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Nian Rebellion

The Nian Rebellion (Chinese: 捻亂; pinyin: Niǎn Luàn)[7] was an armed uprising that took place in northern China from 1851 to 1868, contemporaneously with Taiping Rebellion (1851–1864) in South China. The rebellion failed to topple the Qing dynasty, but caused immense economic devastation and loss of life that became major long-term factors in the collapse of the Qing regime in the early 20th century.

Nian Rebellion

Map of Nian Rebellion
Date1851–1868
Location
Northern China
Result Qing victory
Belligerents
Qing dynasty
Supported by:
 United Kingdom
 France
 United States

Nian militias

  • Five Banner alliance (1856–58)[1]
  • "Army of the Taipings"[2]
  • Henan armies[3]
Co-belligerents:
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom[4]
White Lotus rebels[5]
Commanders and leaders
Zeng Guofan
Li Hongzhang
Zuo Zongtang
Sengge Rinchen 
Zhang Lexing 
Su Sanniang
Lai Wenguang
Zhang Zongyu
Ren Zhu
Miao Peilin
Fan Ruzeng
Niu Hongsheng
Strength
~500,000 ~200,000[6]
Casualties and losses
100,000+ killed[6]

Origin

Nian is a word borrowed from the Huaibei dialect, a form of Central Plains Mandarin, where it was used to refer to loosely affiliated gangs or groups or “bandits”.[8] The Nian movement was formed in the late 1840s by Zhang Lexing and, by 1851, numbered approximately 40,000. Unlike the Taiping Rebellion movement, the Nian initially had no clear goals or objectives, aside from criticism of the Qing government. Their slogan was "'kill the rich and aid the poor.'"[9] However, the Nian were provoked into taking direct action against the Imperial regime following a series of environmental disasters.

The 1851 Yellow River flood deluged hundreds of thousands of square miles and caused immense loss of life. The Qing government slowly began cleaning up after the disaster but could not provide effective aid, as government finances had been drained during the First Opium War and the ongoing Taiping Rebellion. The damage created by the disaster had still not been repaired when, in 1855, the river burst its banks again, drowning thousands and devastating the fertile province of Jiangsu. Along with the destruction caused by the floods famine spread.[6] At the time, the Qing government was trying to negotiate a deal with the European powers, and as state finances had been so severely depleted, the regime was again unable to provide effective relief. This enraged the Nian movement, which blamed the Europeans for contributing to the nation troubles, and increasingly viewed the Qing government as incompetent.

The Nian rebels seemed to have been influenced by the previous 1794 White Lotus Rebellion, recruiting from secret societies and sects such as the White Lotus, and actively borrowing their terminology and symbols, examples being the practice of sworn brotherhood, five colours of banners, flags with eight trigrams, and the widespread use of units of woman warriors. Zhang Lexing, leader of the rebellion, used the title "Bright King of the Great Han", an address reminiscent of White Lotus leadership positions.[10]

Political scientists Valerie Hudson and Andrea den Boer suggest that the rebellion was fueled, at least in part, by decades of female infanticide caused by the flood-related economic misery, leading to a large population of frustrated young men without any women to marry, perhaps as many as a quarter of all young men in the area being in this category of "bare branches".[11][12]

The conflict

The Nian rebels were to a large degree desperate and poor peasants who banded together in bandit groups simply to survive. However, as natural disasters grew worse, these bandit groups grew increasingly large, and eventually became armies that were able to directly challenge the government. Nevertheless, the main interest of most Nian members remained plundering communities that were better off, as well as resisting taxation.[13] Religious motifs likewise were of little importance to the Nian rebels.[5] While the Nian forces possibly inherited some of their symbols such as red turbans and Eight Trigram flags from the White Lotus,[14] the overall influence of spiritual movements such as the White Lotus or the God Worshipping Society on them was low. For example, White Lotus rebels sometimes fought alongside Nian groups, but the latter sometimes also attacked the former in hopes of plunder.[5] On average, the Nian groups in Henan remained more similar to mere bandits than the Nian in Anhui.[3] Overall, the Nian movement "remained primarily the expression of mundane strategies of survival" according to historian Elizabeth J. Perry.[15] They were never revolutionaries,[16] and besides slogans that called for death of government officials and the rich,[17] as well as hopes for a more just society,[15] they lacked clear, well-defined goals.[6] That some Nian armies became actual rebel movements was mostly due to the ambitions of individual Nian leaders who wanted to become legitimate rulers.[18]

The Nian utilized cavalry in part to aid in looting, which served to support both the Nians' forces and their home communities.[19] In contrast to their mobile cavalry, the Nians' defensive tactics were based on the so-called "earthwall communities" they controlled.[20] Support of the peasantry proved crucial and provided the true base of the Nians' power.[21]

In 1851, the Nian began raiding the grain stores and silver caches of villages.[22] Upon the seizure of Nanjing by the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, some Nian leaders sought an alliance with the Taiping.[23] While Hong Xiuquan bestowed titles upon the Nian leaders and the Nian and the Taiping occasionally cooperated, full coordination between the two rebellions was never achieved.[24] Cases in which Nian armies submitted or even fully joined the Taipings remained rare,[4] as most remained bandit armies that were only interested in imminent profit and survival.[15]

In 1855, Zhang Lexing took direct action by launching attacks against government troops in central China. By the summer, the fast-moving Nian cavalry, well-trained and fully equipped with modern firearms, had cut the lines of communication between Beijing and the Qing armies fighting the Taiping rebels in the south. Qing forces were badly overstretched as rebellions broke out across China, allowing the Nian armies to conquer large tracts of land and gain control over economically vital areas. The Nian fortified their captured cities and used them as bases to launch cavalry attacks against Qing troops in the countryside, prompting local towns to fortify themselves against Nian raiding parties. This resulted in constant fighting which devastated the previously rich provinces of Jiangsu and Hunan.

In 1856, several Nian bands formed an alliance led by Zhang Lexing, organizing themselves into a loose confederation of five armies. Each army was identified by a colored banner, operated largely autonomously, and recruited mostly people belonging to a single clan.[25][26][27][28] As result, each banner army had a core area which consisted of a number of villages whose inhabitants were related to each other. Due to the widely differing numbers of the involved clans, the banner armies were accordingly smaller or bigger: the yellow banner army, led by Zhang himself, drew its forces from 18 villages; the white banner army of Kung Teh from 13; the red banner army of Hou Shih-wei from 12; the blue banner army of Han Lao-wan from just six; and the black banner army of Su T'ien-fu from one hundred villages.[29] Though Zhang tried to impose more order and coordination upon the alliance, he enjoyed only limited success in this regard.[30] Internal differences caused the alliance to quickly fall apart, and by 1858 it was effectively dissolved.[31]

 
Triumphal Procession after the Campaign against the Nian

In early 1856, the Qing government sent the Mongol General Senggelinqin, who had recently crushed a large Taiping army, to defeat the Nian. Senggelinqin's army captured several fortified cities and destroyed most of the Nian infantry, and killed Zhang Lexing himself in an ambush in 1863. However, in late 1864, the Nian movement survived as skilled Taiping commanders Lai Wenguang (賴文光) (1827–1868) and Fan Ruzeng (1840–1867) arrived to take control of the Nian forces, and the bulk of the Nian cavalry remained intact. Senggelinqin's infantry-based army could not stop the fast moving cavalry from devastating the countryside and launching surprise attacks on Imperial troops.

In late 1865, Senggelinqin and his bodyguards were ambushed by Nian troops and killed, in the Battle of Goulawjai, depriving the government of its best military commander. The Qing regime sent General Zeng Guofan (曾国藩) to take command of Imperial forces protecting the capital Beijing, and provided him with modern artillery and weapons, purchased from the Europeans at exorbitant prices. Zeng's army set about building canals and trenches to hem in the Nian cavalry, an effective but slow and expensive method. General Zeng was relieved of command after Nian infantry broke through one of his defense lines, and he was replaced by Generals Li Hongzhang and Zuo Zongtang equipped with more European artillery and firearms.[32]

In late 1866, the remaining Nian forces split into two, with the Eastern Army, under command of Lai Wenguang, stationed in central China whilst the Western Army advanced on Beijing. The Western Army, commanded by Zhang Zongyu, Zhang Lexing's brother's son, was defeated southwest of Beijing by Qing troops, leaving large swathes of Nian territory exposed to a Qing counter-attack. By late 1867, Li Hongzhang's and Zuo Zongtang's troops had recaptured most Nian territory, and in early 1868, the remnants were crushed by the combined forces of the government's troops and the Ever Victorious Army.

Military equipment

The Nian rebels were equipped with guns (including modern Western guns), muskets, and a significant quantity of cannons up to 5000 pounds in weight.[33]

Assessment

The Nian rebellion failed to topple the Qing dynasty largely because it failed to make alliances with other rebels, especially the Taiping movement. The Nian only symbolically supported Taiping efforts by accepting the Taiping king's "appointments", but refusing to follow his orders. Had the Nian and Taipings joined forces, the Qing government would have been faced with a formidable threat, in spite of its alliances with European powers.

Despite the Nians' failure to seize power, the events of the rebellion dealt a severe blow to the Qing dynasty. The environmental disasters of 1851 and 1855 devastated the richest provinces of China, depriving the Qing regime of tax income and trade duties. The endless fighting between Nian troops and Qing forces, who made widespread use of scorched earth tactics, ruined the countryside and resulted in countless deaths. Although the Nian rebellion was smaller than that of the Taiping, it severely drained government finances, devastated the richest areas of China, and left China's economy in a very precarious state. In the long term, the Nian rebellion was to become one of the major factors in the collapse of Qing China.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 128–130, 140–145.
  2. ^ Perry (1980), p. 121.
  3. ^ a b Perry (1980), pp. 145, 146.
  4. ^ a b Perry (1980), pp. 120, 121.
  5. ^ a b c Perry (1980), p. 150.
  6. ^ a b c d Jowett (2013), p. 11.
  7. ^ 陳華. 捻亂之研究 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 國立臺灣大學出版中心. p. 8. OCLC 19479110.
  8. ^ Billingsley, Phil. Bandits in Republican China.
  9. ^ Pamela Kyle Crossley, The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800 108 (2010)
  10. ^ Perry, Elizabeth J. (15 August 2016). "Worshipers and Warriors". Modern China. 2 (1): 4–22. doi:10.1177/009770047600200102. hdl:2027.42/68415. JSTOR 188811. S2CID 44642041.
  11. ^ Hudson, Valerie M., Andrea Den Boer. . Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved 2008-06-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Hutton, Will (2007-03-24). "Shortage of women leaves surplus of disaffected men". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2008-06-22.
  13. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 147–149.
  14. ^ Pamela Kyle Crossley, The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800 108 (2010)
  15. ^ a b c Perry (1980), p. 148.
  16. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 147, 148.
  17. ^ Chesneaux, Jean. Peasant Revolts in China, 1840–1949 p. 33 (C. A. Curwen trans. 1973)
  18. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 150, 151.
  19. ^ Siang-tseh Chiang, The Nien Rebellion p. viii (1954)
  20. ^ Siang-tseh Chiang, The Nien Rebellion p. viii-ix (1954)
  21. ^ Siang-tseh Chiang, The Nien Rebellion p. ix (1954)
  22. ^ Pamela Kyle Crossley, The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800 108 (2010)
  23. ^ Pamela Kyle Crossley, The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800 108 (2010)
  24. ^ Pamela Kyle Crossley, The Wobbling Pivot: China Since 1800 108-09 (2010)
  25. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 128–132.
  26. ^ Michael Dillon (15 September 2012). China: A Modern History. I.B.Tauris. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-1-78076-381-1.
  27. ^ Stewart Lone (January 2007). Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia: From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 21–. ISBN 978-0-313-33684-3.
  28. ^ Spence, Jonathan D. (1991). The Search for Modern China. Norton. pp. 185–. ISBN 978-0-393-30780-1.
  29. ^ Perry (1980), p. 131.
  30. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 130, 131.
  31. ^ Perry (1980), pp. 140–145.
  32. ^ Xiaobing Li (2012). China at War: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 321. ISBN 9781598844153.
  33. ^ Elleman, Bruce A. (2005). Modern Chinese Warfare, 1795-1989. Routledge. p. 61. ISBN 1134610092.

Sources

Further reading

  • Jiang, Xiangze (1954). The Nien Rebellion. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  • Ownby, David. "Approximations of Chinese Bandits: Perverse Rebels or Frustrated Bachelors?" Chinese Masculinities/Femininities. Ed. Jeffrey Wasserstrom and Susan Brownell. Berkeley, CA: U of California P.
  • Perry, Elizabeth J. (1980). Approaches to the Nien Rebellion. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe.
  • —— (1981). Chinese Perspectives on the Nien Rebellion. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 087332191X.
  • Têng, Ssu-yü. The Nien Army and Their Guerrilla Warfare, 1851-1868. Paris: Mouton, 1961.

nian, rebellion, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, december, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, template, message,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Nian Rebellion Chinese 捻亂 pinyin Niǎn Luan 7 was an armed uprising that took place in northern China from 1851 to 1868 contemporaneously with Taiping Rebellion 1851 1864 in South China The rebellion failed to topple the Qing dynasty but caused immense economic devastation and loss of life that became major long term factors in the collapse of the Qing regime in the early 20th century Nian RebellionMap of Nian RebellionDate1851 1868LocationNorthern ChinaResultQing victoryBelligerentsQing dynastySupported by United Kingdom France United StatesNian militias Five Banner alliance 1856 58 1 Army of the Taipings 2 Henan armies 3 Co belligerents Taiping Heavenly Kingdom 4 White Lotus rebels 5 Commanders and leadersZeng Guofan Li Hongzhang Zuo Zongtang Sengge Rinchen Zhang Lexing Su Sanniang Lai Wenguang Zhang Zongyu Ren Zhu Miao Peilin Fan Ruzeng Niu HongshengStrength 500 000 200 000 6 Casualties and losses100 000 killed 6 Contents 1 Origin 2 The conflict 3 Military equipment 4 Assessment 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further readingOrigin EditNian is a word borrowed from the Huaibei dialect a form of Central Plains Mandarin where it was used to refer to loosely affiliated gangs or groups or bandits 8 The Nian movement was formed in the late 1840s by Zhang Lexing and by 1851 numbered approximately 40 000 Unlike the Taiping Rebellion movement the Nian initially had no clear goals or objectives aside from criticism of the Qing government Their slogan was kill the rich and aid the poor 9 However the Nian were provoked into taking direct action against the Imperial regime following a series of environmental disasters The 1851 Yellow River flood deluged hundreds of thousands of square miles and caused immense loss of life The Qing government slowly began cleaning up after the disaster but could not provide effective aid as government finances had been drained during the First Opium War and the ongoing Taiping Rebellion The damage created by the disaster had still not been repaired when in 1855 the river burst its banks again drowning thousands and devastating the fertile province of Jiangsu Along with the destruction caused by the floods famine spread 6 At the time the Qing government was trying to negotiate a deal with the European powers and as state finances had been so severely depleted the regime was again unable to provide effective relief This enraged the Nian movement which blamed the Europeans for contributing to the nation troubles and increasingly viewed the Qing government as incompetent The Nian rebels seemed to have been influenced by the previous 1794 White Lotus Rebellion recruiting from secret societies and sects such as the White Lotus and actively borrowing their terminology and symbols examples being the practice of sworn brotherhood five colours of banners flags with eight trigrams and the widespread use of units of woman warriors Zhang Lexing leader of the rebellion used the title Bright King of the Great Han an address reminiscent of White Lotus leadership positions 10 Political scientists Valerie Hudson and Andrea den Boer suggest that the rebellion was fueled at least in part by decades of female infanticide caused by the flood related economic misery leading to a large population of frustrated young men without any women to marry perhaps as many as a quarter of all young men in the area being in this category of bare branches 11 12 The conflict EditThe Nian rebels were to a large degree desperate and poor peasants who banded together in bandit groups simply to survive However as natural disasters grew worse these bandit groups grew increasingly large and eventually became armies that were able to directly challenge the government Nevertheless the main interest of most Nian members remained plundering communities that were better off as well as resisting taxation 13 Religious motifs likewise were of little importance to the Nian rebels 5 While the Nian forces possibly inherited some of their symbols such as red turbans and Eight Trigram flags from the White Lotus 14 the overall influence of spiritual movements such as the White Lotus or the God Worshipping Society on them was low For example White Lotus rebels sometimes fought alongside Nian groups but the latter sometimes also attacked the former in hopes of plunder 5 On average the Nian groups in Henan remained more similar to mere bandits than the Nian in Anhui 3 Overall the Nian movement remained primarily the expression of mundane strategies of survival according to historian Elizabeth J Perry 15 They were never revolutionaries 16 and besides slogans that called for death of government officials and the rich 17 as well as hopes for a more just society 15 they lacked clear well defined goals 6 That some Nian armies became actual rebel movements was mostly due to the ambitions of individual Nian leaders who wanted to become legitimate rulers 18 The Nian utilized cavalry in part to aid in looting which served to support both the Nians forces and their home communities 19 In contrast to their mobile cavalry the Nians defensive tactics were based on the so called earthwall communities they controlled 20 Support of the peasantry proved crucial and provided the true base of the Nians power 21 In 1851 the Nian began raiding the grain stores and silver caches of villages 22 Upon the seizure of Nanjing by the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom some Nian leaders sought an alliance with the Taiping 23 While Hong Xiuquan bestowed titles upon the Nian leaders and the Nian and the Taiping occasionally cooperated full coordination between the two rebellions was never achieved 24 Cases in which Nian armies submitted or even fully joined the Taipings remained rare 4 as most remained bandit armies that were only interested in imminent profit and survival 15 In 1855 Zhang Lexing took direct action by launching attacks against government troops in central China By the summer the fast moving Nian cavalry well trained and fully equipped with modern firearms had cut the lines of communication between Beijing and the Qing armies fighting the Taiping rebels in the south Qing forces were badly overstretched as rebellions broke out across China allowing the Nian armies to conquer large tracts of land and gain control over economically vital areas The Nian fortified their captured cities and used them as bases to launch cavalry attacks against Qing troops in the countryside prompting local towns to fortify themselves against Nian raiding parties This resulted in constant fighting which devastated the previously rich provinces of Jiangsu and Hunan In 1856 several Nian bands formed an alliance led by Zhang Lexing organizing themselves into a loose confederation of five armies Each army was identified by a colored banner operated largely autonomously and recruited mostly people belonging to a single clan 25 26 27 28 As result each banner army had a core area which consisted of a number of villages whose inhabitants were related to each other Due to the widely differing numbers of the involved clans the banner armies were accordingly smaller or bigger the yellow banner army led by Zhang himself drew its forces from 18 villages the white banner army of Kung Teh from 13 the red banner army of Hou Shih wei from 12 the blue banner army of Han Lao wan from just six and the black banner army of Su T ien fu from one hundred villages 29 Though Zhang tried to impose more order and coordination upon the alliance he enjoyed only limited success in this regard 30 Internal differences caused the alliance to quickly fall apart and by 1858 it was effectively dissolved 31 Triumphal Procession after the Campaign against the Nian In early 1856 the Qing government sent the Mongol General Senggelinqin who had recently crushed a large Taiping army to defeat the Nian Senggelinqin s army captured several fortified cities and destroyed most of the Nian infantry and killed Zhang Lexing himself in an ambush in 1863 However in late 1864 the Nian movement survived as skilled Taiping commanders Lai Wenguang 賴文光 1827 1868 and Fan Ruzeng 1840 1867 arrived to take control of the Nian forces and the bulk of the Nian cavalry remained intact Senggelinqin s infantry based army could not stop the fast moving cavalry from devastating the countryside and launching surprise attacks on Imperial troops In late 1865 Senggelinqin and his bodyguards were ambushed by Nian troops and killed in the Battle of Goulawjai depriving the government of its best military commander The Qing regime sent General Zeng Guofan 曾国藩 to take command of Imperial forces protecting the capital Beijing and provided him with modern artillery and weapons purchased from the Europeans at exorbitant prices Zeng s army set about building canals and trenches to hem in the Nian cavalry an effective but slow and expensive method General Zeng was relieved of command after Nian infantry broke through one of his defense lines and he was replaced by Generals Li Hongzhang and Zuo Zongtang equipped with more European artillery and firearms 32 In late 1866 the remaining Nian forces split into two with the Eastern Army under command of Lai Wenguang stationed in central China whilst the Western Army advanced on Beijing The Western Army commanded by Zhang Zongyu Zhang Lexing s brother s son was defeated southwest of Beijing by Qing troops leaving large swathes of Nian territory exposed to a Qing counter attack By late 1867 Li Hongzhang s and Zuo Zongtang s troops had recaptured most Nian territory and in early 1868 the remnants were crushed by the combined forces of the government s troops and the Ever Victorious Army Military equipment EditThe Nian rebels were equipped with guns including modern Western guns muskets and a significant quantity of cannons up to 5000 pounds in weight 33 Assessment EditThe Nian rebellion failed to topple the Qing dynasty largely because it failed to make alliances with other rebels especially the Taiping movement The Nian only symbolically supported Taiping efforts by accepting the Taiping king s appointments but refusing to follow his orders Had the Nian and Taipings joined forces the Qing government would have been faced with a formidable threat in spite of its alliances with European powers Despite the Nians failure to seize power the events of the rebellion dealt a severe blow to the Qing dynasty The environmental disasters of 1851 and 1855 devastated the richest provinces of China depriving the Qing regime of tax income and trade duties The endless fighting between Nian troops and Qing forces who made widespread use of scorched earth tactics ruined the countryside and resulted in countless deaths Although the Nian rebellion was smaller than that of the Taiping it severely drained government finances devastated the richest areas of China and left China s economy in a very precarious state In the long term the Nian rebellion was to become one of the major factors in the collapse of Qing China See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nien Rebellion List of rebellions in China Taiping Rebellion Punti Hakka Clan Wars Miao Rebellion 1854 73 Dungan revolt 1862 1877 Panthay Rebellion Nepalese Tibetan WarReferences EditCitations Edit Perry 1980 pp 128 130 140 145 Perry 1980 p 121 a b Perry 1980 pp 145 146 a b Perry 1980 pp 120 121 a b c Perry 1980 p 150 a b c d Jowett 2013 p 11 陳華 捻亂之研究 in Chinese Taiwan 國立臺灣大學出版中心 p 8 OCLC 19479110 Billingsley Phil Bandits in Republican China Pamela Kyle Crossley The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 108 2010 Perry Elizabeth J 15 August 2016 Worshipers and Warriors Modern China 2 1 4 22 doi 10 1177 009770047600200102 hdl 2027 42 68415 JSTOR 188811 S2CID 44642041 Hudson Valerie M Andrea Den Boer A Surplus of Men A Deficit of Peace Security and Sex Ratios in Asia s Largest States Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved 2008 06 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hutton Will 2007 03 24 Shortage of women leaves surplus of disaffected men New Zealand Herald Retrieved 2008 06 22 Perry 1980 pp 147 149 Pamela Kyle Crossley The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 108 2010 a b c Perry 1980 p 148 Perry 1980 pp 147 148 Chesneaux Jean Peasant Revolts in China 1840 1949 p 33 C A Curwen trans 1973 Perry 1980 pp 150 151 Siang tseh Chiang The Nien Rebellion p viii 1954 Siang tseh Chiang The Nien Rebellion p viii ix 1954 Siang tseh Chiang The Nien Rebellion p ix 1954 Pamela Kyle Crossley The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 108 2010 Pamela Kyle Crossley The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 108 2010 Pamela Kyle Crossley The Wobbling Pivot China Since 1800 108 09 2010 Perry 1980 pp 128 132 Michael Dillon 15 September 2012 China A Modern History I B Tauris pp 85 ISBN 978 1 78076 381 1 Stewart Lone January 2007 Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War Greenwood Publishing Group pp 21 ISBN 978 0 313 33684 3 Spence Jonathan D 1991 The Search for Modern China Norton pp 185 ISBN 978 0 393 30780 1 Perry 1980 p 131 Perry 1980 pp 130 131 Perry 1980 pp 140 145 Xiaobing Li 2012 China at War An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 321 ISBN 9781598844153 Elleman Bruce A 2005 Modern Chinese Warfare 1795 1989 Routledge p 61 ISBN 1134610092 Sources Edit Jowett Philip S 2013 China s Wars Rousing the Dragon 1894 1949 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1782004073 Perry Elizabeth J 1980 Rebels and Revolutionaries in North China 1845 1945 Stanford California Stanford University Press Further reading EditJiang Xiangze 1954 The Nien Rebellion Seattle University of Washington Press Ownby David Approximations of Chinese Bandits Perverse Rebels or Frustrated Bachelors Chinese Masculinities Femininities Ed Jeffrey Wasserstrom and Susan Brownell Berkeley CA U of California P Perry Elizabeth J 1980 Approaches to the Nien Rebellion Armonk N Y M E Sharpe 1981 Chinese Perspectives on the Nien Rebellion Armonk N Y M E Sharpe ISBN 087332191X Teng Ssu yu The Nien Army and Their Guerrilla Warfare 1851 1868 Paris Mouton 1961 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nian Rebellion amp oldid 1130274477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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