived copy". from the original on 13 October 2004. Retrieved 13 October 2004.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 August 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2016.
  4. ^ "清朝抗法英雄---苏元春".
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d e 蔡晨著、指文烽火工作室編,《戰爭事典:036》,《詳解中法戰爭之鎮南關大捷》章
  7. ^ Clodfelter 2008, p. 257.
  8. ^ Armengaud, 40–58; Bonifacy, 23–6; Harmant, 211–35; Lecomte, 428–53 and 455; Maury, 185–203; Notes, 32–40
  9. ^ Lecomte, 408–15; Thomazi, Conquête, 250–2; Histoire militaire, 110–11
  10. ^ Lung Chang, 336
  11. ^ Lung Chang, 334
  12. ^ Armengaud, 39–40; Harmant, 203–9; Lecomte, 420–8; Notes, 31–2
  13. ^ Lecomte, 425–8
  14. ^ Lecomte, 428–35
  15. ^ Lecomte, 450–2
  16. ^ Maury, 202–3
  17. ^ Bonifacy, 25–6; Lecomte, 453
  18. ^ Bruce A. Elleman (2001). Modern Chinese warfare, 1795–1989 (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. p. 89. ISBN 0-415-21474-2. Retrieved 18 January 2012. The Qing coury whole-heartedly supported the war, and from August to November 1884 the Chinese military prepared to enter the conflict. During the early months of 1885, the Chinese Army once again took the offensive as Beijing repteadly ordered it to march on Tonkin. However, the shortage of supplies, poor weather, and illness devastated the Chinese troops; one 2,000-man unit reportedly lost 1,500 men to disease. This situation led one Qing military official to warn that fully one-half of all reinforcements to Annam might succumb to the elements. The focus of the fighting soon revolved around Lạng Sơn, Pan Dingxin, the Governor of Guangxi, succeeded in establishing his headquarters there by early 1885. In February 1885 a French campaign forced Pan to retreat, and the French troops soon reoccupied the town. the French forces continued the offensive, an on 23 March they temporarily occupied and then hastily torched Zhennanguan, a town on the China-Annam border, before pulling back once again to Lạng Sơn. Spurred on by the French attack, General Feng Zicai led his troops southward against General François de Negerier's forces. The situation quickly became serious for the French, as their coolies deserted, interrupting the French supply lines, and ammunition began to run short. Even though the training of the Qing troops was inferior to the French and the Chinese officer corps was poor, their absolute number were greater. This precarious situation worsened for the French when General Negrier was wounded on 28 March. Lieutenant Colonel Paul Gustave Herbinger

References edit

  • Armengaud, J. L., Lang-Son: journal des opérations qui ont précédé et suivi la prise de cette citadelle (Paris, 1901)
  • Bonifacy, A propos d'une collection des peintures chinoises représentant divers épisodes de la guerre franco-chinoise de 1884–1885 (Hanoi, 1931)
  • Clodfelter, M. (2008). Warfare and armed conflicts : a statistical encyclopedia of casualty and other figures, 1494-2007. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786433193.
  • Harmant, J., La vérité sur la retraite de Lang-Son (Paris, 1892)
  • Lecomte, J., Lang-Son: combats, retraite et négociations (Paris, 1895)
  • Lung Chang [龍章], Yueh-nan yu Chung-fa chan-cheng [越南與中法戰爭, Vietnam and the Sino-French War] (Taipei, 1993)
  • Maury, A., Mes campagnes au Tong-King (Lyons, undated)
  • Notes sur la campagne du 3e bataillon de la légion étrangère au Tonkin (Paris, 1888)
  • Thomazi, A., Histoire militaire de l'Indochine française (Hanoi, 1931)
  • Thomazi, A., La conquête de l'Indochine (Paris, 1934)
  • 蔡晨 (2017). 指文烽火工作室 (ed.). 戰爭事典:036. 北京: 台海出版社. ISBN 978-7516815960.

21°59′23″N 106°45′06″E / 21.9897471°N 106.7517508°E / 21.9897471; 106.7517508

battle, bang, zhennan, pass, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, battle, bang, zhennan, pass, news, news. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Battle of Bang Bo Zhennan Pass news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Battle of Bang Bo Zhennan Pass Part of the Tonkin Campaign Sino French WarChinese fortifications at Zhennan PassDate24 March 1885Locationnorth of Lạng Sơn VietnamResultChinese victory 1 Belligerents France China Black Flag ArmyCommanders and leadersFrancois Oscar de Negrier WIA Paul Gustave Herbinger Lieutenant Colonel Godart Lieutenant Colonel Donnier Lieutenant Colonel Schoeffer Captain Roperh Captain de Saxce Captain Martin Captain Patrick Cotter Captain Brunet Pan Dingxin Feng Zicai Wang Debang Wang Xiaochi 王孝祺 Su Yuanchun 2 3 4 5 Chen Jia 陈嘉 Jiang Zonghan 蔣宗汉 Fang Yousheng 方友升 Wei Gang 魏刚 Strength2 137 men 6 30 000 men 7 6 Casualties and losses74 killed 6 213 wounded 6 1 650 killed or wounded 6 The Battle of Bang Bo known in China as the Battle of Zhennan Pass Chinese 鎮南關之役 was a major Chinese victory during the Sino French War August 1884 April 1885 The battle fought on 23 and 24 March 1885 on the Tonkin Guangxi border saw the defeat of 1 500 soldiers of General Francois de Negrier s 2nd Brigade of the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps by a Chinese army under the command of the Guangxi military commissioner Pan Dingxin 潘鼎新 8 The battle set the scene for the French retreat from Lạng Sơn on 28 March and the conclusion of the Sino French War in early April in circumstances of considerable embarrassment for France Contents 1 The Tonkin military stalemate March 1885 2 French and Chinese forces 3 The battle of Bang Bo 23 and 24 March 1885 4 Casualties 5 French officers killed in action at Bang Bo 24 March 1885 6 Significance 7 Film portrayal 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesThe Tonkin military stalemate March 1885 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message On 17 February 1885 General Louis Briere de l Isle the general in chief of the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps left Lạng Sơn with Lieutenant Colonel Laurent Giovanninelli s 1st Brigade to relieve the Siege of Tuyen Quang On 3 March at the Battle of Hoa Mộc Giovanninelli s men broke through a formidable Chinese blocking position and relieved the siege Before his departure Briere de l Isle ordered General Francois de Negrier who remained at Lạng Sơn with the 2nd Brigade to press on towards the Chinese border and expel the battered remnants of the Guangxi Army from Tonkinese soil After resupplying the 2nd Brigade with food and ammunition de Negrier defeated the Guangxi Army at the Battle of Đồng Đăng on 23 February and cleared it from Tonkinese territory For good measure the French crossed briefly into Guangxi province and blew up the Gate of China an elaborate Chinese customs building on the Tonkin Guangxi border They were not strong enough to exploit this victory however and the 2nd Brigade returned to Lạng Sơn at the end of February By early March in the wake of the French victories at Hoa Mộc and Dong Dang the military situation in Tonkin had reached a temporary stalemate Giovanninelli s 1st Brigade faced Tang Jingsong s Yunnan Army around Hưng Hoa and Tuyen Quang while de Negrier s 2nd Brigade at Lạng Sơn faced Pan Dingxin s Guangxi Army Neither Chinese army had any realistic prospect of launching an offensive for several weeks while the two French brigades that had jointly captured Lạng Sơn in February were not strong enough to inflict a decisive defeat on either Chinese army separately 9 Briere de l Isle and de Negrier examined the possibility of crossing into Guangxi with the 2nd Brigade to capture the major Chinese military depot at Longzhou but on 17 March Briere de l Isle advised the army ministry in Paris that such an operation was beyond their strength Substantial French reinforcements reached Tonkin in the middle of March giving Briere de l Isle a brief opportunity to break the stalemate He moved the bulk of the reinforcements to Hưng Hoa to reinforce the 1st Brigade intending to attack the Yunnan Army and drive it back beyond Yen Bay While he and Giovanninelli drew up plans for a western offensive he ordered de Negrier to keep the Chinese in respect around Lạng Sơn Meanwhile behind the Chinese border the Guangxi Army was also building up its strength The French whose Vietnamese spies in Longzhou had been conscientiously counting the company flags of every Chinese battalion that passed through the town estimated on 17 March that they were facing a Chinese force of 40 000 men This was an exaggeration based on the assumption that each Chinese company was at full strength In fact most of the Chinese commands were considerably understrength with 300 to 400 men and the strength of the Guangxi Army at the Battle of Zhennan Pass was probably around a couple thousand men while all of Longzhou had 25 000 to 30 000 men under arms Even at this lower strength it fearfully outnumbered the French 10 French and Chinese forces edit nbsp Chinese regular soldiers photographed during the Sino French war nbsp Bang Bo Ky Lua and the Retreat from Lạng Sơn March 1885By the middle of March nine separate Chinese military commands were massed close up to the Tonkinese border around the enormous entrenched camps of Yen Cua Ai and Bang Bo There were six main Chinese concentrations The entrenched camp of Yen Cua Ai was held by ten battalions under the command of Feng Zicai 冯子材 and a slightly smaller force under the command of Wang Xiaochi 王孝祺 These two commands numbered perhaps 7 500 men in all Two to three kilometres 1 2 to 1 9 mi behind Yen Cua Ai around the village of Mufu lay the commands of Su Yuanchun and Chen Jia 陳嘉 perhaps 7 000 men in all Fifteen kilometres 9 3 mi behind Mufu the commands of Jiang Zonghan 蔣宗汉 and Fang Yusheng 方友升 also 7 000 strong were deployed around the village of Pingxiang known to the French from its Vietnamese pronunciation as Binh Thuong The commander of the Guangxi Army Pan Dingxin 潘鼎新 lay at Haicun 30 kilometres 19 mi behind Mufu with 3 500 men Fifty kilometres 31 mi to the west of Zhennanguan 3 500 men under the command of Wei Gang 魏刚 were deployed around the village of Aiwa Finally 15 kilometres 9 3 mi to the east of Zhennanguan just inside Tonkin Wang Debang occupied the village of Cua Ai with 3 500 men 11 De Negrier s 2nd Brigade numbered around 1 500 men The brigade s order of battle in March 1885 was as follows 3rd Marching Regiment Lieutenant Colonel Herbinger 23rd Line Infantry Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Godart 111th Line Infantry Battalion chef de bataillon Faure 143rd Line Infantry Battalion chef de bataillon Farret 4th Marching Regiment Lieutenant Colonel Donnier 2nd Foreign Legion Battalion chef de bataillon Diguet 3rd Foreign Legion Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Schoeffer 2nd African Light Infantry Battalion chef de bataillon Serviere 1st Battalion 1st Tonkinese Rifle Regiment chef de bataillon Jorna de Lacale 3 artillery batteries Captains Roperh de Saxce and Martin Roussel s battery of Giovanninelli s 1st Brigade was also at Lạng Sơn The battery had lagged behind during the Lạng Sơn Campaign and Giovanninelli had left it at Lạng Sơn when he set out with the 1st Brigade to relieve Tuyen Quang Not all of the 2nd Brigade was stationed at Lạng Sơn and immediately available for action The four companies of Serviere s 2nd African Battalion were echeloned between Lạng Sơn and Chu guarding the vital French supply line up to Lạng Sơn and labouring to improve the miserable paths over which the expeditionary corps had advanced in February into a surfaced wagon road The battle of Bang Bo 23 and 24 March 1885 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp General Francois Oscar de Negrier 1842 1913 nbsp Chef de bataillon Francois Leon Faure 1845 c 1906 111th Line BattalionOn 22 March Chinese forces under the command of Feng Zicai 冯子材 raided the French forward post at Dong Dang a few kilometres north of Lạng Sơn The French post under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Paul Gustave Herbinger was held by chef de battalion Diguet s 2nd Foreign Legion Battalion and the legionnaires repelled the Chinese assault without difficulty De Negrier who had been forced to bring the bulk of the 2nd Brigade up from Lạng Sơn to support Herbinger decided to hit back immediately Hoping to take the Chinese by surprise he decided to cross the frontier and attack the Guangxi Army in its entrenchments at Bang Bo near the frontier pass of Zhennanguan He had no intention of launching a major offensive into Guangxi His aim in the military phrase of the day was simply to take some air se donner de l air around Dong Dang After giving the Chinese a bloody nose at Bang Bo and clearing them away from the approaches to Dong Dang he would return to Lạng Sơn with the 2nd Brigade 12 Leaving chef de bataillon Serviere to hold Lạng Sơn with a single company of the 2nd African Battalion and Martin and Roussel s batteries and stationing the 23rd Line Battalion at Dong Dang to protect his supply line he advanced to the Chinese frontier at Zhennanguan on the morning of 23 March with a force of only 1 600 men and 10 guns the 111th and 143rd Line Battalions the 2nd and 3rd Legion Battalions and Roperh and de Saxce s batteries Substantial reinforcements for the 2nd Brigade were already on their way up to Lạng Sơn but de Negrier decided not to wait for them He judged it more important to attack the Chinese while they were still discouraged by Feng Zicai s repulse on 22 March 13 On 23 and 24 March the 2nd Brigade fought a fierce action with the Guangxi Army near Zhennanguan This engagement known as the Battle of Zhennan Pass in China is normally called Bang Bo in European sources after the name of a village in the centre of the Chinese position where the fighting was fiercest The French took a number of outworks on 23 March and defeated a hesitant Chinese counterattack against their right flank launched by Wang Debang from Cua Ai 14 On 24 March de Negrier attacked the Guangxi Army s main positions around Bang Bo His plan called for a simultaneous frontal and rear attack on Feng Zicai s troops who were holding a line of trenches in front of Bang Bo known to the French as the Long Trench The frontal attack would be delivered by Faure s 111th Battalion and the rear attack by Diguet s 2nd Legion Battalion and Farret s 143rd Battalion Herbinger who was instructed to guide Diguet and Farret to their attack positions led the two battalions in a wide outflanking march in thick fog and lost his way De Negrier unaware that Herbinger had failed to reach his positions and mistaking a column of Chinese troops moving up to the Long Trench for Herbinger s two battalions ordered chef de bataillon Faure s 111th Battalion to deliver its planned frontal attack The men of the 111th laid down their haversacks formed up and charged The battalion came under heavy frontal fire from Feng Zicai s infantry and flanking fire from Chinese units on the nearby hills and lost several company officers within seconds Two of the four companies of the 111th Battalion reached the trench but after a short spell of hand to hand fighting were thrown back by a Chinese counterattack led personally by Feng Zicai The senior surviving French company officer Captain Verdier who later wrote a detailed account of the campaign La verite sur la retraite de Lang Son under the pseudonym Jacques Harmant was able to disengage and rally the battalion The Chinese intent on beheading the French wounded and plundering the abandoned French haversacks did not seriously pursue the 111th Battalion and Verdier was able to withdraw its shredded companies to safety Among the officers who fell during the 111th Battalion s attack on the Long Trench was 2nd Lieutenant Rene Normand shot in the throat and mortally wounded Normand had only recently arrived in Tonkin and had distinguished himself on 10 February 1885 at the engagement at Pho Vy during the Lạng Sơn Campaign A collection of his letters from Tonkin including a number of vivid descriptions of the February campaign to capture Lạng Sơn would be published posthumously in France in 1886 nbsp Combat at Bang Bo a Chinese viewOn the right of the battlefield the 143rd Battalion and 2nd Legion Battalion went into action several hours later than expected and captured a Chinese fort It was the only French success of the day At 3 00 pm Pan Dingxin seeing the 111th Battalion in full retreat and Herbinger s men exhausted from their exertions counterattacked along the entire front Herbinger s command was nearly cut off Captain Gayon s company of the 143rd Battalion was surrounded by the Chinese Captain Patrick Cotter an Irish officer in Diguet s Legion battalion ignored an order from Herbinger to leave Gayon to his fate and led his Legion company to the rescue The legionnaires charged and successfully disengaged Gayon s men but Cotter was killed in the attack Diguet and Farret s battalions fell back by echelons constantly turning and firing to keep the Chinese in respect Meanwhile Schoeffer s 3rd Legion Battalion which had been ordered to remain on Tonkinese soil around Dong Dang to protect the flanks of the French column fought desperately to keep open a line of retreat for the 2nd Brigade Schoeffer s men beat off strong Chinese attacks on both French flanks enabling the other three infantry battalions and the two artillery batteries to make good their retreat General de Negrier fought with the French rearguard setting an example of personal courage and the Chinese were unable to convert the French retreat into a rout In the final flurry of action just before nightfall Captain Brunet of Schoeffer s battalion was shot dead 15 There were ominous scenes of disorder as the defeated French regrouped after the battle and de Negrier had to intervene sharply to quell them As the brigade s morale was precarious and ammunition was running short de Negrier decided to fall back to Lạng Sơn On the evening of 24 March the brigade marched back to Dong Dang where it camped for the night Hungry exhausted and shocked by their defeat many French troops found it difficult to credit what had happened Sergeant Maury of Diguet s 2nd Legion Battalion was overcome by a nervous reaction The night was very dark The soldiers marched in complete silence We felt cheated ashamed and angry We were leaving behind us both victory and many of our friends From time to time in low murmurs we established who was missing Then we relapsed into the silence of mourning and the bitterness of loss And so we reached Dong Dang without being disturbed We slept in the field hospital huts after drinking some soup We were harassed and hungry We had not eaten all day and had drunk nothing since morning except a single cup of coffee In spite of my weariness I spent a troubled night My spirits were haunted by the day s memories by images of the fighting and phantasms of our misfortunes I was shaken with spasms I trembled as I have never done on the battlefield I lay down but was unable to sleep 16 Casualties editAlthough the French made a fighting withdrawal from the battlefield and prevented the Chinese from piercing their line casualties in the 2nd Brigade during the two day battle were relatively heavy 74 killed including 7 officers and 213 wounded including 6 officers Most of these casualties 70 killed and 188 wounded were suffered on 24 March The heaviest casualties were suffered by the 111th Battalion 31 killed and 58 wounded and the 2nd Legion Battalion 12 killed and 68 wounded There were also appreciable casualties in the 143rd Battalion 17 killed and 48 wounded and the 3rd Legion Battalion 12 killed and 34 wounded The dead and mortally wounded officers included Captain Mailhat Doctor Raynaud Lieutenant Canin and 2nd Lieutenant Normand of the 111th Battalion Lieutenant Thebaut of the 143rd Battalion Captain Cotter of Diguet s Legion battalion and Captain Brunet of Schoeffer s Legion battalion The wounded officers included chef de bataillon Tonnot of the Tonkinese Rifles Lieutenant de Colomb of the 111th Battalion Lieutenant Mangin and 2nd Lieutenant Bruneau of the 143rd Battalion and Lieutenant Durillon and 2nd Lieutenant Comignan of Diguet s battalion Lieutenant Mangin died several days after the battle in Lạng Sơn from shock following an operation to amputate a wounded limb 17 French officers killed in action at Bang Bo 24 March 1885 edit nbsp 2nd Lieutenant Rene Normand 111th Line Battalion nbsp Doctor Raynaud 111th Line Battalion nbsp Captain Patrick Cotter 2nd Legion Battalion nbsp Captain Brunet 3rd Legion BattalionSignificance editThe French defeat at Bang Bo on 24 March 1885 shook the nerve of several French politicians who had earlier supported France s war against the Qing Dynasty More importantly it convinced Lieutenant Colonel Paul Gustave Herbinger de Negrier s second in command that the 2nd Brigade was dangerously isolated at Lạng Sơn On 28 March de Negrier was seriously wounded in the battle of Kỳ Lừa 18 in which the Tonkin Expeditionary Corps defeated an attack by the Guangxi Army on the defences of Lạng Sơn Herbinger assumed command of the 2nd Brigade and immediately ordered a retreat to Kep and Chu The battle of Bang Bo therefore paved the way for the Retreat from Lạng Sơn and the collapse of Jules Ferry s administration on 30 March in the Tonkin Affair The battle before the war ended due to negotiations made the Qing Dynasty seem to be almost victorious in the entire war in light of the French defeats at Zhennan and Langson 1 Film portrayal editThe story of Feng Zicai and the victory of the Chinese troops was made into the 2017 film The War of Loong See also editFrench colonial empires Imperialism in Asia Jules FerryNotes edit a b John King Fairbank Kwang Ching Liu Denis Crispin Twitchett eds 1980 Late Ch ing 1800 1911 Vol 11 Part 2 of The Cambridge History of China Series illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 251 ISBN 0 521 22029 7 Retrieved 18 January 2012 In 1885 the Chinese defeated French forces at Chen nan kuan on the China Annam border 23 March and went on to recapture the important city of Langson and other points in Annam during the next two weeks In the eyes of some China was on the verge of victory when peace negotiations forced the cessation of hostilitties on 4 April 1885 Archived copy Archived from the original on 13 October 2004 Retrieved 13 October 2004 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 蘇元春 中文百科在線 Archived from the original on 11 August 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2016 清朝抗法英雄 苏元春 苏元春 清朝官员曾 蒙冤受诬 Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2016 a b c d e 蔡晨著 指文烽火工作室編 戰爭事典 036 詳解中法戰爭之鎮南關大捷 章 Clodfelter 2008 p 257 Armengaud 40 58 Bonifacy 23 6 Harmant 211 35 Lecomte 428 53 and 455 Maury 185 203 Notes 32 40 Lecomte 408 15 Thomazi Conquete 250 2 Histoire militaire 110 11 Lung Chang 336 Lung Chang 334 Armengaud 39 40 Harmant 203 9 Lecomte 420 8 Notes 31 2 Lecomte 425 8 Lecomte 428 35 Lecomte 450 2 Maury 202 3 Bonifacy 25 6 Lecomte 453 Bruce A Elleman 2001 Modern Chinese warfare 1795 1989 illustrated ed Psychology Press p 89 ISBN 0 415 21474 2 Retrieved 18 January 2012 The Qing coury whole heartedly supported the war and from August to November 1884 the Chinese military prepared to enter the conflict During the early months of 1885 the Chinese Army once again took the offensive as Beijing repteadly ordered it to march on Tonkin However the shortage of supplies poor weather and illness devastated the Chinese troops one 2 000 man unit reportedly lost 1 500 men to disease This situation led one Qing military official to warn that fully one half of all reinforcements to Annam might succumb to the elements The focus of the fighting soon revolved around Lạng Sơn Pan Dingxin the Governor of Guangxi succeeded in establishing his headquarters there by early 1885 In February 1885 a French campaign forced Pan to retreat and the French troops soon reoccupied the town the French forces continued the offensive an on 23 March they temporarily occupied and then hastily torched Zhennanguan a town on the China Annam border before pulling back once again to Lạng Sơn Spurred on by the French attack General Feng Zicai led his troops southward against General Francois de Negerier s forces The situation quickly became serious for the French as their coolies deserted interrupting the French supply lines and ammunition began to run short Even though the training of the Qing troops was inferior to the French and the Chinese officer corps was poor their absolute number were greater This precarious situation worsened for the French when General Negrier was wounded on 28 March Lieutenant Colonel Paul Gustave HerbingerReferences editArmengaud J L Lang Son journal des operations qui ont precede et suivi la prise de cette citadelle Paris 1901 Bonifacy A propos d une collection des peintures chinoises representant divers episodes de la guerre franco chinoise de 1884 1885 Hanoi 1931 Clodfelter M 2008 Warfare and armed conflicts a statistical encyclopedia of casualty and other figures 1494 2007 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 978 0786433193 Harmant J La verite sur la retraite de Lang Son Paris 1892 Lecomte J Lang Son combats retraite et negociations Paris 1895 Lung Chang 龍章 Yueh nan yu Chung fa chan cheng 越南與中法戰爭 Vietnam and the Sino French War Taipei 1993 Maury A Mes campagnes au Tong King Lyons undated Notes sur la campagne du 3e bataillon de la legion etrangere au Tonkin Paris 1888 Thomazi A Histoire militaire de l Indochine francaise Hanoi 1931 Thomazi A La conquete de l Indochine Paris 1934 蔡晨 2017 指文烽火工作室 ed 戰爭事典 036 北京 台海出版社 ISBN 978 7516815960 21 59 23 N 106 45 06 E 21 9897471 N 106 7517508 E 21 9897471 106 7517508 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Bang Bo Zhennan Pass amp oldid 1188920861, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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