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Kansu Braves

The Gansu Braves or Gansu Army was a unit of 10,000 Chinese Muslim troops from the northwestern province of Kansu (Gansu) in the last decades of the Qing dynasty (1644–1912). Loyal to the Qing, the Braves were recruited in 1895 to suppress a Muslim revolt in Gansu. Under the command of General Dong Fuxiang (1839–1908), they were transferred to the Beijing metropolitan area in 1898, where they officially became the Rear Division of the Wuwei Corps, a modern army that protected the imperial capital. The Gansu Army included Hui Muslims, Salar Muslims,[1][2][3] Dongxiang Muslims, and Bonan Muslims.

Gansu Braves
Three Muslim soldiers from the Gansu Army
Active1895–1901
Country Qing Empire
Allegiance Emperor of China
BranchWuwei Corps
TypeDivision
Size10,000
Garrison/HQGansu, then Beijing
Nickname(s)Kansu Braves
EquipmentKrupp artillery, Mauser rifles, swords, halberds
EngagementsDungan revolt (1895–96)
Battle of Langfang
Siege of the International Legations (Boxer Rebellion)
Battle of Peking
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Dong Fuxiang (general in chief)
Ma Fuxiang, Ma Fulu, Ma Fuxing
Kansu Braves
Traditional Chinese甘軍
Simplified Chinese甘军
Literal meaningGansu Army
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinGān Jūn
Wade–GilesKan¹ Chün¹
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationGām Gwān
JyutpingGam1 Gwan1

The Braves, who wore traditional uniforms but were armed with modern rifles and artillery, played an important role in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion. After helping to repel the Seymour Expedition, a multinational foreign force sent from Tianjin to relieve the Beijing Legation Quarter in early June, the Muslim troops were the fiercest attackers during the siege of the legations from 20 June to 14 August.[4] They suffered heavy casualties at the Battle of Peking, in which the Eight-Nation Alliance relieved the siege. The Kansu Braves then guarded the Imperial Court on their journey to Xi'an.

Origins in Gansu edit

In the spring of 1895, a Muslim revolt erupted in the southern parts of Gansu province.[5] Dong Fuxiang (1839–1908), who had fought under Zuo Zongtang (1812–1885) in the suppression of a larger Muslim rebellion in the 1860s and 1870s, had by 1895 become Imperial Commissioner in Gansu and he now commanded the Muslim militias that Zuo had recruited locally.[6] In early July 1895, Dong commanded these troops in relieving the siege of Didao by Muslims rebels.[7]

When he attended Empress Dowager Cixi's sixtieth birthday celebrations in Beijing in August 1895, he was recommended to Cixi by the powerful Manchu minister Ronglu.[8] The Muslim rebels, who were armed with muzzleloaders and various white arms, were overwhelmed by the firepower of the modern Remington and Mauser rifles that Dong brought back from Beijing.[9] Dong also used his understanding of local politics to convince the rebels to return to their homes.[10] By the spring of 1896, Gansu was again pacified.[11]

Generals Dong Fuxiang, Ma Anliang and Ma Haiyan were originally called to Beijing during the First Sino-Japanese War in 1894, but the Dungan Revolt (1895) broke out and they were subsequently sent to crush the rebels. During the Hundred Days' Reform in 1898 Generals Dong Fuxiang, Ma Anliang, and Ma Haiyan were called to Beijing and helped put an end to the reform movement along with Ma Fulu and Ma Fuxiang.

Late in the afternoon it transpired that the Empress Dowager was not in the Imperial city at all, but out at the Summer Palace on the Wan-shou-shan--the hills of ten thousand ages, as these are poetically called. Tung Fu-hsiang, whose ruffianly Kansu braves were marched out of the Chinese city--that is the outer ring of Peking--two nights before the Legation Guards came in, is also with the Empress, for his cavalry banners, made of black and blue velvet, with blood-red characters splashed splendidly across them, have been seen planted at the foot of the hills. Tung Fu-hsiang is an invincible one, who stamped out the Kansu rebellion a few years ago with such fierceness that his name strikes terror to-day into every Chinese heart.

— Indiscreet Letters from Peking, Bertram Lenox Simpson, p. 12[12][13][14]

But it is grave notwithstanding the laughter. Once in 1899, after the Empress Dowager's coup d'etat and the virtual imprisonment of the Emperor, Legation Guards had to be sent for, a few files for each of the Legations that possess squadrons in the Far East, and, what is more, these guards had to stay for a good many months. The guards are now no more, but it is curious that the men they came mainly to protect us against— Tung Fu-hsiang's Mohammedan braves from the savage back province of Kansu who love the reactionary Empress Dowager—are still encamped near the Northern capital.

— Indiscreet Letters from Peking, p. 10.[15]

Transfer to Beijing edit

 
General Dong Fuxiang

Following the killing of two German missionaries in Shandong in November 1897, foreign powers engaged in a "scramble for concessions" that threatened to split China into several spheres of influence.[16] To protect the imperial capital against possible attacks, Cixi had the Gansu Army transferred to Beijing in the summer of 1898.[17] She admired the Gansu Army because Ronglu, who was in her favor, had a close relation with its commander Dong Fuxiang.[18] On their way to Beijing, Dong's troops attacked Christian churches in Baoding.[17] After the failure of the Hundred Days' Reform (11 June – 21 September 1898) sponsored by the Guangxu Emperor, Cixi named Ronglu Minister of War and highest official in the Grand Council, and put him in charge of reforming the metropolitan armies.[19] Ronglu made Dong's militia the "Rear Division" of a new corps called the "Wuwei Corps".[20] Dong Fuxiang was the only commander of the five divisions who did not hide his hostility toward foreigners.[21]

Beijing residents and foreigners alike feared the turbulent Muslim troops.[21] It was said "the troops are to act tomorrow when all foreigners in Peking are to be wiped out and the golden age return for China." during 23 October 1898.[22][23] Some Westerners described the Gansu Braves as the "10,000 Islamic rabble",[24]"a disorderly rabble of about 10,000 men, most of whom were Mohammedans",[25][26][27] or Kansu Irregulars,[28] others as "ten thousand Mohammedan cutthroats feared by even the Chinese".[29] In late September and early October 1898, several minor clashes between the Gansu troops and foreigners heightened tensions in the capital.[17] Soldiers from the United States Marine Corps were among the new guards called from Tianjin to protect the Beijing Legation Quarter from possible assaults.[30][31] By late October, rumors were circulating that the Gansu Army was preparing to kill all foreigners in Beijing.[17] Responding to an ultimatum by the foreign ministers, Cixi had the Gansu troops transferred to the "Southern Park" (Nanyuan 南苑), which was also known as the "Hunting Park" because emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties had used it for large-scale hunts and military drills.[32][33] By the 1880s, this large expanse of land south of Beijing – it was several times larger than the walled city – had been partly converted into farmland, but it was conveniently located near the railroad that connected Beijing to Tianjin.[34][35] The Kansu braves were involved in a scuffle at a theatre.[36] At the section of railroad at Fengtai, two British engineers were almost beaten to death by the Muslim Kansu troops, and foreign ministers asked that they be pulled back since they were threatening the safety of foreigners.[37]

§ 26. At Peking much apprehension was felt from the disturbed political state, but the actual danger came from the turbulent soldiery brought to the capital to guard against the fear of foreign aggression, and of these the most turbulent were the Kansu troops of Tung Fu-siang, stationed in the southern Hunting Park. Men of this force attacked, on September 30th, a party consisting of members of the British and American legations, and the next day the foreign representatives decided to send for a guard of marines from each of their fleets. The viceroy at Tientsin refused to allow them to pass, but, as the envoys [67] Sir C. MacDonald to Lord Salisbury, April 15th, 1898, China, Xo. 1, 1899, p. 102.

— Hosea Ballou Morse, The International Relations of the Chinese Empire, Volume 3, p. 151.[38]

The Chinese government did protest, but without effect. The legation guards were insisted upon, and, as speedily as possible, they were provided from the war-ships of the several powers, and quartered in Peking. Then the Chinese authorities brought troops to the capital, and the sense of danger at the legations grew. On the 25th of October Minister MacDonald cabled to London: "A serious menace to the safety of Europeans is the presence of some 10,000 soldiers, who have come from the Province of Kansu, and are to be quartered in the hunting park, two miles south of Peking. A party of these soldiers made a savage assault on four Europeans (including Mr. C. W. Campbell, of this Legation), who were last Sunday visiting the railway line at Lukou Chiao. The foreign Ministers will meet this morning to protest against these outrages. I shall see the Yamcm to-day, and propose to demand that the force of soldiers shall be removed to another province, and that the offenders shall be rigorously dealt with." On the 29th he telegraphed again: "The Foreign Representatives met yesterday, and drafted a note to the Yamfin demanding that the Kansu troops should be withdrawn at once. The troops in question have not been paid for some months, and are in a semi-mutinous state. They have declared their intention to drive all Europeans out of the north of China, and have cut the telegraph wires and destroyed portions of the railway line between Lukouchiao and Paoting Fu. Some disturbances have been caused by them on the railway to Tien-tsin, but the line has not been touched, and traffic has not been interrupted. In the city here all is quiet. The presence of these troops in the immediate vicinity of Peking undoubtedly constitutes a serious danger to all Europeans. The Yamfin gave me a promise that the force should be removed, but have not yet carried it into effect."

— Alan Campbell Reiley, History for Ready Reference: From the Best Historians, Biographers, and Specialists; Their Own Words in a Complete System of History ..., p. 95.[39][40][41]

On the 31st of May, Tung Fuhsiang had an audience of the Throne and upon being questioned stood up and accepted all responsibility in the war of extermination of Foreigners, which he strongly advocated, staking his head on his ability in successfully combating the Foreign Powers. The result was that instead of ordering the suppression of the Boxers, the policy of the Government was suddenly changed, and an Imperial decree was immediately issued appointing Kang Yi and Chao Shu-chiao, Imperial High Commissioners, to organise the Boxers in the vicinity of Peking and bring them under Government control. During this crisis the various Foreign Powers also sent some 400 odd troops into Peking to protect their Legations. By the 4th of June, the Boxer outlaws had begun to tear up and destroy the Railway between Peking and Tientsin, and from that day also began to enter the city walls of Peking, crowding in at the rate of over a thousand a day. Altars (or gathering-places for recruits, etc.) were erected by them all over the city. At this time also these outlaws began the wholesale slaughter of Christians, and burning of churches outside of Peking, until none of the latter have been left standing. As many as could escape, amongst the Christians, then poured into the capital, taking refuge in the Legations situated in the Tung-chiao-ming street (otherwise known as Legation street). This state of affairs, I may say, existed in the capital during the first days of June, from which time I began to jot down the following diary of events as they occurred before my own eyes and were personally experienced by me.

13th June, 1900: 17th day of the 5th moon 26th year of Kuang Hsü:— About dusk, while in the University [of Peking]. I saw four places on fire, whereupon I immediately returned to my house, subsequently learning that all the Churches and mission properties inside the "Eastern City" had been set fire to and entirely destroyed, the conflagration in the Lamplight Market (Night Bazaar) having been especially destructive, lasting far into the next day.

14th June.—I passed the Panshih Residence this morning. The building in the rear of this is now the headquarters of Tung Fu-hsiang and his Kansu troops, who I may state, had already entered the city a few days previously. [The Kansu troops, ever since their arrival from Kansu in the autumn of 1898, had always been kept encamped outside Peking and prohibited from entering the City walls.] At noon, my friend Yang Ch'ao-chió, a Military Chüjén graduate, sent a servant over to my house suggesting that we should join our families together and escape from Peking in company from the dangers threatening all, and fixing to-morrow morning as our time of departure. I, fortunately as it turned out for us all, firmly refused to go with Yang's party, as I had just heard the rumour that steamers had stopped running to Tientsin. I had also heard that the road to T'ungchou was greatly infested by marauding bands of outlaws, that the railway to Tientsin had been destroyed, and the telegraph lines cut. Further, that a relief force of Foreign troops was on its way to Peking from Tientsin, and that that city was in great confusion. With these considerations in my mind, I decided to remain where I was for the present.

— The Japan Daily Mail[42]

Peking, Oct, 30. The Kansu troops encamping to the South of Peking are preparing to retire.

— The Japan Daily Mail[43][44]

The Boxer Rebellion edit

Rise of the Boxers and return to the walled city edit

"Secondary Devils "—the term used to describe Chinese Christians. Of the family in one of the main rooms, and told them not to get excited or scream. I had scarcely mustered them when nineteen of the Kansu braves came rushing in. Their swords and clothes were still dripping with blood, as if they had come from a shambles. I went forward to meet them, saying politely: 'I know what you have come for: you are looking for secondary devils. However, none of us have "eaten" the foreign religion. You will see that we have an altar to the kitchen god in our back premises. The whole of our family is now here; will you not take a look through the house to see if there are any Christians in hiding?' I meant by this to imply that we should offer no opposition to their looting whatsoever they pleased. I also called a servant to prepare tea. Our guests received these overtures pleasantly enough, and after a few minutes of energetic looting they returned to my guest room, and some of them sat down to take tea. One of them remarked: 'You seem to be thoroughly respectable people: what a pity that you should reside near this nest of foreign converts and spies.' After a brief stay they thanked us politely, apologising for the intrusion, and retired with their booty. It was then about 2 p.m. We lost about $4,000 worth of valuables. Shortly afterwards, flames were bursting from our neighbour's premises, so I made up my mind to remove my family to a friend's house in the north of the city. In spite of these deeds of violence, even intelligent people still believed that the Kansu soldiery were a tower of defence for China, and would be more than able to repel any number of foreign troops. A friend of mine reckoned that 250,000 persons lost their lives in Peking that summer. I used to revile the Boxers in the family circle so much that my own kinsmen, who sympathised with them, would call me an 'Erh Mao Tzu,' and my cousin, fearing that the Boxers would murder me, induced me one day to kotow before one of their altars in the Nai Tzu-fu. To this day I have regretted my weakness in thus bowing the knee."

— Sir Edmund Backhouse & John Otway Percy Bland, Annals & memoirs of the court of Peking: (from the 16th to the 20th century), Act III, Scene I.[45][46][47]

It is, therefore, becoming patent to the most blind that this is going to be something startling, something eclipsing any other anti-foreign movement ever heard of, because never before have the users of foreign imports and the mere friends of foreigners been labelled in a class just below that of the foreigners themselves. And then as it became dark today, a fresh wave of excitement broke over the city and produced almost a panic. The main body of Tung Fuhsiang's savage Kansu braves—that is, his whole army-—re-entered the capital and rapidly encamped on the open places in front of the Temples of Heaven and Agriculture in the outer ring of Peking. This settled it, I am glad to say. At last all the Legations shivered, and urgent telegrams were sent to the British admiral for reinforcements to be rushed up at all costs.

— Indiscreet Letters from Peking, Bertram Lenox Simpson, pp. 36-7.[15][48][49]

On 5 January 1900, Sir Claude MacDonald, the British Minister in Beijing, wrote to the Foreign Office about a movement called the "Boxers" that had been attacking Christian property and Chinese converts in Shandong and southern Zhili province.[50] In the early months of 1900, this "Boxer movement" took dramatic expansion in northern Zhili – the area surrounding Beijing – and Boxers even started to appear in the capital.[51][52] In late May, the anti-Christian Boxers took a broader anti-foreign turn, and as they became more organized, they started to attack the Beijing–Baoding railway and to cut telegraph lines between Beijing and Tianjin.[53]

The Qing court hesitated between annihilating, "pacifying", or supporting the Boxers. From 27 to 29 May, Cixi received Dong Fuxiang in audiences at the Summer Palace.[54] Dong assured her that he could get rid of the foreign "barbarians" if necessary, increasing the dowager's confidence in China's ability to drive out foreigners if war became unavoidable.[54] Meanwhile, an increase in the number of the legation guards – they arrived in Beijing on 31 May – further inflamed anti-foreign sentiment in Beijing and its surrounding countryside: for the first time, Boxers started to attack foreigners directly.[55] Several foreign powers sent warships under the Dagu Forts, which protected access to Tianjin and Beijing.[56][57]

On 9 June, the bulk of the Kansu Braves escorted Empress Dowager Cixi back to the Forbidden City from the Summer Palace; they set camp in the southern part of city, in empty lands in front of the Temple of Heaven and the Temple of Agriculture.[58] Fearing the worst, Sir Claude MacDonald immediately sent a telegram calling for Admiral Seymour to send help from Tianjin.[58] On 10 June, the anti-foreign and pro-Boxer prince Duan replaced the anti-Boxer and more moderate prince Qing as the head of the Zongli Yamen, the bureau through which the Qing government communicated with foreigners.[59] On that same day the telegraph lines were cut off for good.[58]

Assassination of Sugiyama Akira edit

On June 11th occurred the murder of the Japanese Chancellor, Sugiyama, by the Boxers, and Tung Fuhsiang's Kansu' troops. The Chancellor attempted to leave Peking by the Yung-ting gate in order to meet Admiral Seymour's relief force, which was on its way to the capital from Tientsin, and which was apparently expected to reach Peking that day. Sugiyama rode in a cart with a broad red band round the body, denoting that the occupant was of, at least, the second rank. When he arrived at the Yung-ting gate he was accosted by a number of Tung Fu-hsiang's men who were guarding it. It seemed that Prince Tuan had that day given secret orders that no foreigner was to be allowed either to leave the city or enter it. He was therefore stopped and asked who he was. Sugiyama told them that he was a member of the Japanese legation. "Are you the Japanese minister?" "No, I am only a chancellor of the legation." "Then what right have you, a petty officer like that, to ride in such a high official's cart?" So they pulled him out of his cart and began to mob the unlucky Chancellor. Sugiyama then demanded to be brought before General Tung Fu-hsiang. "What! You to speak to our Great General! (Ta Shuei.) Why, you are too insignificant to have such an honor!" At last, however, a red-buttoned Kansu officer appeared on the scene, to whom Sugiyama appealed for help. Instead of doing so the ruffian merely ordered the Japanese Chancellor's head to be struck off as a sacrifice to their war banner, and stuck near the gate, "for trying to break out of Peking." Sugiyama was the first foreigner murdered inside Peking. The great mass of the population of Peking were greatly alarmed at these blood-thirsty proceedings, and all were expecting that the Empress Dowager would show some disapproval of the murder of the Japanese Chancellor, belonging to a friendly State, and the member of an Embassy; but the Manchus, one and all, were jubilant when they heard of the murder. Finally the official seal of approval from the highest quarter for this dastardly murder was made by Prince Tuan, who, when he met General Tung Fu-hsiang the next morning, slapped the latter on the back and raising his right thumb called out "Hao" (good!) The raising of the thumb denotes that the person addressed is a "first-class hero."

— China and the Boxers: A short history of the Boxer outbreak, with two chapters on the sufferings of missionaries and a closing one on the outlook, Zephaniah Charles Beals, pp. 73-5.[60]

June 11th.—On this day the general body of General Tung's troops that had remained in the South Park entered the Yungting-men. This is the central gate of the Chinese city on the South. They met a secretary, Sugiyama, of the Japanese Legation who was leaving Peking in order to meet the foreign troops coming to Peking. General Tung's troops asked him who he was. He replied he was an official secretary of the Japanese Legation. The soldiers objected to this, if you are an official secretary why do you use a cart with a red band round it. They seized his ear and made him come off the cart. The secretary knew that it was not a time to reason the matter. He said in a conciliatory tone "Kindly allow me to see your commander, to him I will apologize." The soldiers said, "There is no need." "Then," said he, "I will later on invite your commander to my Legation and my Minister will apologize." The officers with their swords, then killed him by cutting open his abdomen. The Japanese Minister on hearing it asked permission to have the body taken back to the city for burial. After a long time permission was given. Prince Tuan afterwards on seeing General Tung put out his thumb and said, "You are indeed a hero."

— The Boxer Rising: A History of the Boxer Trouble in China, pp. 59-60.[61] The Boxer Rising: A History of the Boxer Trouble in China. Reprinted from the "Shanghai Mercury.", pp. 46-7.[62]

On the morning of 11 June, the British sent a large convoy of carts to greet the Seymour Expedition. The procession safely passed through the areas occupied by the Gansu troops inside the walled city and soon reached the Majiapu (Machiapu[63]) train station south of Beijing, where the relief troops were expected to arrive soon.[59] Except that it they never arrived, and the carts had to head back to the legations.[59] A smaller Italian delegation guarded by a few riflemen narrowly escaped Dong Fuxiang's soldiers, who were lining up to block Beijing's main southern gate the Yongding Gate, but also managed to return safely.[64]

That same afternoon, the Japanese legation sent secretary Sugiyama Akira to the station unguarded to greet the Japanese troops. With his formal western suit and a bowler hat, Sugiyama made a conspicuous target.[65][66] The Kansu Muslim troops seized him from his cart near the Yongding Gate, hacked him into pieces, decapitated him, and left his mutilated body and severed head and genitals on the street.[67][68][69][70][71] George Morrison, the Beijing correspondent for the London Times, claimed that they also carved his heart out and sent it to Dong Fuxiang.[65][72] The Japanese legation lodged a formal protest at the Tsungli Yamen, which expressed its regrets and explained that Sugiyama had been killed by "bandits".[73][74]

Combat edit

Dong was extremely anti-foreign, and gave full support to Cixi and the Boxers. General Dong committed his Muslim troops to join the Boxers to attack foreigners in Beijing. They attacked the legation quarter relentlessly. They were also known for their intolerance towards the Opium trade. A Japanese chancellor, Sugiyama Akira, and several Westerners were killed by the Kansu braves.[75][76][77] The Muslim troops were reportedly enthusiastic about going on the offensive and killing foreigners.

The German diplomat in Beijing Clemens von Ketteler killed a Chinese civilian suspecting him of being a Boxer.[78] In response, Boxers and thousands of Chinese Muslim Kansu Braves went on a violent riot against the westerners.[79]

They were made out of 5,000 cavalry with the most modern repeating rifles.[80] Some of them went on horseback.[81]

The Kansu Braves and Boxers combined their forces to attack the foreigners and the legations.[82][83][84]

In contrast to other units besieging the legations, like Ronglu's troops who let supplies and letters slip through to the besieged foreigners, the "sullen and suspicious" Kansu braves seriously pressed the siege and refused to let anything through, shooting at foreigners trying to smuggle things through their lines.[85][86][87][88][89][90] Sir Claude Macdonald noted the "ferocity" of Dong Fuxiang's Kansu troops compared to the "restraint" of Ronglu's troops.[91]

Battle summary edit

Early on Sunday morning, 17th June, a week after we had started, the Taku Forts were taken by U the Allied Forces in order to relieve Tientsin. That city was invested by the Boxers who began to bombard it next day. Of this of course we were quite ignorant. But the Court in Peking must have received instant news of the fact, for on the afternoon of the 18th Captain von Usedom, the German officer in command of the troops left at Langfang, was attacked by the Imperial forces belonging to General Tung-fuh-siang's division. Their numbers were estimated at 7,000 and they were well armed _^ with modern rifles which they used with effect, so that we suffered considerable casualties.

— Charles Clive Bigham Mersey (Viscount), A Year in China, 1899–1900, p. 177.[92]

Messages were then sent back to Lofa and Langfang, recalling trains 2, 3, and 4, the advance by rail being found to be impracticable, and the isolation and separate destruction of the trains a possibility. In the afternoon of June 18, train No. 3 came back from Lofa, and later in the evening Nos. 2 and 4 from Langfang. The latter had been unexpectedly attacked about half past 2 in the afternoon of June 18, by a force estimated at 5,000 men, including cavalry, large numbers of whom were armed with magazine rifles of the latest pattern. Captured banners showed that they belonged to the army of General Tung Fu Hsiang, who commanded the Chinese troops in the hunting park outside Pekin, showing that the Chinese imperial troops were being employed to defeat the expedition. This army was composed of especially picked men, 10,000 strong, commanded from the palace. They were said to be well armed, but indifferently drilled.

— United States. Adjutant-General's Office. Military Information Division, Publication, Issue 33, p. 528.[93][94][95]

The Muslim troops led by Dong Fuxiang defeated the hastily assembled Seymour Expedition of the 8 nation alliance at the Battle of Langfang on 18 June. The Chinese won a major victory, and forced Seymour to retreat back to Tianjin with heavy casualties by 26 June.[92][96][97][98][99][100] Langfang was the only battle the Muslim troops did outside of Beijing. After Langfang, Dong Fuxiang's troops only participated in battles inside of Beijing.[101]

Summary of battles of General Dong Fuxiang: Ts'ai Ts'un, 24 July; Ho Hsi Wu, 25 July; An P'ing, 26 July; Ma T'ou, 27 July.[102]

6,000 of the Muslim troops under Dong Fuxiang and 20,000 Boxers repulsed a relief column, driving them to Huang Ts'un.[103] The Muslims camped outside the temples of Heaven and Agriculture.[104]

The German Kaiser Wilhelm II was so alarmed by the Chinese Muslim troops that he requested the Caliph Abdul Hamid II of the Ottoman Empire to find a way to stop the Muslim troops from fighting. The Caliph agreed to the Kaiser's request and sent Enver Pasha (not the future Young Turk leader) to China in 1901, but the rebellion was over by that time.[105][106][107][108][109] Because the Ottomans were not in a position to create a rift with the European nations, and to assist ties with Germany, an order imploring Chinese Muslims to avoid assisting the Boxers was issued by the Ottoman Khalifa and reprinted in Egyptian and Indian Muslim newspapers in spite of the fact that the predicament the British found themselves in the Boxer Rebellion was gratifying to Indian Muslims and Egyptians.[110][111][112][113][114][115][116][117]

During the Battle of Peking at Zhengyang Gate the Muslim troops engaged in a fierce battle against the Alliance forces.[118][119][120] The commanding Muslim general in the Chinese army, General Ma Fulu, and four cousins of his – his paternal cousins Ma Fugui 馬福貴, Ma Fuquan 馬福全, and his paternal nephews Ma Yaotu 馬耀圖, and Ma Zhaotu 馬兆圖— were killed while charging against the Alliance forces while a hundred Hui and Dongxiang Muslim troops from his home village in total died in the fighting at Zhengyang. The Battle at Zhengyang was fought against the British.[121] After the battle was over, the Kansu Muslim troops, including General Ma Fuxiang, were among those guarding the Empress Dowager during her flight.[122] The future Muslim General Ma Biao, who led Muslim cavalry to fight against the Japanese in the Second Sino-Japanese War, fought in the Boxer Rebellion as a private under General Ma Haiyan in the Battle of Peking against the foreigners. General Ma Haiyan died of exhaustion after the Imperial Court reached their destination, and his son Ma Qi took over his posts.

The role the Muslim troops played in the war incurred anger from the westerners towards them.[123]

As the Imperial court evacuated to Xi'an in Shaanxi province after Beijing fell to the Alliance, the court gave signals that it would continue the war with Dong Fuxiang "opposing Count von Waldersee tooth and nail", and the court promoted Dong to Commander-in-chief.[124]

The Muslim troops were described as "picked men, the bravest of the brave, the most fanatical of fanatics: and that is why the defence of the Emperor's city had been entrusted to them."[125]

Organization and armament edit

They were organized into eight battalions of infantry, two squadrons of cavalry, two brigades of artillery, and one company of engineers.[126] They were armed with modern weaponry such as Mauser repeater rifles and field artillery.[127] They used scarlet and black banners.[128]

List of people who served in the Kansu Braves edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b 秉默, ed. (16 October 2008). . 中国国民党革命委员会中央委员会. 民革中央. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  2. ^ 朱, 国琳 (3 March 2011). . 民族日报-民族日报一版 | 民族日报数字报刊平台. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  3. ^ 韩, 芝华 (16 October 2009). . 中国国民党革命委员会新疆维吾尔自治区委员会. Archived from the original on 6 September 2017.
  4. ^ Travels of a Consular Officer in North-West China. CUP Archive. 1921. p. 110.
  5. ^ Jonathan N. Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers: A History of Muslims in Northwest China. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. pp. 142–3. ISBN 0-295-97644-6.
  6. ^ Jonathan Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers. pp. 128 and 156–7.
  7. ^ Jonathan Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers. p. 151.
  8. ^ Jonathan Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers. pp. 156–7.
  9. ^ Jonathan Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers. p. 157.
  10. ^ Jonathan Lipman (1997). Familiar Strangers. pp. 157–8.
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kansu, braves, gansu, braves, gansu, army, unit, chinese, muslim, troops, from, northwestern, province, kansu, gansu, last, decades, qing, dynasty, 1644, 1912, loyal, qing, braves, were, recruited, 1895, suppress, muslim, revolt, gansu, under, command, general. The Gansu Braves or Gansu Army was a unit of 10 000 Chinese Muslim troops from the northwestern province of Kansu Gansu in the last decades of the Qing dynasty 1644 1912 Loyal to the Qing the Braves were recruited in 1895 to suppress a Muslim revolt in Gansu Under the command of General Dong Fuxiang 1839 1908 they were transferred to the Beijing metropolitan area in 1898 where they officially became the Rear Division of the Wuwei Corps a modern army that protected the imperial capital The Gansu Army included Hui Muslims Salar Muslims 1 2 3 Dongxiang Muslims and Bonan Muslims Gansu BravesThree Muslim soldiers from the Gansu ArmyActive1895 1901Country Qing EmpireAllegianceEmperor of ChinaBranchWuwei CorpsTypeDivisionSize10 000Garrison HQGansu then BeijingNickname s Kansu BravesEquipmentKrupp artillery Mauser rifles swords halberdsEngagementsDungan revolt 1895 96 Battle of LangfangSiege of the International Legations Boxer Rebellion Battle of PekingCommandersNotablecommandersDong Fuxiang general in chief Ma Fuxiang Ma Fulu Ma Fuxing Kansu BravesTraditional Chinese甘軍Simplified Chinese甘军Literal meaningGansu ArmyTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinGan JunWade GilesKan Chun Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationGam GwanJyutpingGam1 Gwan1 The Braves who wore traditional uniforms but were armed with modern rifles and artillery played an important role in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion After helping to repel the Seymour Expedition a multinational foreign force sent from Tianjin to relieve the Beijing Legation Quarter in early June the Muslim troops were the fiercest attackers during the siege of the legations from 20 June to 14 August 4 They suffered heavy casualties at the Battle of Peking in which the Eight Nation Alliance relieved the siege The Kansu Braves then guarded the Imperial Court on their journey to Xi an Contents 1 Origins in Gansu 2 Transfer to Beijing 3 The Boxer Rebellion 3 1 Rise of the Boxers and return to the walled city 3 2 Assassination of Sugiyama Akira 3 3 Combat 3 4 Battle summary 4 Organization and armament 5 List of people who served in the Kansu Braves 6 See also 7 ReferencesOrigins in Gansu editIn the spring of 1895 a Muslim revolt erupted in the southern parts of Gansu province 5 Dong Fuxiang 1839 1908 who had fought under Zuo Zongtang 1812 1885 in the suppression of a larger Muslim rebellion in the 1860s and 1870s had by 1895 become Imperial Commissioner in Gansu and he now commanded the Muslim militias that Zuo had recruited locally 6 In early July 1895 Dong commanded these troops in relieving the siege of Didao by Muslims rebels 7 When he attended Empress Dowager Cixi s sixtieth birthday celebrations in Beijing in August 1895 he was recommended to Cixi by the powerful Manchu minister Ronglu 8 The Muslim rebels who were armed with muzzleloaders and various white arms were overwhelmed by the firepower of the modern Remington and Mauser rifles that Dong brought back from Beijing 9 Dong also used his understanding of local politics to convince the rebels to return to their homes 10 By the spring of 1896 Gansu was again pacified 11 Generals Dong Fuxiang Ma Anliang and Ma Haiyan were originally called to Beijing during the First Sino Japanese War in 1894 but the Dungan Revolt 1895 broke out and they were subsequently sent to crush the rebels During the Hundred Days Reform in 1898 Generals Dong Fuxiang Ma Anliang and Ma Haiyan were called to Beijing and helped put an end to the reform movement along with Ma Fulu and Ma Fuxiang Late in the afternoon it transpired that the Empress Dowager was not in the Imperial city at all but out at the Summer Palace on the Wan shou shan the hills of ten thousand ages as these are poetically called Tung Fu hsiang whose ruffianly Kansu braves were marched out of the Chinese city that is the outer ring of Peking two nights before the Legation Guards came in is also with the Empress for his cavalry banners made of black and blue velvet with blood red characters splashed splendidly across them have been seen planted at the foot of the hills Tung Fu hsiang is an invincible one who stamped out the Kansu rebellion a few years ago with such fierceness that his name strikes terror to day into every Chinese heart Indiscreet Letters from Peking Bertram Lenox Simpson p 12 12 13 14 But it is grave notwithstanding the laughter Once in 1899 after the Empress Dowager s coup d etat and the virtual imprisonment of the Emperor Legation Guards had to be sent for a few files for each of the Legations that possess squadrons in the Far East and what is more these guards had to stay for a good many months The guards are now no more but it is curious that the men they came mainly to protect us against Tung Fu hsiang s Mohammedan braves from the savage back province of Kansu who love the reactionary Empress Dowager are still encamped near the Northern capital Indiscreet Letters from Peking p 10 15 Transfer to Beijing edit nbsp General Dong Fuxiang Following the killing of two German missionaries in Shandong in November 1897 foreign powers engaged in a scramble for concessions that threatened to split China into several spheres of influence 16 To protect the imperial capital against possible attacks Cixi had the Gansu Army transferred to Beijing in the summer of 1898 17 She admired the Gansu Army because Ronglu who was in her favor had a close relation with its commander Dong Fuxiang 18 On their way to Beijing Dong s troops attacked Christian churches in Baoding 17 After the failure of the Hundred Days Reform 11 June 21 September 1898 sponsored by the Guangxu Emperor Cixi named Ronglu Minister of War and highest official in the Grand Council and put him in charge of reforming the metropolitan armies 19 Ronglu made Dong s militia the Rear Division of a new corps called the Wuwei Corps 20 Dong Fuxiang was the only commander of the five divisions who did not hide his hostility toward foreigners 21 Beijing residents and foreigners alike feared the turbulent Muslim troops 21 It was said the troops are to act tomorrow when all foreigners in Peking are to be wiped out and the golden age return for China during 23 October 1898 22 23 Some Westerners described the Gansu Braves as the 10 000 Islamic rabble 24 a disorderly rabble of about 10 000 men most of whom were Mohammedans 25 26 27 or Kansu Irregulars 28 others as ten thousand Mohammedan cutthroats feared by even the Chinese 29 In late September and early October 1898 several minor clashes between the Gansu troops and foreigners heightened tensions in the capital 17 Soldiers from the United States Marine Corps were among the new guards called from Tianjin to protect the Beijing Legation Quarter from possible assaults 30 31 By late October rumors were circulating that the Gansu Army was preparing to kill all foreigners in Beijing 17 Responding to an ultimatum by the foreign ministers Cixi had the Gansu troops transferred to the Southern Park Nanyuan 南苑 which was also known as the Hunting Park because emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties had used it for large scale hunts and military drills 32 33 By the 1880s this large expanse of land south of Beijing it was several times larger than the walled city had been partly converted into farmland but it was conveniently located near the railroad that connected Beijing to Tianjin 34 35 The Kansu braves were involved in a scuffle at a theatre 36 At the section of railroad at Fengtai two British engineers were almost beaten to death by the Muslim Kansu troops and foreign ministers asked that they be pulled back since they were threatening the safety of foreigners 37 26 At Peking much apprehension was felt from the disturbed political state but the actual danger came from the turbulent soldiery brought to the capital to guard against the fear of foreign aggression and of these the most turbulent were the Kansu troops of Tung Fu siang stationed in the southern Hunting Park Men of this force attacked on September 30th a party consisting of members of the British and American legations and the next day the foreign representatives decided to send for a guard of marines from each of their fleets The viceroy at Tientsin refused to allow them to pass but as the envoys 67 Sir C MacDonald to Lord Salisbury April 15th 1898 China Xo 1 1899 p 102 Hosea Ballou Morse The International Relations of the Chinese Empire Volume 3 p 151 38 The Chinese government did protest but without effect The legation guards were insisted upon and as speedily as possible they were provided from the war ships of the several powers and quartered in Peking Then the Chinese authorities brought troops to the capital and the sense of danger at the legations grew On the 25th of October Minister MacDonald cabled to London A serious menace to the safety of Europeans is the presence of some 10 000 soldiers who have come from the Province of Kansu and are to be quartered in the hunting park two miles south of Peking A party of these soldiers made a savage assault on four Europeans including Mr C W Campbell of this Legation who were last Sunday visiting the railway line at Lukou Chiao The foreign Ministers will meet this morning to protest against these outrages I shall see the Yamcm to day and propose to demand that the force of soldiers shall be removed to another province and that the offenders shall be rigorously dealt with On the 29th he telegraphed again The Foreign Representatives met yesterday and drafted a note to the Yamfin demanding that the Kansu troops should be withdrawn at once The troops in question have not been paid for some months and are in a semi mutinous state They have declared their intention to drive all Europeans out of the north of China and have cut the telegraph wires and destroyed portions of the railway line between Lukouchiao and Paoting Fu Some disturbances have been caused by them on the railway to Tien tsin but the line has not been touched and traffic has not been interrupted In the city here all is quiet The presence of these troops in the immediate vicinity of Peking undoubtedly constitutes a serious danger to all Europeans The Yamfin gave me a promise that the force should be removed but have not yet carried it into effect Alan Campbell Reiley History for Ready Reference From the Best Historians Biographers and Specialists Their Own Words in a Complete System of History p 95 39 40 41 On the 31st of May Tung Fuhsiang had an audience of the Throne and upon being questioned stood up and accepted all responsibility in the war of extermination of Foreigners which he strongly advocated staking his head on his ability in successfully combating the Foreign Powers The result was that instead of ordering the suppression of the Boxers the policy of the Government was suddenly changed and an Imperial decree was immediately issued appointing Kang Yi and Chao Shu chiao Imperial High Commissioners to organise the Boxers in the vicinity of Peking and bring them under Government control During this crisis the various Foreign Powers also sent some 400 odd troops into Peking to protect their Legations By the 4th of June the Boxer outlaws had begun to tear up and destroy the Railway between Peking and Tientsin and from that day also began to enter the city walls of Peking crowding in at the rate of over a thousand a day Altars or gathering places for recruits etc were erected by them all over the city At this time also these outlaws began the wholesale slaughter of Christians and burning of churches outside of Peking until none of the latter have been left standing As many as could escape amongst the Christians then poured into the capital taking refuge in the Legations situated in the Tung chiao ming street otherwise known as Legation street This state of affairs I may say existed in the capital during the first days of June from which time I began to jot down the following diary of events as they occurred before my own eyes and were personally experienced by me 13th June 1900 17th day of the 5th moon 26th year of Kuang Hsu About dusk while in the University of Peking I saw four places on fire whereupon I immediately returned to my house subsequently learning that all the Churches and mission properties inside the Eastern City had been set fire to and entirely destroyed the conflagration in the Lamplight Market Night Bazaar having been especially destructive lasting far into the next day 14th June I passed the Panshih Residence this morning The building in the rear of this is now the headquarters of Tung Fu hsiang and his Kansu troops who I may state had already entered the city a few days previously The Kansu troops ever since their arrival from Kansu in the autumn of 1898 had always been kept encamped outside Peking and prohibited from entering the City walls At noon my friend Yang Ch ao chio a Military Chujen graduate sent a servant over to my house suggesting that we should join our families together and escape from Peking in company from the dangers threatening all and fixing to morrow morning as our time of departure I fortunately as it turned out for us all firmly refused to go with Yang s party as I had just heard the rumour that steamers had stopped running to Tientsin I had also heard that the road to T ungchou was greatly infested by marauding bands of outlaws that the railway to Tientsin had been destroyed and the telegraph lines cut Further that a relief force of Foreign troops was on its way to Peking from Tientsin and that that city was in great confusion With these considerations in my mind I decided to remain where I was for the present The Japan Daily Mail 42 Peking Oct 30 The Kansu troops encamping to the South of Peking are preparing to retire The Japan Daily Mail 43 44 The Boxer Rebellion editMain article Boxer Rebellion Rise of the Boxers and return to the walled city edit Secondary Devils the term used to describe Chinese Christians Of the family in one of the main rooms and told them not to get excited or scream I had scarcely mustered them when nineteen of the Kansu braves came rushing in Their swords and clothes were still dripping with blood as if they had come from a shambles I went forward to meet them saying politely I know what you have come for you are looking for secondary devils However none of us have eaten the foreign religion You will see that we have an altar to the kitchen god in our back premises The whole of our family is now here will you not take a look through the house to see if there are any Christians in hiding I meant by this to imply that we should offer no opposition to their looting whatsoever they pleased I also called a servant to prepare tea Our guests received these overtures pleasantly enough and after a few minutes of energetic looting they returned to my guest room and some of them sat down to take tea One of them remarked You seem to be thoroughly respectable people what a pity that you should reside near this nest of foreign converts and spies After a brief stay they thanked us politely apologising for the intrusion and retired with their booty It was then about 2 p m We lost about 4 000 worth of valuables Shortly afterwards flames were bursting from our neighbour s premises so I made up my mind to remove my family to a friend s house in the north of the city In spite of these deeds of violence even intelligent people still believed that the Kansu soldiery were a tower of defence for China and would be more than able to repel any number of foreign troops A friend of mine reckoned that 250 000 persons lost their lives in Peking that summer I used to revile the Boxers in the family circle so much that my own kinsmen who sympathised with them would call me an Erh Mao Tzu and my cousin fearing that the Boxers would murder me induced me one day to kotow before one of their altars in the Nai Tzu fu To this day I have regretted my weakness in thus bowing the knee Sir Edmund Backhouse amp John Otway Percy Bland Annals amp memoirs of the court of Peking from the 16th to the 20th century Act III Scene I 45 46 47 It is therefore becoming patent to the most blind that this is going to be something startling something eclipsing any other anti foreign movement ever heard of because never before have the users of foreign imports and the mere friends of foreigners been labelled in a class just below that of the foreigners themselves And then as it became dark today a fresh wave of excitement broke over the city and produced almost a panic The main body of Tung Fuhsiang s savage Kansu braves that is his whole army re entered the capital and rapidly encamped on the open places in front of the Temples of Heaven and Agriculture in the outer ring of Peking This settled it I am glad to say At last all the Legations shivered and urgent telegrams were sent to the British admiral for reinforcements to be rushed up at all costs Indiscreet Letters from Peking Bertram Lenox Simpson pp 36 7 15 48 49 On 5 January 1900 Sir Claude MacDonald the British Minister in Beijing wrote to the Foreign Office about a movement called the Boxers that had been attacking Christian property and Chinese converts in Shandong and southern Zhili province 50 In the early months of 1900 this Boxer movement took dramatic expansion in northern Zhili the area surrounding Beijing and Boxers even started to appear in the capital 51 52 In late May the anti Christian Boxers took a broader anti foreign turn and as they became more organized they started to attack the Beijing Baoding railway and to cut telegraph lines between Beijing and Tianjin 53 The Qing court hesitated between annihilating pacifying or supporting the Boxers From 27 to 29 May Cixi received Dong Fuxiang in audiences at the Summer Palace 54 Dong assured her that he could get rid of the foreign barbarians if necessary increasing the dowager s confidence in China s ability to drive out foreigners if war became unavoidable 54 Meanwhile an increase in the number of the legation guards they arrived in Beijing on 31 May further inflamed anti foreign sentiment in Beijing and its surrounding countryside for the first time Boxers started to attack foreigners directly 55 Several foreign powers sent warships under the Dagu Forts which protected access to Tianjin and Beijing 56 57 On 9 June the bulk of the Kansu Braves escorted Empress Dowager Cixi back to the Forbidden City from the Summer Palace they set camp in the southern part of city in empty lands in front of the Temple of Heaven and the Temple of Agriculture 58 Fearing the worst Sir Claude MacDonald immediately sent a telegram calling for Admiral Seymour to send help from Tianjin 58 On 10 June the anti foreign and pro Boxer prince Duan replaced the anti Boxer and more moderate prince Qing as the head of the Zongli Yamen the bureau through which the Qing government communicated with foreigners 59 On that same day the telegraph lines were cut off for good 58 Assassination of Sugiyama Akira edit On June 11th occurred the murder of the Japanese Chancellor Sugiyama by the Boxers and Tung Fuhsiang s Kansu troops The Chancellor attempted to leave Peking by the Yung ting gate in order to meet Admiral Seymour s relief force which was on its way to the capital from Tientsin and which was apparently expected to reach Peking that day Sugiyama rode in a cart with a broad red band round the body denoting that the occupant was of at least the second rank When he arrived at the Yung ting gate he was accosted by a number of Tung Fu hsiang s men who were guarding it It seemed that Prince Tuan had that day given secret orders that no foreigner was to be allowed either to leave the city or enter it He was therefore stopped and asked who he was Sugiyama told them that he was a member of the Japanese legation Are you the Japanese minister No I am only a chancellor of the legation Then what right have you a petty officer like that to ride in such a high official s cart So they pulled him out of his cart and began to mob the unlucky Chancellor Sugiyama then demanded to be brought before General Tung Fu hsiang What You to speak to our Great General Ta Shuei Why you are too insignificant to have such an honor At last however a red buttoned Kansu officer appeared on the scene to whom Sugiyama appealed for help Instead of doing so the ruffian merely ordered the Japanese Chancellor s head to be struck off as a sacrifice to their war banner and stuck near the gate for trying to break out of Peking Sugiyama was the first foreigner murdered inside Peking The great mass of the population of Peking were greatly alarmed at these blood thirsty proceedings and all were expecting that the Empress Dowager would show some disapproval of the murder of the Japanese Chancellor belonging to a friendly State and the member of an Embassy but the Manchus one and all were jubilant when they heard of the murder Finally the official seal of approval from the highest quarter for this dastardly murder was made by Prince Tuan who when he met General Tung Fu hsiang the next morning slapped the latter on the back and raising his right thumb called out Hao good The raising of the thumb denotes that the person addressed is a first class hero China and the Boxers A short history of the Boxer outbreak with two chapters on the sufferings of missionaries and a closing one on the outlook Zephaniah Charles Beals pp 73 5 60 June 11th On this day the general body of General Tung s troops that had remained in the South Park entered the Yungting men This is the central gate of the Chinese city on the South They met a secretary Sugiyama of the Japanese Legation who was leaving Peking in order to meet the foreign troops coming to Peking General Tung s troops asked him who he was He replied he was an official secretary of the Japanese Legation The soldiers objected to this if you are an official secretary why do you use a cart with a red band round it They seized his ear and made him come off the cart The secretary knew that it was not a time to reason the matter He said in a conciliatory tone Kindly allow me to see your commander to him I will apologize The soldiers said There is no need Then said he I will later on invite your commander to my Legation and my Minister will apologize The officers with their swords then killed him by cutting open his abdomen The Japanese Minister on hearing it asked permission to have the body taken back to the city for burial After a long time permission was given Prince Tuan afterwards on seeing General Tung put out his thumb and said You are indeed a hero The Boxer Rising A History of the Boxer Trouble in China pp 59 60 61 The Boxer Rising A History of the Boxer Trouble in China Reprinted from the Shanghai Mercury pp 46 7 62 On the morning of 11 June the British sent a large convoy of carts to greet the Seymour Expedition The procession safely passed through the areas occupied by the Gansu troops inside the walled city and soon reached the Majiapu Machiapu 63 train station south of Beijing where the relief troops were expected to arrive soon 59 Except that it they never arrived and the carts had to head back to the legations 59 A smaller Italian delegation guarded by a few riflemen narrowly escaped Dong Fuxiang s soldiers who were lining up to block Beijing s main southern gate the Yongding Gate but also managed to return safely 64 That same afternoon the Japanese legation sent secretary Sugiyama Akira to the station unguarded to greet the Japanese troops With his formal western suit and a bowler hat Sugiyama made a conspicuous target 65 66 The Kansu Muslim troops seized him from his cart near the Yongding Gate hacked him into pieces decapitated him and left his mutilated body and severed head and genitals on the street 67 68 69 70 71 George Morrison the Beijing correspondent for the London Times claimed that they also carved his heart out and sent it to Dong Fuxiang 65 72 The Japanese legation lodged a formal protest at the Tsungli Yamen which expressed its regrets and explained that Sugiyama had been killed by bandits 73 74 Combat edit Dong was extremely anti foreign and gave full support to Cixi and the Boxers General Dong committed his Muslim troops to join the Boxers to attack foreigners in Beijing They attacked the legation quarter relentlessly They were also known for their intolerance towards the Opium trade A Japanese chancellor Sugiyama Akira and several Westerners were killed by the Kansu braves 75 76 77 The Muslim troops were reportedly enthusiastic about going on the offensive and killing foreigners The German diplomat in Beijing Clemens von Ketteler killed a Chinese civilian suspecting him of being a Boxer 78 In response Boxers and thousands of Chinese Muslim Kansu Braves went on a violent riot against the westerners 79 They were made out of 5 000 cavalry with the most modern repeating rifles 80 Some of them went on horseback 81 The Kansu Braves and Boxers combined their forces to attack the foreigners and the legations 82 83 84 In contrast to other units besieging the legations like Ronglu s troops who let supplies and letters slip through to the besieged foreigners the sullen and suspicious Kansu braves seriously pressed the siege and refused to let anything through shooting at foreigners trying to smuggle things through their lines 85 86 87 88 89 90 Sir Claude Macdonald noted the ferocity of Dong Fuxiang s Kansu troops compared to the restraint of Ronglu s troops 91 Battle summary edit Early on Sunday morning 17th June a week after we had started the Taku Forts were taken by U the Allied Forces in order to relieve Tientsin That city was invested by the Boxers who began to bombard it next day Of this of course we were quite ignorant But the Court in Peking must have received instant news of the fact for on the afternoon of the 18th Captain von Usedom the German officer in command of the troops left at Langfang was attacked by the Imperial forces belonging to General Tung fuh siang s division Their numbers were estimated at 7 000 and they were well armed with modern rifles which they used with effect so that we suffered considerable casualties Charles Clive Bigham Mersey Viscount A Year in China 1899 1900 p 177 92 Messages were then sent back to Lofa and Langfang recalling trains 2 3 and 4 the advance by rail being found to be impracticable and the isolation and separate destruction of the trains a possibility In the afternoon of June 18 train No 3 came back from Lofa and later in the evening Nos 2 and 4 from Langfang The latter had been unexpectedly attacked about half past 2 in the afternoon of June 18 by a force estimated at 5 000 men including cavalry large numbers of whom were armed with magazine rifles of the latest pattern Captured banners showed that they belonged to the army of General Tung Fu Hsiang who commanded the Chinese troops in the hunting park outside Pekin showing that the Chinese imperial troops were being employed to defeat the expedition This army was composed of especially picked men 10 000 strong commanded from the palace They were said to be well armed but indifferently drilled United States Adjutant General s Office Military Information Division Publication Issue 33 p 528 93 94 95 The Muslim troops led by Dong Fuxiang defeated the hastily assembled Seymour Expedition of the 8 nation alliance at the Battle of Langfang on 18 June The Chinese won a major victory and forced Seymour to retreat back to Tianjin with heavy casualties by 26 June 92 96 97 98 99 100 Langfang was the only battle the Muslim troops did outside of Beijing After Langfang Dong Fuxiang s troops only participated in battles inside of Beijing 101 Summary of battles of General Dong Fuxiang Ts ai Ts un 24 July Ho Hsi Wu 25 July An P ing 26 July Ma T ou 27 July 102 6 000 of the Muslim troops under Dong Fuxiang and 20 000 Boxers repulsed a relief column driving them to Huang Ts un 103 The Muslims camped outside the temples of Heaven and Agriculture 104 The German Kaiser Wilhelm II was so alarmed by the Chinese Muslim troops that he requested the Caliph Abdul Hamid II of the Ottoman Empire to find a way to stop the Muslim troops from fighting The Caliph agreed to the Kaiser s request and sent Enver Pasha not the future Young Turk leader to China in 1901 but the rebellion was over by that time 105 106 107 108 109 Because the Ottomans were not in a position to create a rift with the European nations and to assist ties with Germany an order imploring Chinese Muslims to avoid assisting the Boxers was issued by the Ottoman Khalifa and reprinted in Egyptian and Indian Muslim newspapers in spite of the fact that the predicament the British found themselves in the Boxer Rebellion was gratifying to Indian Muslims and Egyptians 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 During the Battle of Peking at Zhengyang Gate the Muslim troops engaged in a fierce battle against the Alliance forces 118 119 120 The commanding Muslim general in the Chinese army General Ma Fulu and four cousins of his his paternal cousins Ma Fugui 馬福貴 Ma Fuquan 馬福全 and his paternal nephews Ma Yaotu 馬耀圖 and Ma Zhaotu 馬兆圖 were killed while charging against the Alliance forces while a hundred Hui and Dongxiang Muslim troops from his home village in total died in the fighting at Zhengyang The Battle at Zhengyang was fought against the British 121 After the battle was over the Kansu Muslim troops including General Ma Fuxiang were among those guarding the Empress Dowager during her flight 122 The future Muslim General Ma Biao who led Muslim cavalry to fight against the Japanese in the Second Sino Japanese War fought in the Boxer Rebellion as a private under General Ma Haiyan in the Battle of Peking against the foreigners General Ma Haiyan died of exhaustion after the Imperial Court reached their destination and his son Ma Qi took over his posts The role the Muslim troops played in the war incurred anger from the westerners towards them 123 As the Imperial court evacuated to Xi an in Shaanxi province after Beijing fell to the Alliance the court gave signals that it would continue the war with Dong Fuxiang opposing Count von Waldersee tooth and nail and the court promoted Dong to Commander in chief 124 The Muslim troops were described as picked men the bravest of the brave the most fanatical of fanatics and that is why the defence of the Emperor s city had been entrusted to them 125 Organization and armament editThey were organized into eight battalions of infantry two squadrons of cavalry two brigades of artillery and one company of engineers 126 They were armed with modern weaponry such as Mauser repeater rifles and field artillery 127 They used scarlet and black banners 128 List of people who served in the Kansu Braves editDong Fuxiang Ma Fuxiang nbsp Commander Ma Fuxing Ma Fulu Ma Fuxing Ma Haiyan Ma Biao Ma Qi Ma Zhankui 129 Aema 1 See also editHui peopleReferences edit a b 秉默 ed 16 October 2008 韩有文传奇 然 也 中国国民党革命委员会中央委员会 民革中央 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 朱 国琳 3 March 2011 马呈祥在新疆 民族日报 民族日报一版 民族日报数字报刊平台 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 韩 芝华 16 October 2009 怀念我的父亲 韩有文 中国国民党革命委员会新疆维吾尔自治区委员会 Archived from the original on 6 September 2017 Travels of a Consular Officer in North West China CUP Archive 1921 p 110 Jonathan N Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers A History of Muslims in Northwest China Seattle and London University of Washington Press pp 142 3 ISBN 0 295 97644 6 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers pp 128 and 156 7 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers p 151 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers pp 156 7 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers p 157 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers pp 157 8 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers pp 164 5 WEALE B L PUTNAM ed 1922 Indiscreet Letters From Peking China ed Shanghai Kelly and Walsh Limited British Empire and Continental Copyright Excepting Scandinavian Countries by Putnam Weale from 1921 p 12 Archived from the original on 25 April 2015 Retrieved 1 April 2013 WEALE B L PUTNAM ed 1922 Indiscreet Letters From Peking Being the Notes of an Eye Witness Which Set Forth in Some Detail from Day to Day the Real Story of the Siege and Sack of a Distressed Capital in 1900 the Year of Great Tribulation China ed Shanghai Kelly and Walsh Limited British Empire and Continental Copyright Excepting Scandinavian Countries by Putnam Weale from 1921 p 12 Retrieved 1 April 2013 Indiscreet Letters From Peking Dodd Mead And Company 18 August 1907 via Internet Archive a b Weale B L Putnam 1907 Indiscreet Letters from Peking Year 1919 pp 36 7 Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press pp 123 4 ISBN 0 520 06459 3 a b c d Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 182 Jonathan Lipman 1997 Familiar Strangers p 157 note 120 Jane E Elliott 2002 Some Did It for Civilisation Some Did It for their Country A Revised View of the Boxer War Chinese University Press p 498 ISBN 962 996 066 4 Jane E Elliott 2002 Some Did It for Civilisation Some Did It for their Country Chinese University Press p 498 ISBN 978 962 996 066 7 a b Jane E Elliott 2002 Some Did It for Civilisation Some Did It for their Country p 9 Joseph W Esherick 18 August 1988 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising University of California Press p 182 ISBN 978 0 520 90896 3 Robert Hart John King Fairbank Katherine Frost Bruner Elizabeth MacLeod Matheson James Duncan Campbell 1975 The I G in Peking Letters of Robert Hart Chinese Maritime Customs 1868 1907 Harvard University Press p 1175 ISBN 978 0 674 44320 4 Lynn E Bodin 1979 The Boxer Rebellion Osprey p 26 ISBN 0 85045 335 6 Powell Ralph L 1972 The rise of Chinese military power 1895 1912 illustrated reprint ed Kennikat Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 8046 1645 4 Ralph L Powell 8 December 2015 Rise of the Chinese Military Power Princeton University Press p 103 ISBN 978 1 4008 7884 0 Papers on China Volumes 3 4 Harvard University East Asian Research Center Harvard University Committee on International and Regional Studies Harvard University East Asia Program Harvard University Center for East Asian Studies East Asian Research Center Harvard University 1949 p 240 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2016 Retrieved 10 March 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Chester M Biggs 2003 The United States Marines in North China 1894 1942 McFarland p 85 ISBN 0 7864 1488 X Increase of legation guards Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 182 US Marine Corps Chester M Biggs 2003 The United States Marines in North China McFarland p 25 ISBN 9780786480234 Official name Southern Park and explanation of the park s use Susan Naquin 2000 Peking Temples and City Life 1400 1900 Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 317 ISBN 0 520 21991 0 Reason for the Gansu Army s transfer Joseph Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 182 Farmland Susan Naquin 2000 Peking p 317 Railroad see map in Diana Preston 2000 The Boxer Rebellion The Dramatic Story of China s War on Foreigners that Shook the World in the Summer of 1900 New York Berkley Books p 99 ISBN 0 425 18084 0 Bland J O P Backhouse E 1910 China Under the Empress Dowager p 360 The Defence of Peking Preparing to Resist Expedition The West Australian London 16 June 1900 p 5 Retrieved 1 April 2013 Morse Hosea Ballou 1918 The International Relations of the Chinese Empire Volume 3 Longmans Green and Company p 151 Reiley Alan Campbell 1901 Larned Josephus Nelson ed History for Ready Reference From the Best Historians Biographers and Specialists Their Own Words in a Complete System of History Vol 6 of History for Ready Reference From the Best Historians Biographers and Specialists Their Own Words in a Complete System of History revised ed C A Nichols Company p 95 Josephus Nelson Larned 1901 History for Ready Reference from the Best Historians C A Nichols Company p 95 Alan Campbell Reiley 1913 History for Ready Reference from the Best Historians Biographers and Specialists Their Own Words in a Complete System of History The C A Nichols co p 95 The Japan Daily Mail A H Blackwell 1900 p 178 The Japan Daily Mail A H Blackwell 1899 p 468 Japan Weekly Mail 1898 p 468 Backhouse Sir Edmund Bland John Otway Percy 1914 Annals amp memoirs of the court of Peking from the 16th to the 20th century W Heinemann p 454 The Atlantic Monthly Volume 113 Carl Sandburg Collections University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Library Atlantic Monthly Company 1914 p 80 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Backhouse Sir Edmund Bland John Otway Percy 1914 Annals amp memoirs of the court of Peking from the 16th to the 20th century W Heinemann p 454 Weale B L Putnam 1907 John Otway Percy Bland Edmund Backhouse eds Indiscreet Letters From Peking Dodd Mead And Company pp 36 7 Weale Bertram Lenox Putnam ed 1909 Indiscreet Letters from Peking Being the Notes of an Eyewitness which Set Forth in Some Detail from Day to Day the Real Story of the Siege and Sack of a Distressed Capital in 1900 the Year of Great Tribulation Dodd Mead p 29 Paul A Cohen 1997 History in Three Keys The Boxers as Event Experience and Myth New York Columbia University Press p 44 ISBN 0 231 10651 3 Expansion of the Boxer movement Paul A Cohen 1997 History in Three Keys pp 41 2 Boxer arrival in Beijing Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 290 Paul A Cohen 1997 History in Three Keys p 47 a b Lanxin Xiang 2003 The Origins of the Boxer War A Multinational Study London and New York RoutledgeCurzon p 207 ISBN 0 7007 1563 0 Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 47 Paul A Cohen 1997 History in Three Keys pp 47 8 Joseph W Esherick 1987 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising p 287 a b c Diana Preston 2000 The Boxer Rebellion Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 69 ISBN 9780802713612 a b c Diana Preston 2000 The Boxer Rebellion Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 70 ISBN 9780802713612 Beals Zephaniah Charles 1901 China and the Boxers A short history of the Boxer outbreak with two chapters on the sufferings of missionaries and a closing one on the outlook M E Munson p 73 The Boxer Rising A History of the Boxer Trouble in China 2 reprint ed Shanghai Mercury 1901 p 59 The Boxer Rising A History of the Boxer Trouble in China Reprinted from the Shanghai Mercury reprint ed Shanghai mercury limited 1900 p 46 Diana Preston 1 June 2000 The Boxer Rebellion The Dramatic Story of China s War on Foreigners That Shook the World in the Summer of 1900 Walker p 62 ISBN 978 0 8027 1361 2 Lanxin Xiang 2003 The origins of the Boxer War a multinational study Psychology Press p 252 ISBN 9780700715633 a b Diana Preston 2000 The Boxer Rebellion Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 71 ISBN 9780802713612 Fairbank John King Twitchett Denis Crispin eds 1980 The Cambridge History of China Cambridge University Press p 121 ISBN 0521220297 Robert B Edgerton 1997 Warriors of the rising sun a history of the Japanese military W W Norton amp Company p 70 ISBN 0 393 04085 2 Lancelot Giles Leslie Ronald Marchant 1970 The siege of the Peking legations a diary University of Western Australia Press p 181 ISBN 9780855640415 Kelly John S 1963 A forgotten conference the negotiations at Peking 1900 1901 Librairie Droz p 31 ISBN 2600039996 Boyd Julia 2012 A Dance with the Dragon The Vanished World of Peking s Foreign Colony illustrated ed I B Tauris p 4 ISBN 978 1780760520 Smith Shirley Ann 2012 Imperial Designs Italians in China 1900 1947 The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Italian Studies Lexington Books p 18 ISBN 978 1611475029 Larry Clinton Thompson 2009 William Scott Ament and the Boxer Rebellion heroism hubris and the ideal missionary McFarland p 52 ISBN 978 0 7864 4008 5 Lanxin Xiang 2003 The origins of the Boxer War a multinational study p 253 Harrington Peter 2013 Peking 1900 The Boxer Rebellion illustrated ed Osprey Publishing p 53 ISBN 978 1472803047 ANU Digital Collections Kansu Soldiers Tung Fu Hsiang s dspace anu edu au Archived from the original on 14 October 2009 Retrieved 25 September 2014 Kansu Braves dspace anu edu au Retrieved 25 September 2014 permanent dead link Clark Kenneth G The Boxer Uprising 1899 1900 www russojapanesewar com Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 28 June 2010 Robert B Edgerton 1997 Warriors of the Rising Sun a History of the Japanese Military W W Norton amp Company p 70 ISBN 0 393 04085 2 Sterling Seagrave Peggy Seagrave 1992 Dragon Lady The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China Knopf p 320 ISBN 9780679402305 Smith Arthur Henderson 1901 China in Convulsion Volume 2 Albany N Y F H Revell Co p 441 O Connor Richard 1973 The Boxer Rebellion illustrated reprint ed Hale p 163 ISBN 0709147805 Peking North China South Manchuria and Korea 5 ed T Cook amp son F H amp E E Cook 1924 p 13 Retrieved 1 April 2013 内川芳美 宮地正人 每日コミュニケーションズ Firm 国際ニュース事典出版委員会 1900 外国新聞に見る日本 国際ニュース事典 Volumes 2 3 每日コミュニケーションズ p 228 Retrieved 1 April 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wait Eugene M 2001 The Zenith of Imperialism 1896 1906 Volume 2 Vol 2 of The Zenith of Imperialism Nova History Publications p 97 ISBN 1590330838 Lipman Jonathan N July 1984 Ethnicity and Politics in Republican China The Ma Family Warlords of Gansu Modern China 10 3 Sage Publications Inc 296 doi 10 1177 009770048401000302 JSTOR 189017 S2CID 143843569 Tan Chester C 1955 Columbia university Faculty of political science New York ed The Boxer Catastrophe by Chester C Tan Columbia University Press p 114 Great Britain Parliament House of Commons 1900 Papers by Command Volume 105 H M Stationery Office p 30 MacDonald Claude M Great Britain Foreign Office 1900 Reports from Her Majesty s minister in China respecting events at Peking Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty December 1900 Vol 364 of Cd Great Britain Parliament H M Stationery Office p 30 Whates H 1901 The Politician s Handbook Vacher amp Sons p 137 British and Foreign State Papers Great Britain Foreign Office H M Stationery Office 1905 p 1246 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link O Connor Richard 1973 The Boxer Rebellion illustrated reprint ed Hale p 281 ISBN 0709147805 a b Mersey Viscount Charles Clive Bigham 1901 A Year in China 1899 1900 Macmillan and Company limited p 177 Publication Issue 33 United States Adjutant General s Office Military Information Division U S Government Printing Office 1901 p 528 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link United States Adjutant General s Office Military Information Division 1901 Publications Issues 33 34 p 528 Slocum Stephan L H Reichmann Car Chaffee Adna Romanza 1901 Reports on Military Operations in South Africa and China Vol 33 of War Department Adjutant General s Office United States Adjutant General s Office Military Information Division U S Government Printing Office p 528 Paul A Cohen 1997 History in three keys the Boxers as event experience and myth Columbia University Press p 49 ISBN 0 231 10651 3 O Connor Richard 1973 The Boxer Rebellion illustrated reprint ed Hale p 106 ISBN 0709147805 Fleming Peter 1990 The Siege at Peking illustrated reprint ed Dorset Press p 79 ISBN 0880294620 Desmond Power 1 January 1996 Little Foreign Devil Desmond Power author p 45 ISBN 978 0 9694122 1 2 Ralph L Powell 8 December 2015 Rise of the Chinese Military Power Princeton University Press p 113 ISBN 978 1 4008 7884 0 Jane E Elliott 2002 Some did it for civilisation some did it for their country a revised view of the Boxer war Chinese University Press p 498 ISBN 962 996 066 4 Arthur Henderson Smith 1901 China in convulsion Volume 2 F H Revell Co p 393 William Meyrick Hewlett 1900 Diary of the siege of the Peking legations June to August 1900 28 Little Queen Street High Holborn London W C Pub for the editors of the Harrovian by F W Provost p 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Original from Harvard University Bertram L Simpson 2001 Indiscreet Letters from Peking Being the Notes of an Eye witness Adegi Graphics LLC p 22 ISBN 1 4021 9488 9 Kemal H Karpat 2001 The politicization of Islam reconstructing identity state faith and community in the late Ottoman state Oxford University Press US p 237 ISBN 0 19 513618 7 The Spectator Volume 87 F C Westley 1902 p 243 Harris Lillian Craig 1993 China Considers the Middle East illustrated ed I B Tauris p 56 ISBN 1850435987 The official Russian announcement that The Straits Times 10 July 1901 p 2 Retrieved 1 April 2013 The Moslem World Volumes 1 3 Hartford Seminary Foundation Hartford Seminary Foundation 1966 p 190 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Bickers Robert A Tiedemann R G eds 2007 The Boxers China and the World illustrated ed Seattle Rowman amp Littlefield p 150 ISBN 978 0742553958 The Well Protected Domains Meet the Forbidden City an Ottoman map of Beijing Retrieved 21 April 2023 Gratien Chris The Well Protected Domains Meet the Forbidden City a map of Beijing Afternoon Map Retrieved 21 April 2023 Kemal Hilmi Osmanli haritalari in Turkish osmanlldevleti com ww12 osmanlldevleti com Retrieved 21 April 2023 Osmanskaya karta Zapretnogo goroda v Pekine History and Islam Istoriya i Islam VK vk com VK photo m vk com 马福祥 戎马书生 新华网甘肃频道 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 缅怀中国近代史上的回族将领马福祥将军戎马一生 Archived 15 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine 清末民国间爱国将领马福祥 中国甘肃网 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Michael Dillon 16 December 2013 China s Muslim Hui Community Migration Settlement and Sects Routledge p 72 ISBN 978 1 136 80933 0 Lipman Jonathan Newaman 2004 Familiar Strangers A History of Muslims in Northwest China Seattle University of Washington Press p 169 ISBN 0 295 97644 6 Susan Naquin 2001 Peking Temples and City Life 1400 1900 University of California Press p 684 ISBN 978 0 520 92345 4 The Powers and China Evening Post Vol LX no 74 25 September 1900 p 4 Retrieved 1 April 2013 Arnold Henry Savage Landor 1901 China and the Allies Charles Scribner s sons p 194 Peter Harrington Michael Perry 2001 Peking 1900 the Boxer rebellion Oxford Osprey Publishing p 25 ISBN 1 84176 181 8 Patrick Taveirne 2004 Han Mongol encounters and missionary endeavors a history of Scheut in Ordos Hetao 1874 1911 Leuven Belgium Leuven University Press p 514 ISBN 90 5867 365 0 Peter Fleming 1990 The Siege at Peking The Boxer Rebellion illustrated ed Dorset Press p 98 ISBN 0 88029 462 0 Tung Fu hsiang s Moslem cavalry flaunting banners of scarlet and black but armed with modern Mausers were however treated with great respect They had taken a leading part in anti foreign incidents two years earlier and when on 17 June after a stone throwing incident a detachment of them was fired on by the Germans Sir Claude MacDonald sent a tactful reproof to Baron Von Ketteler urging strict precautions against all acts of provocation When our own troops arrive we may with safety assume a different tone but it is hardly wise now 民国少数民族将军 三 muslimwww com in Chinese 20 October 2012 Retrieved 21 April 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kansu Braves amp oldid 1221209355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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