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Turks in the Tang military

The military of the Tang Dynasty was staffed with a large population of Turkic soldiers, referred to as Tujue (突厥) in Chinese sources. Tang elites in northern China were familiar with Turkic culture, a factor that contributed to the Tang acceptance of Turkic recruits. The Tang emperor Taizong adopted the title of "Heavenly Kaghan" and promoted a cosmopolitan empire. Turkic soldiers that served under the Tang dynasty originated from the Eastern Turkic Khaganate. It began with Tang dynasty Emperor Taizong who sent his general Li Jing, eventually ended in defeating the Eastern Turks and capturing their leader Jiali Khan.[1]

Taizong regularly recruited and promoted military officers of Turkic ancestry, whose steppe experience contributed to the western and northern expansion of the Tang empire. The Turkic general Ashina She'er participated in the Tang capture of the Karakhoja, Karasahr, and Kucha kingdoms in Xinjiang. The half-Turkic general An Lushan started a revolt that led to the decline of the Tang Dynasty.

The Orkhon inscriptions by the Gokturks were critical of the Turks that had served the Tang Dynasty, and condemned them for helping the Chinese emperor expand his burgeoning empire. The Turkic soldiers stationed by the Chinese in the Tang garrisons of Central Asia settled in the region, spreading Turkic languages in the area.[citation needed]

Background

The empire of the Tang Dynasty was cosmopolitan and diverse.[2][3] The Tang Dynasty elites of northern China had an interest in Turkic culture and intermingled with the people of the steppes. The setting of one Tang poem describes a yurt, and the performance of a Turkic actress was hosted in the emperor's palace [4] Following the Tang Dynasty's defeat of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate, the government authorized the settlement of Turks along the borders of the Tang empire. Turkic officers of the former khaganate were recruited as generals in the Tang military, and their experience with steppe warfare contributed to the Tang's military successes as it expanded westward.[5]

Emperor Taizong and multiculturalism

 
Emperor Taizong adopted the steppe title of Heavenly Kaghan.

Emperor Taizong, also known by his personal name Li Shimin, was familiar with the culture of the steppe nomads and employed military strategies using steppe tactics as a prince. Taizong was a skilled horseman, and during a celebration of his victory and ascension to the throne, sacrificed a horse in a ritual derived from a Turkic religious practice. He was able to outmaneuver the heavy cavalry of the Sui Dynasty with his light cavalry, a characteristic of steppe warfare. Taizong shared personal relationships with Turkic allies as a prince, reinforced through oaths sworn as blood brothers. His later successes as an emperor against the armies of Central Asia through diplomacy and divide and rule are the result of his early experiences with Turkic culture.[6]

Taizong's adoption of the Heavenly Kaghan title was used to legitimize his role as a steppe khan not solely as a Chinese emperor with the title of Son of Heaven.[7] He valued the kaghan title and was sincere about his role as a leader of Central Asia. He sought to solidify his claim as a kaghan by organizing a gathering of Turkic leaders in the Lingzhou fortress during the last years of his reign to reconfirm his title.[8]

While mostly symbolic, the title of Heavenly Kaghan shows Taizong's open attitudes towards the existence of a multicultural and ethnically diverse Tang empire.[6] Taizong was proud of his policies promoting ethnic equality, and was reported to have said that, "The emperors since ancient times have all appreciated the Chinese and depreciated the barbarians. Only I view them as equal. That is why they look upon me as their parent."[6]

He had a paternalistic attitude towards his subjects and believed that it was his duty to treat the Chinese and foreign ethnic groups as equals under one ruler. Taizong's views grew into state policy as his government recruited Turkic and other non-Han Chinese soldiers into the Tang military. Turkic soldiers were later promoted to higher ranks as commanders and generals. The surname of Li, belonging to the royal family of Li Shimin, was awarded to Han and non-Han officers for their service.[6]

Tang relationship with the Turks may have further deepened had the crown prince Li Chengqian, a Turkophile, been enthroned as Taizong's successor.[9] Li Chengqian enthusiastically embraced Turkic customs, and Chinese historian Sima Guang recorded that he:

"He [Li Chengqian] loved to emulate Turkish speech and their manner of dress. He chose from among his retinue those who had Turkish features and grouped them in bands of five; he made them plait their hair, wear sheepskins, and herd sheep. He had made five wolf's head banners and tents and set up yurts. The crown prince took up residence here; he gathered sheep and cooked them, and then, drawing out his waist-knife, he would carve the meat and let everyone eat."[10]

Li Chengqian was deposed as crown prince by Taizong after his plans to usurp the throne were revealed. He was exiled by Taizong and died as a commoner.[9]

Turkic generals and Tang military campaigns

 
Map of Tang campaigns against the Tarim Basin oasis states. The Turkic general Ashina She'er led the campaigns against Karasahr and Kucha.
 
Camel with rider, earthenware, Tang Dynasty
 
Statuette of an armoured Turkic soldier, 8th century

Turkic generals led many of the Tang Dynasty military campaigns that expanded the dynasty's territorial reach into Central Asia. In total, ten Turks were able to reach the highest military position of general.[11][5] Ashina She'er, formerly the ruler of Beshbaliq and Kharakhoja between 630 and 635 and a member of the Ashina clan,[12] was recruited as a Tang general in 635. He fought as a commander in a successful campaign against Karakhoja in 640.[12] She'er was chosen as the general for the military expedition against Karasahr. The Tang loyalist that had been installed as ruler after the first invasion of Karasahr in 644 by Chinese general Guo Xiaoke was deposed by his cousin in a revolt. The usurper was executed after the rebellion was suppressed, and Tang governance returned to the oasis state. She'er continued onward to the nearby kingdom of Kucha,[13] a state that had supported Karasahr during its war against the Tang.[14]

Emperor Taizong himself tended to the injuries of the Turkic Generals Qibi Heli and Ashina Simo, who were both wounded during the campaign against Goguryeo.[15]

Ashina Zhong, the brother of She'er, also served as a Turkic general of the Tang Dynasty, and was a participant in a military performance hosted by Emperor Gaozong in 655.[16] Another Turkic member of the Ashina clan, Ashina Helu, briefly served as a commander of the Tang army in Gansu before his rise as a kaghan of the Western Turkic Khaganate.[17] During his reign, the Turkic tribes were unified under a single leader.[12] Emperor Gaozong, Taizong's successor, dispatched a military expedition in 657 against Helu, who had been raiding Tang settlements.[17][18] The campaign was led by the general Su Dingfang and the Turkic commanders Ashina Mishe and Ashina Buzhen, who were opposed to Helu.[18] Helu was defeated and captured by the Tang forces, and the territories annexed from the Western Turks were placed under Tang governance through the Anxi Protectorate.[19][20]

Gaozong awarded the military service of the Turkic commanders Mishe and Buzhen by appointing them as proxy rulers of ten Western Turkic tribes. The ten tribes were split between the two cousins, and the western half was given to Buzhen while Mishe controlled the eastern tribes.[21] In 685, the sons of Mishe and Buzhen were sent from the Tang capital of Chang'an, where they resided, to succeed their fathers in the west.[21] Neither lasted long as Turkic rulers; one was overthrown by his tribal subjects and the other was deposed by the Second Turkic Khaganate after an invasion in 690.[21]

An Lushan was a Tang general of mixed Turkic and Soghdian ancestry whose revolt between 755 and 763, the An Shi Rebellion, devastated the Tang Dynasty.[22] Unlike the majority of Turkic military officers, An Lushan served the Tang as an official closely involved with the politics of the imperial court, rather than as a general in a garrison on the Tang frontier. The dynasty might have collapsed had it not been for their alliance with the Uyghur Turks. The rebellion diminished the Tang enthusiasm for cosmopolitanism that was a characteristic of the dynasty's earlier years.[23]

The Orkhon inscriptions, a memorial erected by the Turks, lamented the Tang influence on the Turks and the Turkic adoption of Chinese titles:[9]

"The Turkish people let their state.... go to ruin... their sons worthy of becoming lords became slaves, and their daughters worthy of becoming ladies became servants to the Chinese people. The Turkish lords abandoned their Turkish titles. Those lords who were in China held the Chinese titles and obeyed the Chinese emperor and gave their service to him for fifty years. For the benefit of the Chinese, they went on campaigns up to [the land of] the Bukli qaghan in the east, where the sun rises, and as far as the Iron Gate in the West. For the benefit of the Chinese emperor they conquered countries."[24][9]

The inscriptions, made to commemorate the elites of the Second Turkic Empire, stress the importance of loyalty between a kaghan and the ruler's subjects.[25] The Turks that sided with the Tang are condemned,[24][9] and the disunity of the Turkic tribes is blamed on a lack of respect for the authority of the kaghan.[25]

Historical significance

 
Turkic warrior in a mural from Tumxuk

The Turkic soldiers and generals that worked in the Chinese garrisons of Central Asia spurred Turkic migration into the area. The Turkic language and culture of the Tang soldiers there gradually displaced the indigenous Indo-European languages. The native languages of Sogdian and Tokharian disappeared as the Turkic languages spread in the Tarim Basin.[26]

The Tang Dynasty declined after the An Shi Rebellion, and the dynasty eventually fell in 907. During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, an era of upheaval following the dynasty's collapse, many of the kingdoms in China were ruled by families of Turkic ancestry.[27] The Shatuo Turks founded the Later Tang in 923, the Later Jin in 936, and the Later Han in 947.[28] Eventually, the Han Chinese Song Dynasty conquered all the Shatuo Turks, uniting all the states once again.

Citations

  1. ^ New Book of Tang, vol. 93 . Archived from the original on 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2007-12-18..
  2. ^ Ebrey 2010, p. 108.
  3. ^ Lewis 2012, pp. 147–148.
  4. ^ Findley 2004, p. 40.
  5. ^ a b Twitchett 2000, p. 125.
  6. ^ a b c d Lewis 2012, p. 150.
  7. ^ Twitchett 2000, p. 124.
  8. ^ Twitchett 2000, pp. 124–125.
  9. ^ a b c d e Findley 2004, p. 41.
  10. ^ Chen 2010, p. 44.
  11. ^ Xue 1992, p. 788.
  12. ^ a b c Skaff 2009, p. 181.
  13. ^ Grousset 1970, p. 99.
  14. ^ Wechsler 1979, p. 226.
  15. ^ Skaff 2012, p. 95.
  16. ^ Skaff 2009, p. 188.
  17. ^ a b Twitchett 2000, p. 116.
  18. ^ a b Skaff 2009, p. 183.
  19. ^ Wechsler & Twitchett 1979, p. 280.
  20. ^ Skaff 2009, p. 184.
  21. ^ a b c Skaff 2012, p. 179.
  22. ^ Millward 2007, p. 36.
  23. ^ Holcombe 2001, p. 215.
  24. ^ a b Tekin 2010, pp. 53–54.
  25. ^ a b Abramson 2008, p. 41.
  26. ^ Millward 2007, p. 42.
  27. ^ Lewis 2012, p. 153.
  28. ^ Mote 2003, pp. 12–13.

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turks, tang, military, military, tang, dynasty, staffed, with, large, population, turkic, soldiers, referred, tujue, 突厥, chinese, sources, tang, elites, northern, china, were, familiar, with, turkic, culture, factor, that, contributed, tang, acceptance, turkic. The military of the Tang Dynasty was staffed with a large population of Turkic soldiers referred to as Tujue 突厥 in Chinese sources Tang elites in northern China were familiar with Turkic culture a factor that contributed to the Tang acceptance of Turkic recruits The Tang emperor Taizong adopted the title of Heavenly Kaghan and promoted a cosmopolitan empire Turkic soldiers that served under the Tang dynasty originated from the Eastern Turkic Khaganate It began with Tang dynasty Emperor Taizong who sent his general Li Jing eventually ended in defeating the Eastern Turks and capturing their leader Jiali Khan 1 Taizong regularly recruited and promoted military officers of Turkic ancestry whose steppe experience contributed to the western and northern expansion of the Tang empire The Turkic general Ashina She er participated in the Tang capture of the Karakhoja Karasahr and Kucha kingdoms in Xinjiang The half Turkic general An Lushan started a revolt that led to the decline of the Tang Dynasty The Orkhon inscriptions by the Gokturks were critical of the Turks that had served the Tang Dynasty and condemned them for helping the Chinese emperor expand his burgeoning empire The Turkic soldiers stationed by the Chinese in the Tang garrisons of Central Asia settled in the region spreading Turkic languages in the area citation needed Contents 1 Background 1 1 Emperor Taizong and multiculturalism 2 Turkic generals and Tang military campaigns 3 Historical significance 4 Citations 5 ReferencesBackground EditThe empire of the Tang Dynasty was cosmopolitan and diverse 2 3 The Tang Dynasty elites of northern China had an interest in Turkic culture and intermingled with the people of the steppes The setting of one Tang poem describes a yurt and the performance of a Turkic actress was hosted in the emperor s palace 4 Following the Tang Dynasty s defeat of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate the government authorized the settlement of Turks along the borders of the Tang empire Turkic officers of the former khaganate were recruited as generals in the Tang military and their experience with steppe warfare contributed to the Tang s military successes as it expanded westward 5 Emperor Taizong and multiculturalism Edit Emperor Taizong adopted the steppe title of Heavenly Kaghan Emperor Taizong also known by his personal name Li Shimin was familiar with the culture of the steppe nomads and employed military strategies using steppe tactics as a prince Taizong was a skilled horseman and during a celebration of his victory and ascension to the throne sacrificed a horse in a ritual derived from a Turkic religious practice He was able to outmaneuver the heavy cavalry of the Sui Dynasty with his light cavalry a characteristic of steppe warfare Taizong shared personal relationships with Turkic allies as a prince reinforced through oaths sworn as blood brothers His later successes as an emperor against the armies of Central Asia through diplomacy and divide and rule are the result of his early experiences with Turkic culture 6 Taizong s adoption of the Heavenly Kaghan title was used to legitimize his role as a steppe khan not solely as a Chinese emperor with the title of Son of Heaven 7 He valued the kaghan title and was sincere about his role as a leader of Central Asia He sought to solidify his claim as a kaghan by organizing a gathering of Turkic leaders in the Lingzhou fortress during the last years of his reign to reconfirm his title 8 While mostly symbolic the title of Heavenly Kaghan shows Taizong s open attitudes towards the existence of a multicultural and ethnically diverse Tang empire 6 Taizong was proud of his policies promoting ethnic equality and was reported to have said that The emperors since ancient times have all appreciated the Chinese and depreciated the barbarians Only I view them as equal That is why they look upon me as their parent 6 He had a paternalistic attitude towards his subjects and believed that it was his duty to treat the Chinese and foreign ethnic groups as equals under one ruler Taizong s views grew into state policy as his government recruited Turkic and other non Han Chinese soldiers into the Tang military Turkic soldiers were later promoted to higher ranks as commanders and generals The surname of Li belonging to the royal family of Li Shimin was awarded to Han and non Han officers for their service 6 Tang relationship with the Turks may have further deepened had the crown prince Li Chengqian a Turkophile been enthroned as Taizong s successor 9 Li Chengqian enthusiastically embraced Turkic customs and Chinese historian Sima Guang recorded that he He Li Chengqian loved to emulate Turkish speech and their manner of dress He chose from among his retinue those who had Turkish features and grouped them in bands of five he made them plait their hair wear sheepskins and herd sheep He had made five wolf s head banners and tents and set up yurts The crown prince took up residence here he gathered sheep and cooked them and then drawing out his waist knife he would carve the meat and let everyone eat 10 Li Chengqian was deposed as crown prince by Taizong after his plans to usurp the throne were revealed He was exiled by Taizong and died as a commoner 9 Turkic generals and Tang military campaigns EditMain article Tang dynasty in Inner Asia Map of Tang campaigns against the Tarim Basin oasis states The Turkic general Ashina She er led the campaigns against Karasahr and Kucha Camel with rider earthenware Tang Dynasty Statuette of an armoured Turkic soldier 8th century Turkic generals led many of the Tang Dynasty military campaigns that expanded the dynasty s territorial reach into Central Asia In total ten Turks were able to reach the highest military position of general 11 5 Ashina She er formerly the ruler of Beshbaliq and Kharakhoja between 630 and 635 and a member of the Ashina clan 12 was recruited as a Tang general in 635 He fought as a commander in a successful campaign against Karakhoja in 640 12 She er was chosen as the general for the military expedition against Karasahr The Tang loyalist that had been installed as ruler after the first invasion of Karasahr in 644 by Chinese general Guo Xiaoke was deposed by his cousin in a revolt The usurper was executed after the rebellion was suppressed and Tang governance returned to the oasis state She er continued onward to the nearby kingdom of Kucha 13 a state that had supported Karasahr during its war against the Tang 14 Emperor Taizong himself tended to the injuries of the Turkic Generals Qibi Heli and Ashina Simo who were both wounded during the campaign against Goguryeo 15 Ashina Zhong the brother of She er also served as a Turkic general of the Tang Dynasty and was a participant in a military performance hosted by Emperor Gaozong in 655 16 Another Turkic member of the Ashina clan Ashina Helu briefly served as a commander of the Tang army in Gansu before his rise as a kaghan of the Western Turkic Khaganate 17 During his reign the Turkic tribes were unified under a single leader 12 Emperor Gaozong Taizong s successor dispatched a military expedition in 657 against Helu who had been raiding Tang settlements 17 18 The campaign was led by the general Su Dingfang and the Turkic commanders Ashina Mishe and Ashina Buzhen who were opposed to Helu 18 Helu was defeated and captured by the Tang forces and the territories annexed from the Western Turks were placed under Tang governance through the Anxi Protectorate 19 20 Gaozong awarded the military service of the Turkic commanders Mishe and Buzhen by appointing them as proxy rulers of ten Western Turkic tribes The ten tribes were split between the two cousins and the western half was given to Buzhen while Mishe controlled the eastern tribes 21 In 685 the sons of Mishe and Buzhen were sent from the Tang capital of Chang an where they resided to succeed their fathers in the west 21 Neither lasted long as Turkic rulers one was overthrown by his tribal subjects and the other was deposed by the Second Turkic Khaganate after an invasion in 690 21 An Lushan was a Tang general of mixed Turkic and Soghdian ancestry whose revolt between 755 and 763 the An Shi Rebellion devastated the Tang Dynasty 22 Unlike the majority of Turkic military officers An Lushan served the Tang as an official closely involved with the politics of the imperial court rather than as a general in a garrison on the Tang frontier The dynasty might have collapsed had it not been for their alliance with the Uyghur Turks The rebellion diminished the Tang enthusiasm for cosmopolitanism that was a characteristic of the dynasty s earlier years 23 The Orkhon inscriptions a memorial erected by the Turks lamented the Tang influence on the Turks and the Turkic adoption of Chinese titles 9 The Turkish people let their state go to ruin their sons worthy of becoming lords became slaves and their daughters worthy of becoming ladies became servants to the Chinese people The Turkish lords abandoned their Turkish titles Those lords who were in China held the Chinese titles and obeyed the Chinese emperor and gave their service to him for fifty years For the benefit of the Chinese they went on campaigns up to the land of the Bukli qaghan in the east where the sun rises and as far as the Iron Gate in the West For the benefit of the Chinese emperor they conquered countries 24 9 The inscriptions made to commemorate the elites of the Second Turkic Empire stress the importance of loyalty between a kaghan and the ruler s subjects 25 The Turks that sided with the Tang are condemned 24 9 and the disunity of the Turkic tribes is blamed on a lack of respect for the authority of the kaghan 25 Historical significance Edit Turkic warrior in a mural from Tumxuk The Turkic soldiers and generals that worked in the Chinese garrisons of Central Asia spurred Turkic migration into the area The Turkic language and culture of the Tang soldiers there gradually displaced the indigenous Indo European languages The native languages of Sogdian and Tokharian disappeared as the Turkic languages spread in the Tarim Basin 26 The Tang Dynasty declined after the An Shi Rebellion and the dynasty eventually fell in 907 During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period an era of upheaval following the dynasty s collapse many of the kingdoms in China were ruled by families of Turkic ancestry 27 The Shatuo Turks founded the Later Tang in 923 the Later Jin in 936 and the Later Han in 947 28 Eventually the Han Chinese Song Dynasty conquered all the Shatuo Turks uniting all the states once again Citations Edit New Book of Tang vol 93 唐書 列傳 第十一至二五 Archived from the original on 2008 02 10 Retrieved 2007 12 18 Ebrey 2010 p 108 Lewis 2012 pp 147 148 Findley 2004 p 40 a b Twitchett 2000 p 125 a b c d Lewis 2012 p 150 Twitchett 2000 p 124 Twitchett 2000 pp 124 125 a b c d e Findley 2004 p 41 Chen 2010 p 44 Xue 1992 p 788 a b c Skaff 2009 p 181 Grousset 1970 p 99 Wechsler 1979 p 226 Skaff 2012 p 95 Skaff 2009 p 188 a b Twitchett 2000 p 116 a b Skaff 2009 p 183 Wechsler amp Twitchett 1979 p 280 Skaff 2009 p 184 a b c Skaff 2012 p 179 Millward 2007 p 36 Holcombe 2001 p 215 a b Tekin 2010 pp 53 54 a b Abramson 2008 p 41 Millward 2007 p 42 Lewis 2012 p 153 Mote 2003 pp 12 13 References EditAbramson Marc S 2008 Ethnic Identity in Tang China University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4052 8 Al Sirafi Abu Zayd 2014 Two Arabic Travel Books New York University Press Algar Ayla Esen 1992 The Dervish Lodge Architecture Art and Sufism in Ottoman Turkey University of California Press Asimov M S 1998 History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume IV The age of achievement A D 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Part One The historical social and economic setting UNESCO Publishing Azad Arezou 2013 Sacred Landscape in Medieval Afghanistan Revisiting the Faḍaʾil i Balkh OUP Oxford Barfield Thomas 1989 The Perilous Frontier Nomadic Empires and China Basil Blackwell Beckwith Christopher I 1987 The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans Turks Arabs and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages Princeton University Press Belyaev Vladimir 2014 The coinage of Qara Khitay a new evidence on the reign title of the Western Liao Emperor Yelu Yilie Russian Academy of Sciences Benson Linda 1998 China s last Nomads the history and culture of China s Kazaks M E Sharpe Biran Michal 2005 The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History Between China and the Islamic World Cambridge University Press Borelova Liliya M 2002 Manchu Grammar Brill Bosworth Clifford Edmund 2000 The Age of Achievement A D 750 to the End of the Fifteenth Century Vol 4 Part II The Achievements History of Civilizations of Central Asia UNESCO Publishing Bregel Yuri 2003 An Historical Atlas of Central Asia Brill Bughra Imin 1983 The history of East Turkestan Istanbul Istanbul publications Chen Jack Wei 2010 The Poetics of Sovereignty On Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 05608 4 Drompp Michael Robert 2005 Tang China And The Collapse Of The Uighur Empire A Documentary History Brill Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2010 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 12433 1 Esposito John L 1999 The Oxford History of Islam Oxford University Press Fiaschetti Francesca 2014 Political Strategies of Identity Building in Non Han Empires in China Harrassowitz Verlag Findley Carter Vaughn 2004 The Turks in World History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 988425 4 Golden Peter B 2011 Central Asia in World History Oxford University Press Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Hansen Valerie 2015 The Silk Road A New History Oxford University Press Haywood John 1998 Historical Atlas of the Medieval World AD 600 1492 Barnes amp Noble Holcombe Charles 2001 The Genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 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