fbpx
Wikipedia

Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty

The Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty or the Song-Yuan War beginning under Ögedei Khan (r. 1229–1241) and completed under Kublai Khan (r. 1260–1294) was the final step of the Mongol conquest of China. With the conquest the Mongols ruled all of the continental East Asia under the Yuan dynasty (a division of the Mongol Empire). It is also considered the Mongol Empire's last great military achievement.[2]

Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty
Part of Mongol conquest of China and Kublai Khan's campaigns

Mongol invasion of the Southern Song dynasty (1234–79)
Date11 February 1235 – 19 March 1279
Location
Result Decisive Yuan victory
Territorial
changes
Southern China added into the Yuan dynasty
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Over 600,000[a] unknown
Casualties and losses
Very heavy Very heavy

Background edit

 

Before the Mongol–Jin War escalated, an envoy from the Song dynasty of China arrived at the court of the Mongols, perhaps to negotiate a united offensive against the Jin dynasty, who the Song had previously fought during the Jin–Song Wars. Although Genghis Khan refused, on his death in 1227 he bequeathed a plan to attack the Jin capital by passing through Song territory. Subsequently, a Mongol ambassador was killed by the Song governor in uncertain circumstances.[3] Before receiving any explanation, the Mongols marched through Song territory to enter the Jin's redoubt in Henan.

 
Emperor Lizong of Song

The 1227 incident edit

In the early spring of 1227, Genghis Khan ordered a small fraction of the army to advance into the Song Lizhou Circuit (利州路), in the name of attacking Jin and Western Xia. The five prefectures of Jie (階), Feng (鳳), Cheng (成), He (和) and Tianshui (天水) were ravaged. Then the Mongols moved southward and seized Wenzhou(文州). In July, the Mongols returned to the north. Genghis Khan further realized that to destroy the Jīn dynasty the Mongol army must make its way via the Song. The 1227 incident(丁亥之變) was the first armed conflict between the Mongols and the Song, but it was incidental to the Mongol conflict with the Jin.[4]

Battles of Shukou edit

From the winter of 1230 to the autumn of 1231, the Mongols forcibly passed through the Song dynasty. In the region centered on the three passes of Shukou (蜀口), they entered into a series of battles with the Song army. This was the second and largest armed conflict between them before the Mongol conquest of Song officially began.[5]

After Mongol conquest of Jin edit

In 1233 the Song dynasty finally became an ally of the Mongols, who agreed to share territories south of the Yellow River with the Song. Song general Meng Gong defeated the Jin general Wu Xian and directed his troops to besiege the city of Caizhou, to which the last emperor of the Jurchen had fled. With the help of the Mongols, the Song armies were finally able to extinguish the Jin dynasty that had occupied northern China for more than a century. A year later, the Song generals fielded their armies to occupy the old capitals of the Song. They advanced as far as Kaifeng but were completely repelled by the Mongol garrisons under Tachir, a descendant of Boorchu, who was a famed companion of Genghis Khan.

The Mongol troops, headed by sons of the Ögedei Khan, started their slow but steady invasion of the south. The Song forces resisted fiercely, which resulted in a prolonged set of campaigns; however, the primary obstacles to the prosecution of their campaigns was unfamiliar terrain that was inhospitable to their horses, new diseases, and the need to wage naval battles, a form of warfare completely alien to the masters of the steppe. This combination resulted in one of the most difficult and prolonged wars of the Mongol conquests.[6] The Chinese offered the fiercest resistance among all the Mongols fought, the Mongols required every single advantage they could gain and "every military artifice known at that time" in order to win.[7]

A greater amount of "stubborn resistance" was put up by Korea and Song towards the Mongol invasions than the others in Eurasia who were swiftly crushed by the Mongols at a lightning pace.[8]

The Mongol force which invaded southern China was far greater than the force they sent to invade the Middle East in 1256.[9]

First stage (1235–1248) edit

From 1235 on, the Mongol general Köden started to attack the region of Sichuan through the Chengdu plain. The occupation of this region had often been an important step for the conquest of the south. The important city of Xiangyang, the gateway to the Yangtze plain, which was defended by the Song general Cao Youwen, capitulated in 1236.[10] In the east, meanwhile, Song generals like Meng Gong (孟珙) and Du Gao (杜杲) withstood the pressure of the Mongol armies under Kouwen Buhua because the main Mongol forces were at that time moving towards Europe. In Sichuan, governor Yu Jie adopted the plan of the brothers Ran Jin and Ran Pu to fortify important locations in mountainous areas, like Diaoyucheng (modern Hechuan/Sichuan). From this point, Yu Jie was able to hold Sichuan for a further ten years. In 1239, General Meng defeated the Mongols and retook Xiangyang, contesting Sichuan against the Mongols for years.[11] The only permanent gain was Chengdu for the Mongols in 1241. In the Huai River area, the Mongol Empire's commanders remained on the defensive, taking few major Song cities, although Töregene and Güyük Khan ordered their generals to attack the Song.[12]

 
Mongol warrior on horseback, preparing a mounted archery shot.

Many Han Chinese defected to the Mongols to fight against the Jin. There were 4 Han Tumens, with each Tumen consisting of 10,000 troops. The four Han Generals Zhang Rou, Yan Shi, Shi Tianze, and Liu Heima commanded the four Han tumens under Ogödei Khan.[13][14][15][16]

The conflicts between the Mongols and the Song troops took place in the area of Chengdu. When Töregene sent her envoys to negotiate peace, the Song imprisoned them.[17] The Mongols invaded Sichuan in 1242. Their commanders ordered Han Chinese tumen general Zhang Rou and Chagaan (Tsagaan) to attack the Song. When they pillaged Song territory, the Song court sent a delegation to negotiate a ceasefire. Chagaan and Zhang Rou returned north after the Mongols accepted the terms.[18]

The Mongols made heavy use of indigenous ethnic minority soldiers in southern China rather than Mongols. The Kingdom of Dali's indigenous Cuan-Bo army led by the Duan royal family were the majority of the forces in the Mongol Yuan army sent to attack Song during battles along the Yangtze river. During a Mongol attack against the Song, there were only 3,000 Mongol cavalry at one point under the Mongol commander Uriyangkhadai, the majority of his army were native Cuan-Bo with Duan officers.[19]

An account of the Mongol attack on Nanjing was given in a Chinese annal, describing the Chinese defenders use of gunpowder against the Mongols:

As the Mongols had dug themselves pits under the earth where they were sheltered from missiles, we decided to bind with iron the machines called zhen tian lei [thunder-shaking-the-sky]... and lowered them into the places[20]

where the translation of the term for the device is that of Prof. Partington, who describes it as an iron pot filled with [huo] yao, literally "fire drug", a low-nitrate gunpowder or proto-gunpowder, sometimes lowered on chains, that sent forth "fire… out of every part", with an incendiary effect over many yards that could pierce metal to which it was attached, producing a "noise like thunder" that could be heard for miles, with the result that "the men and the oxhides were all broken into fragments (chieh sui) flying in all directions".[21][22]

Second stage (1251–1260) edit

The Mongol attacks on Southern Song intensified with the election of Möngke as Great Khan in 1251. Passing through the Chengdu Plain in Sichuan, the Mongols conquered the Kingdom of Dali in modern Yunnan in 1253. The Mongols besieged Ho-chiou[where?] and lifted the siege very soon in 1254. Möngke's brother Kublai and general Uriyangkhadai pacified Yunnan and Tibet and invaded the Trần dynasty in Vietnam.

Uriyangkhadai led successful campaigns in the southwest of China and pacified tribes in Tibet before turning east towards Dai Viet by 1257.[23] In the autumn of 1257, Uriyangkhadai addressed three letters to Dai Viet emperor Trần Thái Tông demanding passage through southern China.[24] After the three successive envoys were imprisoned in the capital Thang Long (modern-day Hanoi) of Dai Viet, Uriyangkhadai invaded Dai Viet in December 1257 with generals Trechecdu and Aju in the rear.[24] In October 1257, Möngke had set out for South China and fixed his camps near Mount Liupan in May 1258.[citation needed] Möngke entered Sichuan in 1258 with two-thirds of the Mongol strength.[citation needed]

According to the Đại Việt Sử ký toàn thư, Mongol forces under Uriyangkhadai battled the larger Trần army led by emperor Trần in Bình Lệ steppe (Bạch Hạc) on 17 January 1258, northwest of Thăng Long.[25] On 22 January 1258, Uriyangkhadai successfully captured the Dai Viet capital Thang Long (now known as Hanoi).[23][26][27] While Chinese source material incorrectly stated that Uriyangkhadai withdrew from Vietnam after nine days due to poor climate,[26][27] Uriyangkhadai left Thang Long in 1259 to invade the Song dynasty in modern-day Guangxi as part of a coordinated Mongol attack with armies attacking in Sichuan under Möngke Khan and other Mongol armies attacking in modern-day Shandong and Henan.[27] Around 17 November 1259, Kublai Khan received a messenger while besieging Ezhou in Hubei who described Uriyangkhadai's army advances from Thang Long to Tanzhou (modern-day Changsha) in Hunan via Yongzhou (modern-day Nanning) and Guilin in Guangxi.[27] Uriyangkhada's army subsequently fought its way north to rejoin Kublai Khan's army north of the Yangtze river on their way back to northern China.[27] While conducting the war in China at Diaoyu Fortress in modern-day Chongqing, Möngke died, perhaps of dysentery[28] or cholera, near the site of the siege on 11 August 1259.[29][30][31]

The central government of the Southern Song meanwhile was unable to cope with the challenge of the Mongols and new peasant uprisings in the region of modern Fujian led by Yan Mengbiao and Hunan. The court of Emperor Lizong was dominated by consort clans, Yan and Jia, and the eunuchs Dong Songchen and Lu Yunsheng.[citation needed] In 1260, Jia Sidao became chancellor who took control over the new emperor Zhao Qi (posthumous title Song Duzong) and expelled his opponents like Wen Tianxiang and Li Fu. Because the financial revenue of the late Southern Song state was very low, Jia Sidao tried to reform the regulations for the merchandise of lands with his state field law.[citation needed]

Gunpowder weapons like the tuhuo gun (突火槍) , which fired bullets from bamboo tubes, were deployed by the Chinese against the Mongol forces.[32]

The Tusi chieftains and local tribe leaders and kingdoms in Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles. The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song dynasty and Tang dynasty also received recognition by the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty and later by the Ming dynasty. The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors, as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei. They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo. They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty.[33][34]

Prelude, and surrender of Song (1260–1276) edit

 
Kublai Khan, the Great Khan of the Mongol Empire and Emperor of the Yuan dynasty. Painting from 1294.


After Kublai was elected Great Khan of the Mongols in 1260, he was eventually able to conquer the Song to the south, but at great cost. From 1260 to 1264, he first faced civil insurrection within the Mongol empire, led by his younger brother, Ariq Böke, who had been left in command of the north and stationed at the Mongol capital, Karakorum. This led to the Toluid Civil War and was followed by a major confrontation at the Diaoyu Fortress in Sichuan in 1265. The Mongols eventually defeated the Song land and naval armies and captured more than 100 ships.[35]

The Yuan dynasty created a "Han Army" (漢軍) out of defected Jin troops and an army of defected Song troops called the "Newly Submitted Army" (新附軍).[36] Southern Song Chinese troops who defected and surrendered to the Mongols were granted Korean women as wives by the Mongols, whom the Mongols earlier took during their invasion of Korea as war booty.[37] The many Song Chinese troops who defected to the Mongols were given oxen, clothes and land.[38] As prizes for battlefield victories, lands sectioned off as appanages were handed by the Yuan dynasty to Chinese military officers who defected to the Mongol side. The Yuan gave defecting Song Chinese soldiers juntun, a type of military farmland.[39]

In 1268, the Mongol advance was halted at the city of Xiangyang, situated on the Han River, which controlled access to the Yangtze, the gateway to the important trading centre of Hangzhou.[40] The walls of Xiangyang were approximately 6 to 7 metres (20 to 23 ft) thick and encompassed an area 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) wide. The main entrances in the wall led out to a waterway impossible to ford in the summer, and impassable as a swamp and a series of ponds and mud flats in the winter. Xiangyang was linked to its twin city, Fancheng(樊城), on the opposite riverbank, by a pontoon bridge spanning the river from where the defenders of the twin settlements attempted to break the siege. However, the Mongols under Aju thwarted every attempt and crushed all reinforcements from the Song, each detachment numbering in the thousands.[41] According to Professor Zhang Lianggao of Huazhong University of Science and Technology, in 1269 (咸淳五年), the Mongols invaded the Yangtze River valley but were repulsed.[42] The Wuying Pagoda was rebuilt in 1270 (咸淳六年) in the throes of the overthrow of the Southern Song during the reign of Emperor Duzong.[43]

After this defeat, Aju asked Kublai for the powerful siege machines of the Ilkhanate. Ismail and Al-aud-Din, from Mosul, Iraq, arrived in South China to construct a new type of counterweight-driven trebuchet that could use explosive shells. The Mosuli engineers built the new siege trebuchets, and smaller mangonels,[44] and traction trebuchets as well.[citation needed] The design of the critical new counterweight trebuchets were taken from those used by Hulagu to batter down the walls of Baghdad in 1258. The counterweight trebuchets Hulegu used (referred to as "Frankish mangonels" in an official Ilkhanate history) were almost certainly borrowed from his Crusader state vassals, having been sent to the Levant by French crusaders by 1242 at the latest. According to the Ilkhanate historian Rashid Al-Din, the introduction of these weapons in 1268 was decisive and allowed the Mongols to rapidly conquer fortified cities they had previously deemed untakeable.[45][46]

Explosive shells had been in use in China for centuries, but the counterweight system of the trebuchet (as opposed to the torsion-type) gave greater range and accuracy while also making it easier to judge the force generated (versus by the torsion from repeated windings).[47] As such, the counterweight trebuchet built by the Persians were, practically speaking, greater in range,[48] and so could assist in destroying the walls at Fancheng with greater safety to the Mongol forces.[citation needed] The Muslim and additional Chinese engineers operated the artillery and siege engines for the Mongol armies.[49] Hence, the Chinese, who were the first to invent the traction trebuchet,[citation needed] now faced Persian-designed counterweight trebuchets on the side of the Mongol army, so by 1273 the Chinese were led to build their own counterweight trebuchets; as a Chinese account states, "In 1273 the frontier cities had all fallen. But Muslim trebuchets were constructed with new and ingenious improvements, and different kinds became available, far better than those used before."[50]

During the siege, both the Mongol and Song forces used thunder crash bombs, a type of incendiary gunpowder weapon of cast iron, filled with gunpowder and which was delivered via trebuchet or other means. The effects of these shells on men and natural materials was devastating; the noise was thunderous and resounded for many miles, while the bomb's casing could penetrate iron armor during the explosion.[22] The Mongols also utilized siege crossbows, while the Song used fire arrows and fire lances.[citation needed]

Political infighting in the Song also contributed to the fall of Xiangyang and Fancheng, due to the power of the Lü family. Many questioned their allegiance to the Song as morale was collapsing, and the Emperor barred Jia Sidao himself from the command. Li Tingzhi, an enemy of the Lü family, was appointed commander. Jia permitted the Lüs to ignore Li's orders, resulting in a fractious command. Li was then unable to relieve Xiangyang and Fancheng, managing only temporary resupply during several breaks in the siege.[51]

Bayan of the Baarin, the Mongol commander, then sent half of his force up-river to wade to the south bank in order to build a bridge across to take the Yang lo fortress; three thousand Song boats came up the Han river and were repulsed, with fifty boats destroyed and 2,000 dead.[citation needed] In the maritime engagements, the Song forces used paddle ships,[52] and on some ships at least, fire lance, siege crossbows, and incendiary devices were deployed against Mongol forces.[50]

 
The Yuan dynasty under Kublai Khan after the conquest of Southern Song dynasty.

Xiangyang's commander Lü Wenhuan from the Lü family then surrendered to the Mongol commander and was appointed as governor of Xiangyang. The entire force, now including the yielding commander, sailed down the Yangtze, and the forts along the way surrendered, as this commander - now allied with the Mongols - had also commanded many of the down-river garrisons. Lü Wenhuan persuaded the rest of his family to switch sides.[53] In 1270, Kublai ordered the construction of five thousand ships. Three years later, an additional two thousand ships were ordered built; these would carry about 50,000 troops to give battle to the Song.

In 1273, Fancheng capitulated, the Mongols putting the entire population to death by sword to terrorize the inhabitants of Xiangyang. After the surrender of Xiangyang, several thousand ships were deployed. The Song fleet, despite their deployment as a coastal defense fleet or coast guard more than an operational navy, was more than a match for the Mongols. Under his great general Bayan, Khublai unleashed a riverine attack upon the defended city of Xiangyang on the Han River. The Mongols ultimately prevailed, but only after five more years of struggle.[54]

Kublai had founded the Yuan dynasty in 1271, and by 1273, the Mongols had emerged victorious on the Han River.[citation needed] The Yangtse River was opened for a large fleet that could conquer the Southern Song empire. A year later, the child-prince Zhao Xian was made emperor. Resistance continued, resulting in Bayan's massacre of the inhabitants of Changzhou in 1275 and mass suicide of the defenders at Changsha in January 1276. When the Yuan Mongol-Chinese troops and fleet advanced and one prefecture after the other submitted to the Yuan, Jia Sidao offered his own submission, but the Yuan chancellor Bayan refused.

The last contingents of the Song dynasty were heavily defeated, the old city of Jiankang (Jiangsu) fell, and Jia Sidao was killed. The capital of Song, Lin'an (Hangzhou), was defended by Wen Tianxiang and Zhang Shijie.

When Bayan and Dong Wenbing camped outside Lin'an in February 1276, the Song Grand Empress Dowager Xie and Empress Dowager Quan surrendered the underage Emperor Gong of Song along with the imperial seal.

Historian Patricia Buckley Ebrey notes that the Mongol Yuan dynasty treated the Jurchen Wanyan royal family harshly, butchering them by the hundreds as well as the Tangut emperor of Western Xia when they defeated him earlier. However, Ebrey also notes the Mongols were comparatively lenient on the Han Chinese Zhao royal family of the Southern Song, sparing both the Southern Song royals in the capital Hangzhou like the Emperor Gong of Song and his mother, as well as the civilians inside it, allowing them to go about their normal business and even rehiring Southern Song officials. The Mongols did not take the southern Song palace women for themselves but instead had Han Chinese artisans in Shangdu marry the palace women.[55] The Mongol emperor Kublai Khan even granted a Mongol princess from his own Borjigin family as a wife to the surrendered Han Chinese Southern Song Emperor Gong of Song and they fathered a son together named Zhao Wanpu.[56][57]

Emperor Gong abdicated, but faithful loyalists like Zhang Jue, Wen Tianxiang, Zhang Shijie and Lu Xiufu successively enthroned the emperor's younger brothers Zhao Shi and Zhao Bing. Zhao Shi was enthroned as Emperor Duanzong of Song far from the capital in the region of Fuzhou, but he died soon afterwards on the flight southwards into modern Guangdong. Zhao Bing was enthroned as Emperor Huaizong of Song on Lantau Island, Hong Kong. On 19 March 1279, the Mongols defeated the last of the Song forces at the naval Battle of Yamen. After the battle, as a last defiant act against the invaders, Lu Xiufu embraced the eight-year-old emperor and the pair leapt to their deaths from Mount Ya, thus marking the extinction of the Southern Song.

Last stand of the Song loyalists (1276–1279) edit

 
Emperor Bing, the last Song emperor claimant.

Empress Dowager Xie had secretly sent the child emperor's two brothers to Fuzhou. The strongholds of the Song loyalists fell one by one: Yangzhou in 1276, Chongqing in 1277 and Hezhou in 1279. The loyalists fought the Mongols in the mountainous FujianGuangdongJiangxi borderland. In February 1279, Wen Tianxiang, one of the Song loyalists, was captured, transported to and executed at the Yuan capital Khanbaliq (Dadu, modern Beijing).

The end of the Mongol-Song war occurred on 19 March 1279, when 1000 Chinese warships faced a fleet of 300 to 700 Yuan Mongol warships at Yamen. The Yuan fleet was commanded by Zhang Hongfan (1238–1280), a northern Chinese, and Li Heng (1236–1285), a Tangut. Catapults as a weapon system were rejected by Kublai's court, for they feared the Song fleet would break out if they used such weapons. Instead, they developed a plan for a maritime siege, in order to starve the Song into submission.

From the outset, there was a defect in the Song tactics that would later be exploited by Yuan at the conclusion of the battle. The Song wanted a stronger defensive position, and the Song fleet "roped itself together in a solid mass[,]" in an attempt to create a nautical skirmish line. Results were disastrous for the Song: they could neither attack nor maneuver. Escape was also impossible, for the Song warships lacked any nearby base. On 12 March, a number of Song combatants defected to the Mongol side. On 13 March, a Song squadron attacked some of the Mongols' northern patrol boats, in what may have been an attempted breakout. However, the attempt failed.

By 17 March, Li Heng and Zhang Hongfan opted for a decisive battle. Four Mongol fleets moved against the Song: Li Heng attacked from the north and northwest; Zhang would proceed from the southwest; and the last two fleets attacked from the south and west. Weather favored the Mongols that morning; heavy fog and rain obscured the approach of Li Heng's dawn attack. The movement of the tide and the southwestern similarly benefited the movement of the Mongol fleet which, in short order, appeared to the north of the Song. It was an unusual attack in that the Mongol fleet engaged the Song fleet stern first.

Prior to the battle, the Mongols constructed archery platforms for their marines. The position enabled the archers to direct a higher, more concentrated rate of missile fire against the enemy. Fire teams of seven or eight archers manned these platforms, and they proved devastatingly effective as the battle commenced at close quarters.

Li Heng's first attack cut the Song rope that held the Chinese fleet together. Fighting raged in close quarters combat. Before midday, the Song lost three of their ships to the Mongols. By forenoon, Li's ships broke through the Song's outer line, and two other Mongol squadrons destroyed the Song formation in the northwest corner. Around this time, the tide shifted; Li's ships drifted to the opposite direction, the north.

 
The Mongol dominions, c. 1300. The gray area is the later Timurid Empire.

The Song believed that the Mongols were halting the attack and dropped their guard. Zhang Hongfan's fleet, riding the northern current, then attacked the Song ships. Zhang was determined to capture the Song admiral, Zuo Tai. The Yuan flagship was protected by shields to negate the Song missile fire. Later, when Zhang captured the Song flagship, his own vessel was riddled with arrows. Li Heng's fleet also returned to the battle. By late afternoon, the battle was over, and the last of the Song navy surrendered.

The Song dynasty elite were unwilling to submit to Mongol rule, and opted for death by suicide. The Song councilor Lu Xiufu, who had been tasked with holding the child-emperor Zhao Bing of the Song in his arms during the battle, also elected to join the Song leaders in death. It is uncertain whether he or others decided that the young Emperor should die as well. In any event, the councilor jumped into the sea, still holding the child in his arms. Tens of thousands of Song officials and women also threw themselves into the sea and drowned. With the death of the last Song emperor, the final remnants of the Song resistance were eliminated. The victory of this naval campaign marked the completion of Kublai's conquest of China, and the onset of the consolidated Mongol Yuan dynasty.

Remnants of the Song imperial family continued to live in the Yuan dynasty like Emperor Gong of Song, Zhao Mengfu, and Zhao Yong. Zhao Mengfu spent his time painting at the Yuan court and was personally interviewed by Kublai Khan.[citation needed] The Vietnamese Annals recorded that remnants of the Song imperial family arrived in Thăng Long, the capital of the Đại Việt, in the winter of 1276 aboard thirty ships and eventually settled in the Nhai-Tuân district and opened a market selling medicine and silk.[58]

Siege policy edit

James Waterson cautioned against attributing the population drop in northern China to Mongol slaughter since much of the population may have moved to southern China under the Southern Song or died of disease and famine as agricultural and urban city infrastructure were destroyed.[59] The Mongols spared cities from massacre and sacking if they surrendered, such as Kaifeng, which was surrendered to Subetai by Xu Li,[60] Yangzhou, which was surrendered to Bayan by Li Tingzhi's second in command after Li Tingzhi was executed by the Southern Song,[61] and Hangzhou, which was spared from sacking when it surrendered to Kublai Khan.[62] Han Chinese and Khitan soldiers defected en masse to Genghis Khan against the Jurchen Jin dynasty.[63] Towns which surrendered were spared from sacking and massacre by Kublai Khan.[64] The Khitan reluctantly left their homeland in Manchuria as the Jin moved their primary capital from Beijing south to Kaifeng and defected to the Mongols.[65]

Capitulation of Nobles and Tusi vassal chiefdoms in southwestern China edit

Many Tusi chiefdoms and kingdoms in southwestern China which existed before the Mongol invasions were allowed to retain their integrity as vassals of the Yuan dynasty after surrendering, including the Kingdom of Dali, the Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou with its seat at the castle Hailongtun, Chiefdom of Lijiang, Chiefdom of Shuidong, Chiefdom of Sizhou, Chiefdom of Yao'an, Chiefdom of Yongning and Mu'ege. As were Korea under Mongol rule and the Kingdom of Qocho.

The Han Chinese nobles Duke Yansheng and Celestial Masters continued possessing their titles in the Yuan dynasty since the previous dynasties.

Chinese exile in Vietnam and Champa helping anti-Mongol resistance edit

Southern Song Chinese military officers and civilian officials fled to overseas countries, namely Vietnam and Champa. In Vietnam, they intermarried with the Vietnamese ruling elite, and in Champa, they served the government there as recorded by Zheng Sixiao.[66] Southern Song soldiers served in the Vietnamese army prepared by emperor Trần Thánh Tông against the second Mongol invasion.[67]

Professor Liam Kelley noted that people from Song like Zhao Zhong and Xu Zongdao escaped to Vietnam (then under the Trần dynasty) after the Mongol invasion of China and helped the Trần fighting against the Mongol invasion. The Daoist Chinese cleric Xu Zongdao, who recorded the Mongol invasion, referred to them as "Northern bandits". He quoted the Đại Việt Sử Ký Toàn Thư which said "When the Song [dynasty] was lost, its people came to us. Nhật Duật took them in. There was Zhao Zhong who served as his personal guard. Therefore, among the accomplishments in defeating the Yuan [i.e., Mongols], Nhật Duật had the most."[68][69]

Notes edit

  1. ^ An initial coalition invasion force of ninety Tumens at roughly two-thirds strength, including Mongols, Chinese, Khitans, Jurchens, Alan Asuds, Turkic people, Central Asians, Cuan-bo Bai people and Yi people from the Kingdom of Dali.

References edit

  1. ^ Igor de Rachewiltz (1993). In the Service of the Khan: Eminent Personalities of the Early Mongol-Yüan Period (1200–1300). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 42–. ISBN 978-3-447-03339-8.
  2. ^ C. P. Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p. 509.
  3. ^ Henry Hoyle Howorth, Ernest George Ravenstein History of the Mongols, p. 228
  4. ^ 陈世松等《宋元战争史》,内蒙古人民出版社,2010年,第20–21页
  5. ^ 陈世松等,第22页
  6. ^ Nicolle, David; Hook, Richard (1998). The Mongol Warlords: Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan, Hulegu, Tamerlane (illustrated ed.). Brockhampton Press. p. 57. ISBN 1-86019-407-9. For his part Kublai dedicated himself totally to the task, but it was still to be the Mongol's toughest war. The Song Chinese showed themselves to be the most resilient of foes. Southern China was not only densely populated and full of strongly walled cities. It was also a land of mountain ranges and wide fast-flowing rivers
  7. ^ Goodrich, L. Carrington (2002). A Short History of the Chinese People (illustrated ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 173. ISBN 0-486-42488-X. Retrieved 28 November 2011. Unquestionably in the Chinese the Mongols encountered more stubborn opposition and better defense than any of their other opponents in Europe and Asia had shown. They needed every military artifice known at that time, for they had to fight in terrain that was difficult for their horses, in regions infested with diseases fatal to large numbers of their forces, and in boats to which they were not accustomed.
  8. ^ van Derven, H. J. (2000). Warfare in Chinese History. Brill. pp. 222–. ISBN 90-04-11774-1.
  9. ^ Smith, Jr. 1998, p. 54.
  10. ^ John Man Kublai Khan, p. 158
  11. ^ René Grousset (1970). The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia (reprint ed.). Rutgers University Press. p. 282. ISBN 0-8135-1304-9. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  12. ^ C. P. Atwood. Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p. 509
  13. ^ "窝阔台汗己丑年汉军万户萧札剌考辨 – 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户". www.wanfangdata.com.cn.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 April 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  15. ^ "新元史/卷146 – 維基文庫,自由的圖書館". zh.wikisource.org.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ Jeremiah Curtin The Mongols A History, p. 343
  18. ^ J. Bor Mongol hiiged Eurasiin diplomat shastir, vol. II, p. 224
  19. ^ Yang, Bin (2009). "Chapter 4 Rule Based on Native Customs". Between winds and clouds: the making of Yunnan (second century BCE to twentieth century CE). Columbia University Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-0231142540. Alt URL
  20. ^ John Merton Patrick, 1961, "Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries (Monograph series)," Vol. 8, No. 3, Logan, Utah:Utah State University Press, p. 10, see [1], accessed 30 December 2014.
  21. ^ J. R. Partington, 1960, "A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder," Baltimore, Md.:Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 0801859549, pp. 243, 268, 244, see [2], accessed 30 December 2014.
  22. ^ a b See also: zhen tian lei, or chen t'ien lei (entry), in The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare, Matthew Bennett, Ed., 1998, Abingdon, UK:Taylor & Francis, p. 356, ISBN 1579581161, see [3], accessed 30 December 2014. The entry reads, substantially, as follows:

    "zhen tian lei (or chen t'ien lei) (Chinese 'heaven-shaking thunder') medieval Chinese explosive bombs first used by the Jurchen Jin dynasty at the siege of the Song Chinese city of Qizhou in 1221… [Replacing bamboo enclosures,] the zhen tian lei had a cast-iron casing [that produced] a genuine fragmentation bomb. [They] were used by the Jin in defense of Kaifeng…, by the Song defenders of Xiangyang… and other cities, and in the Mongol invasions of Japan. They were launched from trebuchets, or even lowered on chains into besiegers approach trenches. The fragments pierced iron armor and the explosion could be heard 50 km / 31 miles away."

  23. ^ a b Rossabi, Morris (2009). Khubilai Khan: His Life and Times. University of California Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0520261327.
  24. ^ a b Lien, Vu Hong; Sharrock, Peter (2014). "The First Mongol Invasion (1257–8 CE)". Descending Dragon, Rising Tiger: A History of Vietnam. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1780233888.
  25. ^ Đại Việt Sử ký toàn thư, pp. 283–284.
  26. ^ a b Buell, P.D. "Mongols in Vietnam: end of one era, beginning of another". First Congress of the Asian Association of World Historians 29–31 May 2009 Osaka University Nakanoshima-Center.
  27. ^ a b c d e Haw, Stephen G. (2013). "The deaths of two Khaghans: a comparison of events in 1242 and 1260". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 76 (3): 361–371. doi:10.1017/S0041977X13000475. JSTOR 24692275.
  28. ^ John Joseph Saunders The history of the Mongol conquests, p. 120.
  29. ^ George Lane Daily life in the Mongol empire, p. 9.
  30. ^ John Man Kublai Khan, p. 98.
  31. ^ Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan and the making of the modern world, p. 188
  32. ^ John Merton Patrick (1961). Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Vol. 8, Issue 3 of Monograph series. Utah State University Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0874210262. Retrieved 28 November 2011. overthrown, as we shall see—since the final counter-offensive launched by the Chinese against their Mongol overlords of the Yuan dynasty is a story in which artillery features significantly. By 1259 at least, if not earlier during the first Mongol invasions, the Chinese were using tubes that shot bullets. The t'u huo ch'iang ("rushing- forth fire- gun") was a long bamboo tube into which bullets in the true sense (tzu-k'o)
  33. ^ Herman, John. E. (2005). Di Cosmo, Nicola; Wyatt, Don J (eds.). Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History (illustrated ed.). Routledge. p. 260. ISBN 1135790957.
  34. ^ Crossley, Pamela Kyle; Siu, Helen F.; Sutton, Donald S., eds. (2006). Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity, and Frontier in Early Modern China. Vol. 28 of Studies on China (illustrated ed.). University of California Press. p. 143. ISBN 0520230159.
  35. ^ Warren I. Cohen East Asia at the center: four thousand years of engagement with the world, p. 136 [ISBN missing]
  36. ^ Hucker 1985, p. 66.
  37. ^ Robinson, David M. (2009). "1. Northeast Asia and the Mongol Empire". Empire's Twilight: Northeast Asia Under the Mongols (illustrated ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0674036086.
  38. ^ Man, John (2012). Kublai Khan (reprint ed.). Random House. p. 168. ISBN 978-1446486153.
  39. ^ Cheung, Ming Tai (2001). China's Entrepreneurial Army (illustrated, reprint ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 14. ISBN 0199246904.
  40. ^ Stephen Turnbull; Wayne Reynolds (2003). Mongol Warrior 1200–1350 (illustrated ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 1-84176-583-X. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  41. ^ John Man Kublai Khan, p. 168
  42. ^ "揭秘730多年无影古塔 为武汉现存最早古建筑(图) (Uncovering the Secrets of the over 730-year-old Wuying Ancient Pagoda: Wuhan's Oldest Extant Ancient Architectural Structure (with Photographs))". Hubei Daily Online. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  43. ^ 范 Fàn, 宁 Níng (15 May 2013). . Tencent Dachuwang. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  44. ^ Jasper Becker (2008). City of heavenly tranquility: Beijing in the history of China (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-19-530997-3.
  45. ^ Rashid al-Din, The Successors of Genghis Khan, pp. 290–291 (John Andrew Boyle's translation).[ISBN missing]
  46. ^ Paul E. Chevedden, "Black Camels and Blazing Bolts: The Bolt-Projecting Trebuchet in the Mamluk Army", Mamluk Studies Review 8 (2004): 232–233.
  47. ^ Stephen Turnbull; Steve Noon (2009). Chinese Walled Cities 221 BC–AD 1644 (illustrated ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-84603-381-0. Retrieved 28 October 2010.[permanent dead link]
  48. ^ Michael E. Haskew; Christer Joregensen; Eric Niderost; Chris McNab (2008). Fighting techniques of the Oriental world, AD 1200–1860: equipment, combat skills, and tactics (illustrated ed.). Macmillan. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-312-38696-2. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  49. ^ Grousset 1970, p. 283.
  50. ^ a b Stephen R. Turnbull (2003). Genghis Khan & the Mongol conquests, 1190–1400 (illustrated ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 63. ISBN 1-84176-523-6. Retrieved 28 October 2010.[permanent dead link]
  51. ^ Peter Allan Lorge (2005). War, politics and society in early modern China, 900–1795. Taylor & Francis. p. 84. ISBN 0-415-31690-1.
  52. ^ Stephen Turnbull (2002). Siege weapons of the Far East: AD 960–1644 (illustrated ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 1-84176-340-3. Retrieved 28 October 2010.[permanent dead link]
  53. ^ Peter Allan Lorge (2005). War, politics and society in early modern China, 900–1795. Taylor & Francis. pp. 84–87. ISBN 0-415-31690-1.
  54. ^ Tony Jaques (2007). Tony Jaques (ed.). Dictionary of battles and sieges: a guide to 8,500 battles from antiquity through the twenty-first century, Volume 3. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 1115. ISBN 978-0-313-33539-6. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  55. ^ Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (2016). . In Ebrey, Patricia Buckley; Smith, Paul Jakov (eds.). State Power in China, 900–1325 (illustrated ed.). University of Washington Press. pp. 325, 326. ISBN 978-0295998480. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 3 December 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  56. ^ Hua, Kaiqi (2018). "Chapter 6 The Journey of Zhao Xian and the Exile of Royal Descendants in the Yuan Dynasty (1271–1358)". In Heirman, Ann; Meinert, Carmen; Anderl, Christoph (eds.). Buddhist Encounters and Identities Across East Asia. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill. p. 213. doi:10.1163/9789004366152_008. ISBN 978-9004366152.
  57. ^ Rašīd-ad-Dīn Faḍlallāh (1971). The Successors of Genghis Khan. Translated by Boyle, John Andrew. Columbia University Press. p. 287. ISBN 0-231-03351-6.
  58. ^ Lien, Vu Hong (2017). "The Mongol Navy: Kublai Khan's Invasions in Đại Việt and Champa". Nalanda-Sriwijaya Centre, ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore. Working Paper. 25.
  59. ^ Waterson, James (2013), Defending Heaven: China's Mongol Wars, 1209–1370, Casemate Publishers, p. 88, ISBN 978-1783469437.
  60. ^ Waterson, James (2013), Defending Heaven: China's Mongol Wars, 1209–1370, Casemate Publishers, p. 92, ISBN 978-1783469437.
  61. ^ Waterson, James (2013), Defending Heaven: China's Mongol Wars, 1209–1370, Casemate Publishers, p. 230, ISBN 978-1783469437.
  62. ^ Balfour, Alan H.; Zheng, Shiling (2002). Balfour, Alan H. (ed.). Shanghai (illustrated ed.). Wiley-Academy. p. 25. ISBN 0471877336.
  63. ^ Waterson, James (2013), Defending Heaven: China's Mongol Wars, 1209–1370, Casemate Publishers, p. 84, ISBN 978-1783469437.
  64. ^ Coatsworth, John; Cole, Juan Ricardo; Hanagan, Michael P.; Perdue, Peter C.; Tilly, Charles; Tilly, Louise (2015). Global Connections. Vol. 1 of Global Connections: Politics, Exchange, and Social Life in World History (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 356. ISBN 978-0521191890.
  65. ^ Man, John (2013). Genghis Khan: Life, Death, and Resurrection. Macmillan. ISBN 978-1466861565.
  66. ^ Anderson, James A.; Whitmore, John K. (2014). China's Encounters on the South and Southwest: Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia (reprint, revised ed.). Brill. p. 122. ISBN 978-9004282483.
  67. ^ Anderson, James A.; Whitmore, John K. (2014). China's Encounters on the South and Southwest: Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia (reprint, revised ed.). Brill. p. 123. ISBN 978-9004282483.
  68. ^ . 4 December 2015. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  69. ^ . 14 October 2014. Archived from the original on 14 October 2014.

Sources edit

  • Grousset, René (1970). The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-1304-1.
  • Smith, John Masson Jr. (January–March 1998). "Review: Nomads on Ponies vs. Slaves on Horses". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 118 (1). American Oriental Society: 54–62. doi:10.2307/606298. JSTOR 606298.

mongol, conquest, song, dynasty, song, yuan, beginning, under, ögedei, khan, 1229, 1241, completed, under, kublai, khan, 1260, 1294, final, step, mongol, conquest, china, with, conquest, mongols, ruled, continental, east, asia, under, yuan, dynasty, division, . The Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty or the Song Yuan War beginning under Ogedei Khan r 1229 1241 and completed under Kublai Khan r 1260 1294 was the final step of the Mongol conquest of China With the conquest the Mongols ruled all of the continental East Asia under the Yuan dynasty a division of the Mongol Empire It is also considered the Mongol Empire s last great military achievement 2 Mongol conquest of the Song dynastyPart of Mongol conquest of China and Kublai Khan s campaignsMongol invasion of the Southern Song dynasty 1234 79 Date11 February 1235 19 March 1279LocationSouthern ChinaResultDecisive Yuan victoryTerritorialchangesSouthern China added into the Yuan dynastyBelligerents1235 1259 Mongol Empire Kingdom of Dali1235 1259 Southern Song dynasty1260 1279 Yuan dynasty Kingdom of Dali1260 1279 Southern Song dynastyCommanders and leadersOgedei Tsagaan Khochu Toregene Guyuk Khan Mongke Khan possibly Kublai Bayan Uriyangkhadai Aju Arikhgiya General Shi Tianze 1 General Zhang Hongfan General Zhang Rou General Guo Kan Kiung Duan Xingzhi of DaliEmperor Lizong of Song Emperor Duzong of Song Emperor Gong of Song Emperor Duanzong of Song Emperor Bing of Song Jia Sidao Lu Wenhuan Lu Wende Cao Youwen Li Tingzhi Jiang Cai Xia Gui Zhang Shijie Wen TianxiangStrengthOver 600 000 a unknownCasualties and lossesVery heavyVery heavy Contents 1 Background 1 1 The 1227 incident 1 2 Battles of Shukou 1 3 After Mongol conquest of Jin 2 First stage 1235 1248 3 Second stage 1251 1260 4 Prelude and surrender of Song 1260 1276 5 Last stand of the Song loyalists 1276 1279 6 Siege policy 7 Capitulation of Nobles and Tusi vassal chiefdoms in southwestern China 8 Chinese exile in Vietnam and Champa helping anti Mongol resistance 9 Notes 10 References 11 SourcesBackground edit nbsp See also Jin Song Wars and History of the Song dynasty Before the Mongol Jin War escalated an envoy from the Song dynasty of China arrived at the court of the Mongols perhaps to negotiate a united offensive against the Jin dynasty who the Song had previously fought during the Jin Song Wars Although Genghis Khan refused on his death in 1227 he bequeathed a plan to attack the Jin capital by passing through Song territory Subsequently a Mongol ambassador was killed by the Song governor in uncertain circumstances 3 Before receiving any explanation the Mongols marched through Song territory to enter the Jin s redoubt in Henan nbsp Emperor Lizong of Song The 1227 incident edit In the early spring of 1227 Genghis Khan ordered a small fraction of the army to advance into the Song Lizhou Circuit 利州路 in the name of attacking Jin and Western Xia The five prefectures of Jie 階 Feng 鳳 Cheng 成 He 和 and Tianshui 天水 were ravaged Then the Mongols moved southward and seized Wenzhou 文州 In July the Mongols returned to the north Genghis Khan further realized that to destroy the Jin dynasty the Mongol army must make its way via the Song The 1227 incident 丁亥之變 was the first armed conflict between the Mongols and the Song but it was incidental to the Mongol conflict with the Jin 4 Battles of Shukou edit From the winter of 1230 to the autumn of 1231 the Mongols forcibly passed through the Song dynasty In the region centered on the three passes of Shukou 蜀口 they entered into a series of battles with the Song army This was the second and largest armed conflict between them before the Mongol conquest of Song officially began 5 After Mongol conquest of Jin edit In 1233 the Song dynasty finally became an ally of the Mongols who agreed to share territories south of the Yellow River with the Song Song general Meng Gong defeated the Jin general Wu Xian and directed his troops to besiege the city of Caizhou to which the last emperor of the Jurchen had fled With the help of the Mongols the Song armies were finally able to extinguish the Jin dynasty that had occupied northern China for more than a century A year later the Song generals fielded their armies to occupy the old capitals of the Song They advanced as far as Kaifeng but were completely repelled by the Mongol garrisons under Tachir a descendant of Boorchu who was a famed companion of Genghis Khan The Mongol troops headed by sons of the Ogedei Khan started their slow but steady invasion of the south The Song forces resisted fiercely which resulted in a prolonged set of campaigns however the primary obstacles to the prosecution of their campaigns was unfamiliar terrain that was inhospitable to their horses new diseases and the need to wage naval battles a form of warfare completely alien to the masters of the steppe This combination resulted in one of the most difficult and prolonged wars of the Mongol conquests 6 The Chinese offered the fiercest resistance among all the Mongols fought the Mongols required every single advantage they could gain and every military artifice known at that time in order to win 7 A greater amount of stubborn resistance was put up by Korea and Song towards the Mongol invasions than the others in Eurasia who were swiftly crushed by the Mongols at a lightning pace 8 The Mongol force which invaded southern China was far greater than the force they sent to invade the Middle East in 1256 9 First stage 1235 1248 editFrom 1235 on the Mongol general Koden started to attack the region of Sichuan through the Chengdu plain The occupation of this region had often been an important step for the conquest of the south The important city of Xiangyang the gateway to the Yangtze plain which was defended by the Song general Cao Youwen capitulated in 1236 10 In the east meanwhile Song generals like Meng Gong 孟珙 and Du Gao 杜杲 withstood the pressure of the Mongol armies under Kouwen Buhua because the main Mongol forces were at that time moving towards Europe In Sichuan governor Yu Jie adopted the plan of the brothers Ran Jin and Ran Pu to fortify important locations in mountainous areas like Diaoyucheng modern Hechuan Sichuan From this point Yu Jie was able to hold Sichuan for a further ten years In 1239 General Meng defeated the Mongols and retook Xiangyang contesting Sichuan against the Mongols for years 11 The only permanent gain was Chengdu for the Mongols in 1241 In the Huai River area the Mongol Empire s commanders remained on the defensive taking few major Song cities although Toregene and Guyuk Khan ordered their generals to attack the Song 12 nbsp Mongol warrior on horseback preparing a mounted archery shot Many Han Chinese defected to the Mongols to fight against the Jin There were 4 Han Tumens with each Tumen consisting of 10 000 troops The four Han Generals Zhang Rou Yan Shi Shi Tianze and Liu Heima commanded the four Han tumens under Ogodei Khan 13 14 15 16 The conflicts between the Mongols and the Song troops took place in the area of Chengdu When Toregene sent her envoys to negotiate peace the Song imprisoned them 17 The Mongols invaded Sichuan in 1242 Their commanders ordered Han Chinese tumen general Zhang Rou and Chagaan Tsagaan to attack the Song When they pillaged Song territory the Song court sent a delegation to negotiate a ceasefire Chagaan and Zhang Rou returned north after the Mongols accepted the terms 18 The Mongols made heavy use of indigenous ethnic minority soldiers in southern China rather than Mongols The Kingdom of Dali s indigenous Cuan Bo army led by the Duan royal family were the majority of the forces in the Mongol Yuan army sent to attack Song during battles along the Yangtze river During a Mongol attack against the Song there were only 3 000 Mongol cavalry at one point under the Mongol commander Uriyangkhadai the majority of his army were native Cuan Bo with Duan officers 19 An account of the Mongol attack on Nanjing was given in a Chinese annal describing the Chinese defenders use of gunpowder against the Mongols As the Mongols had dug themselves pits under the earth where they were sheltered from missiles we decided to bind with iron the machines called zhen tian lei thunder shaking the sky and lowered them into the places 20 where the translation of the term for the device is that of Prof Partington who describes it as an iron pot filled with huo yao literally fire drug a low nitrate gunpowder or proto gunpowder sometimes lowered on chains that sent forth fire out of every part with an incendiary effect over many yards that could pierce metal to which it was attached producing a noise like thunder that could be heard for miles with the result that the men and the oxhides were all broken into fragments chieh sui flying in all directions 21 22 Second stage 1251 1260 editThe Mongol attacks on Southern Song intensified with the election of Mongke as Great Khan in 1251 Passing through the Chengdu Plain in Sichuan the Mongols conquered the Kingdom of Dali in modern Yunnan in 1253 The Mongols besieged Ho chiou where and lifted the siege very soon in 1254 Mongke s brother Kublai and general Uriyangkhadai pacified Yunnan and Tibet and invaded the Trần dynasty in Vietnam Uriyangkhadai led successful campaigns in the southwest of China and pacified tribes in Tibet before turning east towards Dai Viet by 1257 23 In the autumn of 1257 Uriyangkhadai addressed three letters to Dai Viet emperor Trần Thai Tong demanding passage through southern China 24 After the three successive envoys were imprisoned in the capital Thang Long modern day Hanoi of Dai Viet Uriyangkhadai invaded Dai Viet in December 1257 with generals Trechecdu and Aju in the rear 24 In October 1257 Mongke had set out for South China and fixed his camps near Mount Liupan in May 1258 citation needed Mongke entered Sichuan in 1258 with two thirds of the Mongol strength citation needed According to the Đại Việt Sử ky toan thư Mongol forces under Uriyangkhadai battled the larger Trần army led by emperor Trần in Binh Lệ steppe Bạch Hạc on 17 January 1258 northwest of Thăng Long 25 On 22 January 1258 Uriyangkhadai successfully captured the Dai Viet capital Thang Long now known as Hanoi 23 26 27 While Chinese source material incorrectly stated that Uriyangkhadai withdrew from Vietnam after nine days due to poor climate 26 27 Uriyangkhadai left Thang Long in 1259 to invade the Song dynasty in modern day Guangxi as part of a coordinated Mongol attack with armies attacking in Sichuan under Mongke Khan and other Mongol armies attacking in modern day Shandong and Henan 27 Around 17 November 1259 Kublai Khan received a messenger while besieging Ezhou in Hubei who described Uriyangkhadai s army advances from Thang Long to Tanzhou modern day Changsha in Hunan via Yongzhou modern day Nanning and Guilin in Guangxi 27 Uriyangkhada s army subsequently fought its way north to rejoin Kublai Khan s army north of the Yangtze river on their way back to northern China 27 While conducting the war in China at Diaoyu Fortress in modern day Chongqing Mongke died perhaps of dysentery 28 or cholera near the site of the siege on 11 August 1259 29 30 31 The central government of the Southern Song meanwhile was unable to cope with the challenge of the Mongols and new peasant uprisings in the region of modern Fujian led by Yan Mengbiao and Hunan The court of Emperor Lizong was dominated by consort clans Yan and Jia and the eunuchs Dong Songchen and Lu Yunsheng citation needed In 1260 Jia Sidao became chancellor who took control over the new emperor Zhao Qi posthumous title Song Duzong and expelled his opponents like Wen Tianxiang and Li Fu Because the financial revenue of the late Southern Song state was very low Jia Sidao tried to reform the regulations for the merchandise of lands with his state field law citation needed Gunpowder weapons like the tuhuo gun 突火槍 which fired bullets from bamboo tubes were deployed by the Chinese against the Mongol forces 32 The Tusi chieftains and local tribe leaders and kingdoms in Yunnan Guizhou and Sichuan submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song dynasty and Tang dynasty also received recognition by the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty and later by the Ming dynasty The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty 33 34 Prelude and surrender of Song 1260 1276 editSee also Yuan dynasty and Battle of Xiangyang nbsp Kublai Khan the Great Khan of the Mongol Empire and Emperor of the Yuan dynasty Painting from 1294 This 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 December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message After Kublai was elected Great Khan of the Mongols in 1260 he was eventually able to conquer the Song to the south but at great cost From 1260 to 1264 he first faced civil insurrection within the Mongol empire led by his younger brother Ariq Boke who had been left in command of the north and stationed at the Mongol capital Karakorum This led to the Toluid Civil War and was followed by a major confrontation at the Diaoyu Fortress in Sichuan in 1265 The Mongols eventually defeated the Song land and naval armies and captured more than 100 ships 35 The Yuan dynasty created a Han Army 漢軍 out of defected Jin troops and an army of defected Song troops called the Newly Submitted Army 新附軍 36 Southern Song Chinese troops who defected and surrendered to the Mongols were granted Korean women as wives by the Mongols whom the Mongols earlier took during their invasion of Korea as war booty 37 The many Song Chinese troops who defected to the Mongols were given oxen clothes and land 38 As prizes for battlefield victories lands sectioned off as appanages were handed by the Yuan dynasty to Chinese military officers who defected to the Mongol side The Yuan gave defecting Song Chinese soldiers juntun a type of military farmland 39 In 1268 the Mongol advance was halted at the city of Xiangyang situated on the Han River which controlled access to the Yangtze the gateway to the important trading centre of Hangzhou 40 The walls of Xiangyang were approximately 6 to 7 metres 20 to 23 ft thick and encompassed an area 5 kilometres 3 1 mi wide The main entrances in the wall led out to a waterway impossible to ford in the summer and impassable as a swamp and a series of ponds and mud flats in the winter Xiangyang was linked to its twin city Fancheng 樊城 on the opposite riverbank by a pontoon bridge spanning the river from where the defenders of the twin settlements attempted to break the siege However the Mongols under Aju thwarted every attempt and crushed all reinforcements from the Song each detachment numbering in the thousands 41 According to Professor Zhang Lianggao of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in 1269 咸淳五年 the Mongols invaded the Yangtze River valley but were repulsed 42 The Wuying Pagoda was rebuilt in 1270 咸淳六年 in the throes of the overthrow of the Southern Song during the reign of Emperor Duzong 43 After this defeat Aju asked Kublai for the powerful siege machines of the Ilkhanate Ismail and Al aud Din from Mosul Iraq arrived in South China to construct a new type of counterweight driven trebuchet that could use explosive shells The Mosuli engineers built the new siege trebuchets and smaller mangonels 44 and traction trebuchets as well citation needed The design of the critical new counterweight trebuchets were taken from those used by Hulagu to batter down the walls of Baghdad in 1258 The counterweight trebuchets Hulegu used referred to as Frankish mangonels in an official Ilkhanate history were almost certainly borrowed from his Crusader state vassals having been sent to the Levant by French crusaders by 1242 at the latest According to the Ilkhanate historian Rashid Al Din the introduction of these weapons in 1268 was decisive and allowed the Mongols to rapidly conquer fortified cities they had previously deemed untakeable 45 46 Explosive shells had been in use in China for centuries but the counterweight system of the trebuchet as opposed to the torsion type gave greater range and accuracy while also making it easier to judge the force generated versus by the torsion from repeated windings 47 As such the counterweight trebuchet built by the Persians were practically speaking greater in range 48 and so could assist in destroying the walls at Fancheng with greater safety to the Mongol forces citation needed The Muslim and additional Chinese engineers operated the artillery and siege engines for the Mongol armies 49 Hence the Chinese who were the first to invent the traction trebuchet citation needed now faced Persian designed counterweight trebuchets on the side of the Mongol army so by 1273 the Chinese were led to build their own counterweight trebuchets as a Chinese account states In 1273 the frontier cities had all fallen But Muslim trebuchets were constructed with new and ingenious improvements and different kinds became available far better than those used before 50 During the siege both the Mongol and Song forces used thunder crash bombs a type of incendiary gunpowder weapon of cast iron filled with gunpowder and which was delivered via trebuchet or other means The effects of these shells on men and natural materials was devastating the noise was thunderous and resounded for many miles while the bomb s casing could penetrate iron armor during the explosion 22 The Mongols also utilized siege crossbows while the Song used fire arrows and fire lances citation needed Political infighting in the Song also contributed to the fall of Xiangyang and Fancheng due to the power of the Lu family Many questioned their allegiance to the Song as morale was collapsing and the Emperor barred Jia Sidao himself from the command Li Tingzhi an enemy of the Lu family was appointed commander Jia permitted the Lus to ignore Li s orders resulting in a fractious command Li was then unable to relieve Xiangyang and Fancheng managing only temporary resupply during several breaks in the siege 51 Bayan of the Baarin the Mongol commander then sent half of his force up river to wade to the south bank in order to build a bridge across to take the Yang lo fortress three thousand Song boats came up the Han river and were repulsed with fifty boats destroyed and 2 000 dead citation needed In the maritime engagements the Song forces used paddle ships 52 and on some ships at least fire lance siege crossbows and incendiary devices were deployed against Mongol forces 50 nbsp The Yuan dynasty under Kublai Khan after the conquest of Southern Song dynasty Xiangyang s commander Lu Wenhuan from the Lu family then surrendered to the Mongol commander and was appointed as governor of Xiangyang The entire force now including the yielding commander sailed down the Yangtze and the forts along the way surrendered as this commander now allied with the Mongols had also commanded many of the down river garrisons Lu Wenhuan persuaded the rest of his family to switch sides 53 In 1270 Kublai ordered the construction of five thousand ships Three years later an additional two thousand ships were ordered built these would carry about 50 000 troops to give battle to the Song In 1273 Fancheng capitulated the Mongols putting the entire population to death by sword to terrorize the inhabitants of Xiangyang After the surrender of Xiangyang several thousand ships were deployed The Song fleet despite their deployment as a coastal defense fleet or coast guard more than an operational navy was more than a match for the Mongols Under his great general Bayan Khublai unleashed a riverine attack upon the defended city of Xiangyang on the Han River The Mongols ultimately prevailed but only after five more years of struggle 54 Kublai had founded the Yuan dynasty in 1271 and by 1273 the Mongols had emerged victorious on the Han River citation needed The Yangtse River was opened for a large fleet that could conquer the Southern Song empire A year later the child prince Zhao Xian was made emperor Resistance continued resulting in Bayan s massacre of the inhabitants of Changzhou in 1275 and mass suicide of the defenders at Changsha in January 1276 When the Yuan Mongol Chinese troops and fleet advanced and one prefecture after the other submitted to the Yuan Jia Sidao offered his own submission but the Yuan chancellor Bayan refused The last contingents of the Song dynasty were heavily defeated the old city of Jiankang Jiangsu fell and Jia Sidao was killed The capital of Song Lin an Hangzhou was defended by Wen Tianxiang and Zhang Shijie When Bayan and Dong Wenbing camped outside Lin an in February 1276 the Song Grand Empress Dowager Xie and Empress Dowager Quan surrendered the underage Emperor Gong of Song along with the imperial seal Historian Patricia Buckley Ebrey notes that the Mongol Yuan dynasty treated the Jurchen Wanyan royal family harshly butchering them by the hundreds as well as the Tangut emperor of Western Xia when they defeated him earlier However Ebrey also notes the Mongols were comparatively lenient on the Han Chinese Zhao royal family of the Southern Song sparing both the Southern Song royals in the capital Hangzhou like the Emperor Gong of Song and his mother as well as the civilians inside it allowing them to go about their normal business and even rehiring Southern Song officials The Mongols did not take the southern Song palace women for themselves but instead had Han Chinese artisans in Shangdu marry the palace women 55 The Mongol emperor Kublai Khan even granted a Mongol princess from his own Borjigin family as a wife to the surrendered Han Chinese Southern Song Emperor Gong of Song and they fathered a son together named Zhao Wanpu 56 57 Emperor Gong abdicated but faithful loyalists like Zhang Jue Wen Tianxiang Zhang Shijie and Lu Xiufu successively enthroned the emperor s younger brothers Zhao Shi and Zhao Bing Zhao Shi was enthroned as Emperor Duanzong of Song far from the capital in the region of Fuzhou but he died soon afterwards on the flight southwards into modern Guangdong Zhao Bing was enthroned as Emperor Huaizong of Song on Lantau Island Hong Kong On 19 March 1279 the Mongols defeated the last of the Song forces at the naval Battle of Yamen After the battle as a last defiant act against the invaders Lu Xiufu embraced the eight year old emperor and the pair leapt to their deaths from Mount Ya thus marking the extinction of the Southern Song Last stand of the Song loyalists 1276 1279 editMain article Battle of Yamen This 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 May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Emperor Bing the last Song emperor claimant Empress Dowager Xie had secretly sent the child emperor s two brothers to Fuzhou The strongholds of the Song loyalists fell one by one Yangzhou in 1276 Chongqing in 1277 and Hezhou in 1279 The loyalists fought the Mongols in the mountainous Fujian Guangdong Jiangxi borderland In February 1279 Wen Tianxiang one of the Song loyalists was captured transported to and executed at the Yuan capital Khanbaliq Dadu modern Beijing The end of the Mongol Song war occurred on 19 March 1279 when 1000 Chinese warships faced a fleet of 300 to 700 Yuan Mongol warships at Yamen The Yuan fleet was commanded by Zhang Hongfan 1238 1280 a northern Chinese and Li Heng 1236 1285 a Tangut Catapults as a weapon system were rejected by Kublai s court for they feared the Song fleet would break out if they used such weapons Instead they developed a plan for a maritime siege in order to starve the Song into submission From the outset there was a defect in the Song tactics that would later be exploited by Yuan at the conclusion of the battle The Song wanted a stronger defensive position and the Song fleet roped itself together in a solid mass in an attempt to create a nautical skirmish line Results were disastrous for the Song they could neither attack nor maneuver Escape was also impossible for the Song warships lacked any nearby base On 12 March a number of Song combatants defected to the Mongol side On 13 March a Song squadron attacked some of the Mongols northern patrol boats in what may have been an attempted breakout However the attempt failed By 17 March Li Heng and Zhang Hongfan opted for a decisive battle Four Mongol fleets moved against the Song Li Heng attacked from the north and northwest Zhang would proceed from the southwest and the last two fleets attacked from the south and west Weather favored the Mongols that morning heavy fog and rain obscured the approach of Li Heng s dawn attack The movement of the tide and the southwestern similarly benefited the movement of the Mongol fleet which in short order appeared to the north of the Song It was an unusual attack in that the Mongol fleet engaged the Song fleet stern first Prior to the battle the Mongols constructed archery platforms for their marines The position enabled the archers to direct a higher more concentrated rate of missile fire against the enemy Fire teams of seven or eight archers manned these platforms and they proved devastatingly effective as the battle commenced at close quarters Li Heng s first attack cut the Song rope that held the Chinese fleet together Fighting raged in close quarters combat Before midday the Song lost three of their ships to the Mongols By forenoon Li s ships broke through the Song s outer line and two other Mongol squadrons destroyed the Song formation in the northwest corner Around this time the tide shifted Li s ships drifted to the opposite direction the north nbsp The Mongol dominions c 1300 The gray area is the later Timurid Empire The Song believed that the Mongols were halting the attack and dropped their guard Zhang Hongfan s fleet riding the northern current then attacked the Song ships Zhang was determined to capture the Song admiral Zuo Tai The Yuan flagship was protected by shields to negate the Song missile fire Later when Zhang captured the Song flagship his own vessel was riddled with arrows Li Heng s fleet also returned to the battle By late afternoon the battle was over and the last of the Song navy surrendered The Song dynasty elite were unwilling to submit to Mongol rule and opted for death by suicide The Song councilor Lu Xiufu who had been tasked with holding the child emperor Zhao Bing of the Song in his arms during the battle also elected to join the Song leaders in death It is uncertain whether he or others decided that the young Emperor should die as well In any event the councilor jumped into the sea still holding the child in his arms Tens of thousands of Song officials and women also threw themselves into the sea and drowned With the death of the last Song emperor the final remnants of the Song resistance were eliminated The victory of this naval campaign marked the completion of Kublai s conquest of China and the onset of the consolidated Mongol Yuan dynasty Remnants of the Song imperial family continued to live in the Yuan dynasty like Emperor Gong of Song Zhao Mengfu and Zhao Yong Zhao Mengfu spent his time painting at the Yuan court and was personally interviewed by Kublai Khan citation needed The Vietnamese Annals recorded that remnants of the Song imperial family arrived in Thăng Long the capital of the Đại Việt in the winter of 1276 aboard thirty ships and eventually settled in the Nhai Tuan district and opened a market selling medicine and silk 58 Siege policy editJames Waterson cautioned against attributing the population drop in northern China to Mongol slaughter since much of the population may have moved to southern China under the Southern Song or died of disease and famine as agricultural and urban city infrastructure were destroyed 59 The Mongols spared cities from massacre and sacking if they surrendered such as Kaifeng which was surrendered to Subetai by Xu Li 60 Yangzhou which was surrendered to Bayan by Li Tingzhi s second in command after Li Tingzhi was executed by the Southern Song 61 and Hangzhou which was spared from sacking when it surrendered to Kublai Khan 62 Han Chinese and Khitan soldiers defected en masse to Genghis Khan against the Jurchen Jin dynasty 63 Towns which surrendered were spared from sacking and massacre by Kublai Khan 64 The Khitan reluctantly left their homeland in Manchuria as the Jin moved their primary capital from Beijing south to Kaifeng and defected to the Mongols 65 Capitulation of Nobles and Tusi vassal chiefdoms in southwestern China editMany Tusi chiefdoms and kingdoms in southwestern China which existed before the Mongol invasions were allowed to retain their integrity as vassals of the Yuan dynasty after surrendering including the Kingdom of Dali the Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou with its seat at the castle Hailongtun Chiefdom of Lijiang Chiefdom of Shuidong Chiefdom of Sizhou Chiefdom of Yao an Chiefdom of Yongning and Mu ege As were Korea under Mongol rule and the Kingdom of Qocho The Han Chinese nobles Duke Yansheng and Celestial Masters continued possessing their titles in the Yuan dynasty since the previous dynasties Chinese exile in Vietnam and Champa helping anti Mongol resistance editSouthern Song Chinese military officers and civilian officials fled to overseas countries namely Vietnam and Champa In Vietnam they intermarried with the Vietnamese ruling elite and in Champa they served the government there as recorded by Zheng Sixiao 66 Southern Song soldiers served in the Vietnamese army prepared by emperor Trần Thanh Tong against the second Mongol invasion 67 Professor Liam Kelley noted that people from Song like Zhao Zhong and Xu Zongdao escaped to Vietnam then under the Trần dynasty after the Mongol invasion of China and helped the Trần fighting against the Mongol invasion The Daoist Chinese cleric Xu Zongdao who recorded the Mongol invasion referred to them as Northern bandits He quoted the Đại Việt Sử Ky Toan Thư which said When the Song dynasty was lost its people came to us Nhật Duật took them in There was Zhao Zhong who served as his personal guard Therefore among the accomplishments in defeating the Yuan i e Mongols Nhật Duật had the most 68 69 Notes edit An initial coalition invasion force of ninety Tumens at roughly two thirds strength including Mongols Chinese Khitans Jurchens Alan Asuds Turkic people Central Asians Cuan bo Bai people and Yi people from the Kingdom of Dali References edit Igor de Rachewiltz 1993 In the Service of the Khan Eminent Personalities of the Early Mongol Yuan Period 1200 1300 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 42 ISBN 978 3 447 03339 8 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 509 Henry Hoyle Howorth Ernest George Ravenstein History of the Mongols p 228 陈世松等 宋元战争史 内蒙古人民出版社 2010年 第20 21页 陈世松等 第22页 Nicolle David Hook Richard 1998 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane illustrated ed Brockhampton Press p 57 ISBN 1 86019 407 9 For his part Kublai dedicated himself totally to the task but it was still to be the Mongol s toughest war The Song Chinese showed themselves to be the most resilient of foes Southern China was not only densely populated and full of strongly walled cities It was also a land of mountain ranges and wide fast flowing rivers Goodrich L Carrington 2002 A Short History of the Chinese People illustrated ed Courier Dover Publications p 173 ISBN 0 486 42488 X Retrieved 28 November 2011 Unquestionably in the Chinese the Mongols encountered more stubborn opposition and better defense than any of their other opponents in Europe and Asia had shown They needed every military artifice known at that time for they had to fight in terrain that was difficult for their horses in regions infested with diseases fatal to large numbers of their forces and in boats to which they were not accustomed van Derven H J 2000 Warfare in Chinese History Brill pp 222 ISBN 90 04 11774 1 Smith Jr 1998 p 54 John Man Kublai Khan p 158 Rene Grousset 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia reprint ed Rutgers University Press p 282 ISBN 0 8135 1304 9 Retrieved 28 October 2010 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 509 窝阔台汗己丑年汉军万户萧札剌考辨 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户 www wanfangdata com cn 窝阔台汗己丑年汉军万户萧札剌考辨 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户 国家哲学社会科学学术期刊数据库 Archived from the original on 13 April 2020 Retrieved 10 January 2016 新元史 卷146 維基文庫 自由的圖書館 zh wikisource org Archived copy Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Jeremiah Curtin The Mongols A History p 343 J Bor Mongol hiiged Eurasiin diplomat shastir vol II p 224 Yang Bin 2009 Chapter 4 Rule Based on Native Customs Between winds and clouds the making of Yunnan second century BCE to twentieth century CE Columbia University Press p 112 ISBN 978 0231142540 Alt URL John Merton Patrick 1961 Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Monograph series Vol 8 No 3 Logan Utah Utah State University Press p 10 see 1 accessed 30 December 2014 J R Partington 1960 A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0801859549 pp 243 268 244 see 2 accessed 30 December 2014 a b See also zhen tian lei or chen t ien lei entry in The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient amp Medieval Warfare Matthew Bennett Ed 1998 Abingdon UK Taylor amp Francis p 356 ISBN 1579581161 see 3 accessed 30 December 2014 The entry reads substantially as follows zhen tian lei or chen t ien lei Chinese heaven shaking thunder medieval Chinese explosive bombs first used by the Jurchen Jin dynasty at the siege of the Song Chinese city of Qizhou in 1221 Replacing bamboo enclosures the zhen tian lei had a cast iron casing that produced a genuine fragmentation bomb They were used by the Jin in defense of Kaifeng by the Song defenders of Xiangyang and other cities and in the Mongol invasions of Japan They were launched from trebuchets or even lowered on chains into besiegers approach trenches The fragments pierced iron armor and the explosion could be heard 50 km 31 miles away a b Rossabi Morris 2009 Khubilai Khan His Life and Times University of California Press p 27 ISBN 978 0520261327 a b Lien Vu Hong Sharrock Peter 2014 The First Mongol Invasion 1257 8 CE Descending Dragon Rising Tiger A History of Vietnam Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1780233888 Đại Việt Sử ky toan thư pp 283 284 a b Buell P D Mongols in Vietnam end of one era beginning of another First Congress of the Asian Association of World Historians 29 31 May 2009 Osaka University Nakanoshima Center a b c d e Haw Stephen G 2013 The deaths of two Khaghans a comparison of events in 1242 and 1260 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 76 3 361 371 doi 10 1017 S0041977X13000475 JSTOR 24692275 John Joseph Saunders The history of the Mongol conquests p 120 George Lane Daily life in the Mongol empire p 9 John Man Kublai Khan p 98 Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan and the making of the modern world p 188 John Merton Patrick 1961 Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Vol 8 Issue 3 of Monograph series Utah State University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0874210262 Retrieved 28 November 2011 overthrown as we shall see since the final counter offensive launched by the Chinese against their Mongol overlords of the Yuan dynasty is a story in which artillery features significantly By 1259 at least if not earlier during the first Mongol invasions the Chinese were using tubes that shot bullets The t u huo ch iang rushing forth fire gun was a long bamboo tube into which bullets in the true sense tzu k o Herman John E 2005 Di Cosmo Nicola Wyatt Don J eds Political Frontiers Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History illustrated ed Routledge p 260 ISBN 1135790957 Crossley Pamela Kyle Siu Helen F Sutton Donald S eds 2006 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China Vol 28 of Studies on China illustrated ed University of California Press p 143 ISBN 0520230159 Warren I Cohen East Asia at the center four thousand years of engagement with the world p 136 ISBN missing Hucker 1985 p 66 Robinson David M 2009 1 Northeast Asia and the Mongol Empire Empire s Twilight Northeast Asia Under the Mongols illustrated ed Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0674036086 Man John 2012 Kublai Khan reprint ed Random House p 168 ISBN 978 1446486153 Cheung Ming Tai 2001 China s Entrepreneurial Army illustrated reprint ed Oxford University Press p 14 ISBN 0199246904 Stephen Turnbull Wayne Reynolds 2003 Mongol Warrior 1200 1350 illustrated ed Osprey Publishing p 8 ISBN 1 84176 583 X Retrieved 28 October 2010 John Man Kublai Khan p 168 揭秘730多年无影古塔 为武汉现存最早古建筑 图 Uncovering the Secrets of the over 730 year old Wuying Ancient Pagoda Wuhan s Oldest Extant Ancient Architectural Structure with Photographs Hubei Daily Online 13 June 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2017 范 Fan 宁 Ning 15 May 2013 无影有踪 追溯洪山无影塔历史 No Shadow But With History play on the name of the pagoda and the Chinese phrase 无影无踪 Disappear without a Trace Tracing the History of the Hongshan Wuying Pagoda Mount Hong Shadowless Pagoda Tencent Dachuwang Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Jasper Becker 2008 City of heavenly tranquility Beijing in the history of China illustrated ed Oxford University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 19 530997 3 Rashid al Din The Successors of Genghis Khan pp 290 291 John Andrew Boyle s translation ISBN missing Paul E Chevedden Black Camels and Blazing Bolts The Bolt Projecting Trebuchet in the Mamluk Army Mamluk Studies Review 8 2004 232 233 Stephen Turnbull Steve Noon 2009 Chinese Walled Cities 221 BC AD 1644 illustrated ed Osprey Publishing p 53 ISBN 978 1 84603 381 0 Retrieved 28 October 2010 permanent dead link Michael E Haskew Christer Joregensen Eric Niderost Chris McNab 2008 Fighting techniques of the Oriental world AD 1200 1860 equipment combat skills and tactics illustrated ed Macmillan p 190 ISBN 978 0 312 38696 2 Retrieved 28 October 2010 Grousset 1970 p 283 a b Stephen R Turnbull 2003 Genghis Khan amp the Mongol conquests 1190 1400 illustrated ed Osprey Publishing p 63 ISBN 1 84176 523 6 Retrieved 28 October 2010 permanent dead link Peter Allan Lorge 2005 War politics and society in early modern China 900 1795 Taylor amp Francis p 84 ISBN 0 415 31690 1 Stephen Turnbull 2002 Siege weapons of the Far East AD 960 1644 illustrated ed Osprey Publishing p 12 ISBN 1 84176 340 3 Retrieved 28 October 2010 permanent dead link Peter Allan Lorge 2005 War politics and society in early modern China 900 1795 Taylor amp Francis pp 84 87 ISBN 0 415 31690 1 Tony Jaques 2007 Tony Jaques ed Dictionary of battles and sieges a guide to 8 500 battles from antiquity through the twenty first century Volume 3 Greenwood Publishing Group p 1115 ISBN 978 0 313 33539 6 Retrieved 28 October 2010 Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2016 9 State Forced Relocations in China 900 1300 The Mongols and the State of Yuan In Ebrey Patricia Buckley Smith Paul Jakov eds State Power in China 900 1325 illustrated ed University of Washington Press pp 325 326 ISBN 978 0295998480 Archived from the original on 8 September 2023 Retrieved 3 December 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Hua Kaiqi 2018 Chapter 6 The Journey of Zhao Xian and the Exile of Royal Descendants in the Yuan Dynasty 1271 1358 In Heirman Ann Meinert Carmen Anderl Christoph eds Buddhist Encounters and Identities Across East Asia Leiden Netherlands Brill p 213 doi 10 1163 9789004366152 008 ISBN 978 9004366152 Rasid ad Din Faḍlallah 1971 The Successors of Genghis Khan Translated by Boyle John Andrew Columbia University Press p 287 ISBN 0 231 03351 6 Lien Vu Hong 2017 The Mongol Navy Kublai Khan s Invasions in Đại Việt and Champa Nalanda Sriwijaya Centre ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute Singapore Working Paper 25 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers p 88 ISBN 978 1783469437 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers p 92 ISBN 978 1783469437 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers p 230 ISBN 978 1783469437 Balfour Alan H Zheng Shiling 2002 Balfour Alan H ed Shanghai illustrated ed Wiley Academy p 25 ISBN 0471877336 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers p 84 ISBN 978 1783469437 Coatsworth John Cole Juan Ricardo Hanagan Michael P Perdue Peter C Tilly Charles Tilly Louise 2015 Global Connections Vol 1 of Global Connections Politics Exchange and Social Life in World History illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 356 ISBN 978 0521191890 Man John 2013 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection Macmillan ISBN 978 1466861565 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia reprint revised ed Brill p 122 ISBN 978 9004282483 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia reprint revised ed Brill p 123 ISBN 978 9004282483 Giặc Bắc đến xam lược Translations and Exclamation Points 4 December 2015 Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Liam Kelley Department of History 14 October 2014 Archived from the original on 14 October 2014 Sources editGrousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Smith John Masson Jr January March 1998 Review Nomads on Ponies vs Slaves on Horses Journal of the American Oriental Society 118 1 American Oriental Society 54 62 doi 10 2307 606298 JSTOR 606298 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty amp oldid 1214574512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.