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Western Xia

The Western Xia or the Xi Xia (Chinese: 西夏; pinyin: Xī Xià; Wade–Giles: Hsi1 Hsia4), officially the Great Xia (大夏; Dà Xià; Ta4 Hsia4), also known as the Tangut Empire, and known as Mi-nyak[6] to the Tanguts and Tibetans, was a Tangut-led Buddhist imperial dynasty of China that existed from 1038 to 1227. At its peak, the dynasty ruled over the modern-day northwestern Chinese provinces of Ningxia, Gansu, eastern Qinghai, northern Shaanxi, northeastern Xinjiang, and southwest Inner Mongolia, and southernmost Outer Mongolia, measuring about 800,000 square kilometres (310,000 square miles).[7][8][9]

Great Xia
大夏
(白高大夏國)
(大白高國)
1038–1227
Location of Western Xia in 1111 (green in north west)
Western Xia in 1150
CapitalXingqing (modern Yinchuan)
Common languagesTangut, Chinese
Religion
Primary:
Buddhism
Secondary:
Taoism
Confucianism
Chinese folk religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Emperor 
• 1038–1048
Emperor Jingzong (founder)
• 1139–1193
Emperor Renzong (longest-reigned)
• 1226–1227
Li Xian (last)
Historical eraPost-classical history
• Li Jiqian rebels against Song dynasty
984
• Dynasty established by Emperor Jingzong
1038
• Subjugated by Mongol Empire
1210
• Destroyed by Mongol Empire after rebellion
1227
Area
1100 est.[1]1,000,000 km2 (390,000 sq mi)
Population
• peak
3,000,000[2][3][4]
CurrencyBarter with some copper coins in the cities[5]
(see: Western Xia coinage)
Today part ofChina
Mongolia
East Asia and Central Asia in AD 1142: the Southern Song dynasty in orange (  ); the Jin dynasty in grey (  ) in the northeast; the Western Xia in turquoise (  ) and the Western Liao (Qara Khitai) in lime green (  ) in the northwest; and the Dali Kingdom in dark green (  ) in the southwest.

The capital of Western Xia was Xingqing (modern Yinchuan); another major Xia city and archaeological site is Khara-Khoto. Western Xia was annihilated by the Mongols in 1227. Most of its written records and architecture were destroyed, so the founders and history of the empire remained obscure until 20th-century research in China and the West. Today the Tangut language and its unique script are extinct, only fragments of Tangut literature remain.

The Western Xia occupied the area around the Hexi Corridor, a stretch of the Silk Road, the most important trade route between northern China and Central Asia. They made significant achievements in literature, art, music, and architecture, which was characterized as "shining and sparkling".[10] Their extensive stance among the other empires of the Liao, Song, and Jin was attributable to their effective military organizations that integrated cavalry, chariots, archery, shields, artillery (cannons carried on the back of camels), and amphibious troops for combat on land and water.[11]

Name edit

The full title of the Western Xia as named by their own state is L1572 L1890 L2937 L4456 reconstructed as /*phiow¹-bjij²-lhjij-lhjij²/, which word by word denotes "white", "high", "kingdom", "great", or 𗴂𗹭𘜶𗴲𗂧, "white", "high", "great", "summer", "kingdom". The corresponding Chinese name, 白高大夏國 ("White High Great Xia State"), was also used. Chinese and Japanese scholars commonly interpret the first two words as "upper reaches of the White River", which was possibly referring to the Yellow River.[12] Kepping (1994) proposed the translation "the Kingdom of the Great Xia of the White and Lofty", and suggested that the name refers to a peak in the Helan Mountains named the "White and Lofty Mother".[13] The region was known to the Tanguts as /mjɨ-njaa/, and to the Tibetans as Minyak.[6][14] Another name the Tanguts used for their state was /khjɨ-dwuu-lhjij/ (萬祕國), which means the "State of Ten Thousand Secrets".[13] "Western Xia" or "Xi Xia" is the state's Chinese name. "Western" refers to its location to the west of the Liao (916–1125) and Jin (1115–1234) dynasties, as well as the Song. "Xia" (pointing to the Xia dynasty) is a historical name for the region that originated from the 5th-century Hu Xia dynasty.[15]

The name Tangut is derived from a form first found in the Orkhon inscriptions dated to 735, which is transcribed in Chinese as Tangwu or Tangute (Tangghut (Tangɣud) in Mongolian). Tangut was used a common name for certain tribes in the Amdo-Kokonor-Gansu region until the 19th century. The Tanguts called themselves Minag, transcribed in Chinese as Mianyao or Miyao.[16]

History edit

 
Tangut officials

Origins edit

The Tanguts originally came from the Qinghai-Sichuan-Tibet region, whose home originally was in the highlands of western Sichuan.[17] According to Chinese records, which called them the Dangxiang, the Tanguts were descended from the Western Qiang people, and occupied the steppes around Qinghai Lake and the mountains to its south.[16]

In 608, the Tanguts helped the Sui dynasty defeat the Tuyuhun, however they were betrayed by the Sui forces, who took the chance to loot the Tanguts. In 635, they were requested to serve as guides for Emperor Taizong's campaign against Tuyuhun, but the Tang forces double crossed them in a surprise attack and seized thousands of livestock. In retaliation, the Tanguts attacked the Tang and killed thousands of their soldiers.[18]

By the 650s, the Tanguts had left their homeland to escape pressure from the Tibetans and migrated eastward to what are now modern Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces. In 584-5 Tuoba Ningzong led the first group of Tanguts to submit to the Sui. In 628-9 another group under the leadership of Xifeng Bulai surrendered to the Tang. After the Tuyuhun were defeated in 635, the Tanguts under Tuoba Chici also surrendered. The 340,000 Tanguts were divided into 32 jimi prefectures under the control of Tangut chieftains appointed as prefects. Another wave of Tanguts entered Tang territory in 692, adding as many as 200,000 persons to the population in Lingzhou and Xiazhou. In 721-2, Tuoba Sitai, a descendant of Tuoba Chici, aided the Tang in putting down a Sogdian-led revolt in Shuofang.[19] By the time of the An Lushan Rebellion in the 750s, the Tanguts had become the primary local power in the Ordos region in northern Shaanxi. In the 760s, the military commander, Ashina Sijian, harassed six Tangut tribes and took their camels and horses. The Tanguts fled west across the Yellow River and started working for the Tibetans as guides on raiding expeditions. In 764, the Tanguts joined the Tibetans and Uyghurs in supporting the Tang rebel Pugu Huaien.[18] After the Tang reasserted their authority, a descendant of Tuoba Chici, Tuoba Chaoguang, was put in charge of the loyal Tanguts. The Yeli, Bali, and Bozhou clans continued to side with the Tibetans, however the Tanguts also came under Tibetan predation, and frontier settlements continued switching between Tang and Tibetan control for many years.[20] In 806, the Acting Minister of Works, Du You, admitted that they treated the Tanguts badly:

In recent years, corrupt frontier generals have repeatedly harassed and mistreated [the Tanguts]. Some profited from [unfair trading in] their fine horses; some seized their sons and daughters. Some accepted their local products as bribes, and some imposed corvée on them. Having suffered so much hardship, the Tanguts rebelled and fled. They either sent envoys to contact the Uighurs or cooperated with the Tibetans to raid our borders. These are the consequences of [Tang frontier generals’ wrong] deeds. We must discipline them.[21]

— Du You

In 814 the Tang appointed a Commissioner for Pacifying the Tanguts to Youzhou (modern Otog Banner), however this did not resolve the Tangut problem. In 820 the Tanguts were subjected to the tyranny of a local governor, Tian Jin. They retaliated by joining the Tibetans in raids on Tang garrisons. Sporadic conflict with the Tanguts lasted until the 840s when they rose in open revolt against the Tang, but the rebellion was suppressed. Eventually the Tang court was able to mollify the Tanguts by admonishing their frontier generals and replacing them with more disciplined ones.[22] The Tanguts also fought against the Uyghurs after the collapse of the Uyghur Khaganate because they both wanted to monopolize the horse trade which passed through Lingzhou.[23]

Dingnan Jiedushi edit

In 873, the senior Tangut leader at Xiazhou, Tuoba Sigong, occupied Youzhou and declared himself prefect. When Chang'an fell to Huang Chao in 880, Sigong led a Chinese-Tangut army to assist Tang forces in driving out the rebels. For his service, he was granted in 881 control of Xiazhou, Youzhou, Suizhou, Yinzhou, and later also Jingbian. Together the territory was called Dingnan Jiedushi, also known as Xiasui, centered on modern Yulin, Shaanxi. After the Huang Chao rebellion's defeat in 883, Sigong was granted the dynastic surname Li and enfeoffed as "Duke of Xia". In 878, the Shatuo chieftain Li Guochang attacked the Tanguts but was repelled by a Tuyuhun intervention.[24]

 
Xixia stone inscriptions

Sigong died in 886 and was succeeded by his brother Sijian. In 905 Li Keyong's independent regime allied with the Khitans, which pushed the Tanguts into an alliance with Later Liang, which awarded the Dingnan rulers with honorary titles. Sijian died in 908 and was succeeded by his adopted son Yichang, who was murdered by his officer Gao Zongyi in 909. Gao Zongyi was himself murdered by soldiers of Dingnan and was replaced by Yichang's uncle, Renfu, who was a popular officer in the army. In 910 Dingnan came under a monthlong siege by the forces of Qi and Jin but was able to repel the invasion with the aid of Later Liang. In 922 Renfu sent 500 horses to Luoyang, perhaps to aid the Later Liang in fighting the Shatuo. In 924 Renfu was enfeoffed as "Prince of Shuofang" by Later Tang. When Renfu died in 933, Later Tang tried to replace his son, Yichao, with a Sogdian governor, An Congjin. An Congjin besieged Xiazhou with 50,000 soldiers, but the Tanguts mounted a successful defensive by rallying the tribes and stripping the countryside of any resources. The Later Tang army was forced to retreat after three months. Despite Later Tang aggression, Yichao made peace with them by sending 50 horses as an offering.[25]

Yichao died in 935 and was succeeded by his brother Yixing. Yixing discovered a plot by his brother, Yimin, to overthrow him in 943. Yimin fled to Chinese territory, but was returned to Xiazhou for execution. Over 200 clan members were implicated in the plot, resulting in a purge of the core ranks. Yimin's post was taken by a loyal official, Renyu. Not long afterward, Renyu was killed by the Yemu Qiang, who departed for Chinese territory. In 944 Yixing may have attacked the Liao dynasty on behalf of the Later Jin. The sources are not clear on the event. In 948 Yixing requested permission to cross the border and attack the Yemu Qiang but was refused. Instead Yixing attacked a neighboring circuit under encouragement from the rebel Li Shouzhen, but retreated upon encountering an imperial force. In 952 the Yeji people north of Qingzhou rebelled, causing the Tanguts significant difficulty. Honorary titles were given out by the Later Han to appease local commanders, including Yixing. In 960 Dingnan came under attack by Northern Han and successfully repelled invading forces. In 962 Yixing offered horses as tribute to the Song dynasty. Yixing died in 967 and was succeeded by his son, Kerui.[26]

Kerui died in 978 and was succeeded by Jiyun. Jiyun ruled for only a year before dying in 980. His son was still an infant, so Jiyun's brother, Jipeng, assumed leadership. Jipeng did not go through the traditional channel of acquiring consent from the elders, which caused dissent among the Tangut elites. The Tangut prefect of Suizhou challenged Jipeng's succession. In 982 Jipeng fled to the Song court and surrendered control of Dingnan Jiedushi. His brother or cousin, Jiqian, did not agree to this and refused to submit to Song administration. Jiqian led a group of bandit holdouts and resisted Song control. In 984, the Song attacked his camp and captured his mother and wife, but he narrowly escaped. He rebounded from this defeat by capturing Yinzhou the next year.[27] Along with Yinzhou, Jiqian captured large amounts of supply, allowing him to increase his following. In 986, Jiqian submitted to the Khitans and in 989, Jiqian married into Khitan nobility.[28] Jiqian also made symbolic obeisance to the Song, but the Song remained unconvinced of his intentions. Jipeng was sent by the Song to destroy Jiqian, but he was defeated in battle on 6 May 994, and fled back to Xiazhou. Jiqian sent tribute on 9 September as well as his younger brother on 1 October to the Song court. Emperor Taizong of Song was receptive of these gestures, but Jiqian returned to raiding Song territory the next year. In April 996, Taizong sent troops to suppress Jiqian, who raided Lingzhou in May and again in November 997. For a brief period after 998, Jiqian accepted Song suzerainty, until the fall of 1001 when he began raiding again. Jiqian died on 6 January 1004 from an arrow wound. His son and successor, Deming, proved to be more amicable towards the Song than his predecessor.[29]

Jingzong (1038–1048) edit

 
Western Xia painting on silk depicting the Daoist deity Emperor Xuanwu, discovered in the Hongfo Pagoda in 1990

Deming sent tribute missions to both the Liao dynasty and the Song dynasty. At the same time he expanded Tangut territory to the west. In 1028, he sent his son Yuanhao to conquer the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom. Two years later the Guiyi Circuit surrendered to the Tanguts. Yuanhao invaded the Qinghai region as well but was repelled by the newly risen Tibetan kingdom of Tsongkha. In 1032, Yuanhao annexed the Tibetan confederation of Xiliangfu, and soon after his father died, leaving him ruler of the Tangut state.[30]

Upon his father's death, Yuanhao adopted the Tangut surname of Weiming (Tangut: Nweimi) for his clan. He levied all able bodied men between 15 and 60 years of age, providing him with a 150,000 strong army. By 1036, he had annexed both the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom and the Guiyi Circuit to his west. In the same year, the Tangut script was disseminated for use in the Tangut government and translations of Chinese and Tibetan works began at once. The script's creation is attributed to Yeli Renrong and work on it likely began during the reign of Deming.[31]

In 1038, Yuanhao declared himself emperor (wu zu or Blue Son of Heaven), posthumously Emperor Jingzong of Western Xia, of the Great Xia with his capital at Xingqing in modern Yinchuan. Jingzong expanded the bureaucratic apparatus mirroring Chinese institutional practices. A Secretariat (Zhongshu sheng), Bureau of Military Affairs (Shumi yuan), Finance Office (San si), Censorate (Yushi tai), and 16 bureaus (shiliu si) under the supervision of a chancellor (shangshu ling) were created. Jingzong enacted a head shaving decree that ordered all his countrymen to shave the top of their heads so that if within three days, someone had not followed his order, they were allowed to be killed.[32]

In response, the Song dynasty offered to bestow ranks on the Tanguts, which Jingzong rejected. The Song then cut off border trade and put a bounty on his head.[33][34] The Xia's chief military leader, Weiming Shanyu, also fled to seek asylum with the Song, however he was executed at Youzhou.[32] What ensued was a prolonged war with the Song dynasty which resulted in several victories at great cost to the Xia economy.

Beyond establishing a Chinese-style central government for the militarized kingdom (which included sixteen bureaus), he also designated eighteen military control commissions spread among five military zones: (1) 70,000 soldiers to deal with the Liao, (2) 50,000 assigned to deal with Huan, Qing, Zhenrong, and Yuan prefectures, (3) 50,000 opposite Fuyan circuit and Lin and Fu[1] prefectures, (4) 30,000 to deal with the Xifan and Huige to the west, and (5) 50,000 in the eastern skirtlands of Helan Mountains, 50,000 at Ling, and 70,000 spread between Xing prefecture and Xingqing fu, or superior prefecture. Altogether Yuanhao had as many as 370,000 men under arms. These were mounted forces, which had been stretched thin by hard warfare and probably excessive use of non-warrior horsemen impressed to fill the army. He maintained a six-unit bodyguard of 5,000 and his elite cavalry force, Iron Cavalry (tieqi) of 3,000. It was a fearful concentration of military might overlaying a relatively shallow economic base.[35]

— Michael C. McGrath
 
Painting of a warrior from a late Western Xia tomb in Gansu

In the winter of 1039–1040, Jingzong laid siege to Yanzhou (now Yan'an) with over 100,000 troops. The prefect of Yanzhou, Fan Yong, gave contradictory orders to his military deputy, Liu Ping, making him move his forces (9,000) in random directions until they were defeated by Xia forces (50,000) at Sanchuan Pass. Liu Ping was taken captive.[36] Despite the defenders' mediocre performance, Jingzong was forced to lift the siege and retreat to a ring of forts overlooking Yanzhou, when heavy winter snows set in.[37] A Song army of 30,000 returned later that winter under the command of Ren Fu. They were ambushed at Haoshuichuan and annihilated.[38] Despite such victories, Jingzong failed to make any headway against Song fortifications, garrisoned by 200,000 troops on rotation from the capital,[39] and remained unable to seize any territory.[40] In 1042, Jingzong advanced south and surrounded the fort of Dingchuan.[41] The defending commander Ge Huaimin lost his nerve and decided to run, abandoning his troops to be slaughtered.[42] Again, Jingzong failed to gain significant territory. Half his soldiers had died from attrition and after two years, Xia could no longer support his military endeavors. Tangut forces began suffering small defeats, being turned back by Song forces at Weizhou and Linzhou.[43]

By 1043, there were several hundred thousand trained local archer and crossbow militiamen in Shaanxi, and their archery skills were now generally effective. Crucial to defense (or offense) was the use of local non-Chinese allies to screen Song from the monetary costs and social costs of full-scale war. By mid-1042, the accumulated efforts of men like Fan Zhongyan and others to entice the fan to settle in the in-between areas were paying off. The fan generally and the Qiang specifically were siding with the Song much more than with the Xia at this point. By now, also, there were enough forts and walled cities to limit Yuanhao’s maneuverability and to improve mutual support against him.[44]

— Michael C. McGrath

The Liao dynasty took advantage of the Song's dire predicaments by increasing annual tribute payments by 100,000 units of silk and silver (each).[43] The Song appealed to the Liao for help, and as a result, Emperor Xingzong of Liao invaded Western Xia with a force of 100,000 in 1044.[45] Liao forces enjoyed an initial victory but failed to take the Xia capital and were brutally mauled by Jingzong's defenders.[46] According to Song spies, there was a succession of carts bearing Liao dead across the desert.[47] Having exhausted his resources, Jingzong made peace with the Song, who recognized him as the ruler of Xia lands and agreed to pay an annual tribute of 250,000 units of silk, silver, and tea.[47]

Toward the end of the war, Jingzong took the intended bride of his son, Lady Moyi, as his concubine. Jingzong's designated heir, Ninglingge, was the son of the Yeli empress, whose uncle Yeli Wangrong was concerned about the development. Ninglingge was thus arranged to marry the daughter of Wangrong, who planned to kill the emperor on the eve of the wedding. The plot leaked and Wangrong as well as four other Yeli conspirators were executed. The Yeli empress was demoted and Lady Moyi was installed in her place. Another concubine, Lady Mocang, bore the emperor a male child in 1047, named Liangzuo, who was raised by Mocang Epang. The disinherited heir apparent stabbed Jingzong in the nose and fled to Mocang Epang's residence where he was arrested and executed. Jingzong died the next day on 19 January 1048 at the age of 44.[48]

Yizong (1048–1068) edit

 
Western Xia explosive caltrop

After Emperor Jingzong of Western Xia died in 1048, a council of elders selected his cousin as the new ruler. Mocang Epang objected on grounds of primogeniture and put forth his nephew, the son of Jingzong and Lady Mocang, as candidate. No dissent was forthcoming, so the two-year-old Liangzuo became emperor, posthumously known as Emperor Yizong of Western Xia.[49] In 1056 the empress dowager died. In 1061 Yizong eliminated Mocang Epang and married Lady Liang, formerly the wife of Epang's son. Yizong appointed Lady Liang's brother, Liang Yimai, as palace minister. This would start two generations of Liang dominance in Xia. During Yizong's reign, he attempted to enact more Chinese forms of governance by replacing Tangut rites with Chinese court ritual and dress, which was opposed by the Liang faction that favored Tangut forms. At the same time, Song and Xia emissaries regularly exchanged insults.[50] The emperor supported sinification through the import of Chinese books, revived the use of his Chinese surname Li and other Chinese protocols, and pursued accommodation with the Song dynasty in border disputes and opening of trade. However, these diplomatic overtures were squandered by arrogant Song representatives who insulted the Xia envoy. The Liang clan was reportedly of Han Chinese ancestry, albeit assimilated into Tangut culture, but their faction would later lead the opposition to the pro-Chinese policy.[51] The Han Chinese empresses of the Liang clan, Paul Forage notes, were more aggressive in their stance against the Song dynasty than the emperors they were representing.[52]

In 1064, Yizong raided the Song dynasty. In the fall of 1066, he mounted two more raids and in September, an attack on Qingzhou was launched. The Tangut forces destroyed several fortified settlements. Song forces were surrounded for three days before cavalry reinforcements arrived. Yizong was wounded by a crossbow and forced to retreat. Tangut forces attempted another raid later on but failed, and a night attack by Song forces scattered the Tangut army. Yizong regrouped at Qingtang and launched another attack on Qingzhou in December but withdrew after threats by Emperor Yingzong of Song to escalate the conflict.[53] The next year, the Song commander Chong E attacked and captured Suizhou.[54]

Yizong died in January 1068, presumably from his wounds, at the age of 20.[50]

Huizong (1068–1086) edit

 
Bronze Xia seals bearing the Tangut seal script characters 𗥦𗖅 (ɣu sjwi) "commander"
 
Impression of the "commander" seal

The seven-year-old Bingchang, posthumously Emperor Huizong of Western Xia, succeeded his father, Emperor Yizong of Western Xia.[50] Huizong's reign began with an inconclusive war with the Song dynasty in 1070-1 over Suizhou.[55] In 1072 Huizong's sister was married to Linbuzhi (Rinpoche), the son of the Tsongkha ruler, Dongzhan. These events occurred under the regency of the Empress Dowager Liang and her brother, Liang Yimai. Huizong was married to one of Yimai's daughters to ensure the continued control of the Liang over the imperial Weiming clan. In 1080 Huizong rebelled against his mother's dominance by discarding with Tangut ritual in favor of Chinese ceremonies. A year later a plot by Huizong and his concubine, Li Qing, to turn over the Xia's southern territory to the Song was uncovered. Li Qing was executed and Huizong was imprisoned. The emperor's loyalists immediately rallied their forces to oppose Liang rule while Yimai tried to in vain to summon them with the imperial silver paiza.[56]

Seeing the infighting breaking out in the Xia, the Song decided to go on the offensive.[51] In 1081, the Song dynasty launched a five-pronged attack on the Xia. After initial victories, Song forces failed to take the capital of Xia, Xingqing, and remained on the defensive for the next three years. Xia counterattacks also experienced initial success before failing to take Lanzhou multiple times. In 1085, the war ended with the death of Emperor Shenzong of Song.

In the summer of 1081, the five Song armies invaded Western Xia. Chong E defeated a Xia army, killing 8,000.[57] In October, Li Xian took Lanzhou.[57][58] On 15 October, Liu Changzuo's 50,000 strong army met a Xia force of 30,000 led by the Empress Regent Liang's brother. Liu's commanders advised him to take a defensive position, but he refused, and led a contingent of shield warriors with two ranks of crossbowmen and cavalry behind, with himself leading at the front with two shields. The battle lasted for several hours before the Xia forces retreated, suffering 2,700 casualties.[59] Afterwards, Liu captured a large supply of millet at the town of Mingsha, and headed towards Lingzhou.[59] Liu's vanguard attacked the town's gate before the defenders had a chance to close it, dealing several hundred casualties, and seizing more than 1,000 cattle before retreating. Liu wanted Gao Zunyu to help him take Lingzhou, but Gao refused. Then Liu suggested they take the Xia capital instead, to which Gao also refused, and instead took it as a slight that he could not take Lingzhou. Gao relayed his version of events to the Song court, then had Liu removed from command, merging the two forces.[60]

By November, the Xia had abandoned the middle of the Ordos plateau, losing Xiazhou.[57] On 20 November, Wang Zhongzheng took Youzhou and slaughtered its inhabitants.[57] At this point Wang became concerned that he would run out of supplies and quarreled with Chong E over provisions. He also forbade his troops from cooking their meals because he feared it would alert Xia raiders of their position. His troops became ill from their uncooked food, started to starve, and came under attack by enemy cavalry anyway. Wang was ordered to withdraw while Chong E covered his retreat. Wang lost 20,000 men.[61]

On 8 December, Gao Zunyu decided to attack Lingzhou, only to realize he had forgotten to bring any siege equipment, and there were not enough trees around for their construction. Gao took out his frustration on Liu Changzuo, who he tried to have executed. Liu's troops were on the verge of mutiny before Fan Chuncui, a Circuit judge, convinced Gao to reconcile with Liu. On 21 December, Xia forces breached the dikes along the Yellow River and flooded the camps of the two besieging Song armies, forcing them to retreat. Xia harassment turned the retreat into a rout.[61][62]

By the end of 1081, only Chong E remained in active command.[61] In September 1082, the Xia counterattacked with a 300,000 strong army, laying siege to Yongle, a fortress town west of Mizhi. The Xia sent out cavalry to prevent Song relief attempts. The defending commander, Xu Xi, deployed his troops outside the town gates but refused to attack the enemy troops while they forded the river. Then he refused to let his troops in when the Tangut Iron Hawk cavalry attacked, decimating the defending army. With the capture of Yongle, the Song lost 17,300 troops.[63]

In March 1083, Xia forces attacked Lanzhou. The defending commander, Wang Wenyu, led a small contingent out at night and made a surprise attack on the Xia encampment, forcing them to retreat. The Tanguts made two more attempts to take Lanzhou in April and May but failed on both accounts. Their simultaneous attack on Linzhou also failed.[64] After multiple defeats, the Xia offered peace demands to the Song, which they refused.[64] In January 1084, Xia forces made a last attempt to take Lanzhou. The siege lasted for 10 days before the Tangut army ran out of supplies and was forced to retreat.[64]

The war ended in 1085 with the death of Emperor Shenzong in April. In exchange for 100 Chinese prisoners, the Song returned four of the six captured towns. Hostilities between the Song and Xia would flare up again five years later, and conflict would continue sporadically until the Song lost Kaifeng in the Jingkang incident of 1127.[64]

Huizong was returned to his throne in 1083. Liang Yimai died in 1085 and his son, Liang Qipu, succeeded his position as chief minister. The Empress Dowager Liang also died later that year. In 1086 Huizong passed away at the age of 26.[65]

Chongzong (1086–1139) edit

 
Western Xia paiza with four Tangut characters reading 𗿢𗯼𘆝𗪊 "By imperial command, a pass to burn the horses" (i.e. to ride with great urgency)

The three-year-old Qianshun succeeded his father, Emperor Huizong of Western Xia, as emperor, posthumously Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia. His mother, the new Empress Dowager Liang, the younger sister of Liang Qipu, ruled as regent. The Song dynasty continued to campaign against the Xia in 1091 and 1093. In 1094, Rende Baozhuang and Weiming Awu slew Liang Qipu and exterminated his clan. In 1096 the Song stopped paying tribute to the Xia and the next year, launched an "advance and fortify" campaign centered on guarding key locations along river valleys and mountains to erode the Xia position. From 1097 to 1099, the Song army constructed 40 fortifications across the Ordos plateau. In 1098, the Empress Regent Liang sent a 100,000 strong army to recapture Pingxia. The Tangut army was completely defeated in their attempt to dislodge the Song from their high ground position, and their generals Weiming Amai and Meiledubu were both captured.[66] Empress Dowager Liang died in 1099, apparently poisoned by assassins from the Liao dynasty. At the same time, the Tanguts were also involved in a war with the Zubu to their north.[65]

In 1103, the Song annexed Tsongkha and spent the following year weeding out native resistance. The expansion of Song territory threatened the Xia's southern border, resulting in Tangut incursions in 1104 and 1105. Eventually the Xia launched an all out attack on Lanzhou and Qingtang. However, after the Advance and Fortify campaign of 1097–1099, Xia forces were no longer able to defeat Song positions. Failing to take major cities, the Tangut forces went on a rampage, killing tens of thousands of local civilians. The next year, Chongzong made peace with the Song, but was unable to clearly demarcate their borders, leading to another war in 1113.[67]

In 1113, the Xia started building fortifications in disputed territory with the Song, and took the Qingtang region. Incensed at this provocation, Emperor Huizong of Song dispatched Tong Guan to evict the Tanguts. In 1115, 150,000 troops under the command of Liu Fa penetrated deep into Xia territory and slaughtered the Tangut garrison at Gugulong. Meanwhile, Wang Hou and Liu Chongwu attacked the newly built Tangut fortress of Zangdihe. The siege ended in failure and the death of half the invasion force. Wang bribed Tong to keep the number of casualties a secret from the emperor. The next year, Liu Fa and Liu Chongwu took a walled Tangut city called Rendequan. Another 100,000 troops were sent against Zangdihe and succeeded in taking the fortress. The Xia made a successful counterattack in the winter of 1116–1117. Despite piling casualties on the Song side, Tong was adamant about eradicating the Xia once and for all. He gave orders for Liu Fa to lead 200,000 into the heart of the Xia empire, aiming straight at the capital region. It quickly became apparent that this was a suicide mission. The Song army was met outside the city by an even larger Tangut army led by the Xia prince, Chage. The Tangut army surrounded the Song forces, killing half of them, with the remaining falling back during the night. The Tanguts pursued the Song and defeated them again the next day. Liu was beheaded. A ceasefire was called in 1119 and Huizong issued an apology to Xia.[68]

In 1122, the Jürchen Jin dynasty took the Southern Capital of the Liao dynasty, and the remaining Khitans fled in two groups to the west. One group led by Xiao Gan fled to Xia where they set up a short lived Xi dynasty that lasted only five months before Gan died at the hands of his own troops. The other group, led by Yelü Dashi, joined Emperor Tianzuo of Liao at the Xia border. In the early summer of 1123, Dashi was captured by the Jin and forced to lead them to Tianzuo's camp, where the entire imperial family except for Tianzuo and one son were captured. Tianzuo sought refuge with Chongzong, who while initially receptive, changed his mind after warnings from the Jurchens and declared himself a vassal of Jin in 1124.[69]

Domestically the reign of Chongzong saw a formal consolidation of the relationship between the imperial court and the great clans, whose positions were assured in legal documents. After his mother's death in 1099, Chongzong stripped the Rende clan of its military power. Rende Baozhuang was demoted. Chongzong's brother, Chage, was given command of the Tangut army, which he led to many victories against the Song. A state school was established with 300 students supported by government stipends. A "civilian" faction arose under the leadership of the imperial Prince Weiming Renzhong, who often denounced Chage for corruption and abuse of power. Chongzong shuffled appointments to play the two factions against each other. In 1105, Chongzong married a Liao princess, who along with her son, apparently died of heartbreak in 1125 when the Khitan emperor was captured by the Jurchens. In 1138, the penultimate year of his reign, Chongzong took the daughter of Ren Dejing as his empress.[70]

Chongzong died at the age of 56 in the summer of 1139.[71]

Renzong (1139–1193) edit

 
Western Xia coin c. 1149-1169
 
Praying Tangut man

The 16-year-old Renxiao succeeded his father, Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia, as emperor, posthumously Emperor Renzong of Western Xia. His mother was the Chinese concubine, Lady Cao.[71]

In 1140 a group of Khitan exiles led by Xiao Heda rebelled. The Xia forces under Ren Dejing crushed them. Renzong wanted to reward Ren with a palace appointment but his councilor, Weiming Renzhong, convinced him to keep him as a field commander.[71]

In 1142-3 famine and earthquake caused unrest in Xiazhou. Renzong responded with tax remissions and relief measures.[71]

In 1144 Renzong decreed the establishment of schools throughout the country and a secondary school opened for imperial scions aged seven to fifteen. A Superior School of Chinese Learning was opened the following year and Confucian temples were built throughout the land. In 1147 imperial examinations were instituted, although Tangut records do discuss using them for selection of officials. The Tangut law code only discusses inheritance of office and rank. In 1148 an Inner Academy was established and staffed with renowned scholars.[72] Renzong also greatly patronized Buddhist learning. The majority of the Tangut Tripitaka was completed during his reign. In 1189, the 50th anniversary of Renzong's accession, 100,000 copies of the "Sutra on the visualization of the Maitreya Bodhisattva's ascent and rebirth in Tushita Heaven" (Guan Mile pusa shang sheng Toushuai tian jing) was printed and distributed in both Chinese and Tangut, and 50,000 copies of other sutras were also printed.[73]

After the deaths of Renzhong and Chage in 1156, Ren Dejing rose through the ranks and became very powerful. In 1160 he obtained the noble title of Chu, the first Chinese to do so in the Tangut state. Ren tried to have the schools shut down and called them useless Chinese institutions wasting resources on parasitic scholars. It is unknown how the emperor responded but the schools were not closed. In 1161 the emperor opened a Hanlin Academy to compile the Xia historical records.[74]

In 1161-2 the Tanguts briefly occupied territory of both the Jurchen Jin dynasty and Song dynasty during the Jin–Song Wars.[75]

From 1165 to 1170, Ren Dejing tried to establish his own semi-autonomous realm, and in the process meddled in the affairs of the Zhuanglang tribes, who lived in the border region of the Tao River valley. He also tried to enlist the help of the Jurchens, but they refused his overtures. Ren started construction of fortifications along the Jin border. In 1170 Ren pressured Renzong to grant him the eastern half of the realm as well as for Emperor Shizong of Jin to grant him investiture. In the summer of that year, Renzong's men secretly rounded up Ren Dejing and his adherents, executing them.[76]

Wo Daochong succeeded Ren Dejing as chief minister. A Confucian scholar, he translated the Analects and provided commentary to it in the Tangut language. Upon his death, Renzong honored him by having his portrait displayed in all the Confucian temples and schools.[77]

The Jurchens closed down border markets in Lanzhou and Baoan in 1172 and would not reopen them until 1197. They accused the Tanguts of trading worthless gems and jades for their silk. Tangut border raids increased during this period until the Jurchens reopened one market in 1181. In 1191 some Tangut herdsmen strayed into Jurchen territory and was chased away by a Jin patrol. They them ambushed and killed the pursuing patrol officer. Renzong refused to extradite the herdsmen and assured the Jurchens that they would be punished.[78]

Renzong died in 1193 at the age of 70.[78]

Huanzong (1193–1206) edit

 
The Tangut Emperor and a boy, 13th century

The 17-year-old Chunyou succeeded his father, Emperor Renzong of Western Xia, as emperor, posthumously Emperor Huanzong of Western Xia. Little besides the rise of Temüjin and his conflict with Western Xia is known about Huanzong's reign. In 1203, Toghrul was defeated by Temüjin. Toghrul's son, Nilqa Senggum, fled through Tangut territory and although the Tanguts refused to provide him with refuge, and he raided their territory, Temüjin used this as pretext to raid Western Xia. The resulting attack in 1205 caused one local Tangut noble to defect to the Mongols, the plundering of several fortified settlements, and loss of livestock.[79][80][81]

In 1206, Temüjin was formally proclaimed Genghis Khan, ruler of all Mongols, marking the official start of the Mongol Empire. In the same year, Huanzong was deposed in a coup by his cousin Anquan, who installed himself as Emperor Xiangzong of Western Xia. Huanzong died much later in captivity.[82]

Xiangzong (1206–1211) edit

In 1207, Genghis led another raid into Western Xia, invading the Ordos Loop and sacking Wulahai, the main garrison along the Yellow River, before withdrawing in the spring of 1208.[83] The Tanguts tried to form a united front with the Jurchen Jin dynasty against the Mongols, but the usurper monarch, Wanyan Yongji, refused to cooperate and declared that it was to their advantage that enemies attack one another.[82]

In the autumn of 1209, Genghis received the submission of the Uyghurs to the west and invaded Western Xia. After defeating an army led by Gao Lianghui outside Wulahai, Genghis captured the city and pushed up along the Yellow River, capturing several garrisons and defeating another imperial army. The Mongols besieged the capital, Zhongxing, which held a well-fortified garrison of 150,000,[84] and attempted to flood the city by diverting the Yellow River. The dike they built broke and flooded the Mongol camp, forcing them to withdraw.[80] In 1210, Xiangzong agreed to submit to Mongol rule, and demonstrated his loyalty by giving a daughter, Chaka, in marriage to Genghis and paying a tribute of camels, falcons, and textiles.[85]

After their defeat in 1210, Western Xia attacked the Jin dynasty in response to their refusal to aid them against the Mongols.[86] The following year, the Mongols joined Western Xia and began a 23-year-long campaign against Jin. In the same year Xiangzong's nephew Zunxu seized power in a coup and became Emperor Shenzong of Western Xia. Xiangzong died a month later.[87]

Shenzong (1211–1223) edit

Emperor Shenzong of Western Xia was the first person in the imperial family to pass the palace examinations and receive a jinshi degree.[87]

Shenzong appeased the Mongols by attacking the Jurchens and in 1214, supported a rebellion against the Jurchens. In 1216, Western Xia provided auxiliary troops to the Mongols for an attack on Jin territory. The Tanguts also invited the Song dynasty to join them in attacking the Jin, but nothing came of this except an aborted joint action in 1220. The antagonistic policy towards the Jurchen Jin was unpopular at court, as was cooperating with the Mongols. A certain Asha Gambu emerged as an outspoken proponent of anti-Mongol policy. In the winter of 1217-18, the Mongols called on Western Xia to provide them troops for campaigns further west, but they refused to comply. No immediate retaliation occurred since Genghis left for the west in 1219 and left Muqali in charge of North China. In 1223, Muqali died. At the same time, Shenzong abdicated to his son, Dewang, posthumously Emperor Xianzong of Western Xia.[88]

Xianzong (1223–1226) edit

 
Western Xia mail armour

Emperor Xianzong of Western Xia began peace talks with the Jurchen Jin in 1224 and the peace agreement was finalized in the fall of 1225. The Tanguts continued to defy the Mongols by refusing to send a hostage prince to the Mongol court.[88]

After defeating Khwarazm in 1221, Genghis prepared his armies to punish Western Xia. In 1225, Genghis attacked with a force of approximately 180,000.[89] According to the Secret History of the Mongols, Genghis was injured in 1225 during a horse hunt when his horse bolted from under him. Genghis then tried to offer Western Xia the chance to willingly submit, but Asha Gambhu mocked the Mongols and challenged them to battle. Genghis pledged to avenge this insult.[90] Genghis ordered his generals to systematically destroy cities and garrisons as they went.[91]

Genghis divided his army and sent general Subutai to take care of the westernmost cities, while the main force under Genghis moved east into the heart of the Western Xia and took Suzhou and Ganzhou, which was spared destruction upon its capture due to it being the hometown of Genghis's commander Chagaan.[92] After taking Khara-Khoto in early 1226, the Mongols began a steady advance southward. Asha, commander of the Western Xia troops, could not afford to meet the Mongols as it would involve an exhausting westward march from the capital through 500 kilometers of desert, so the Mongols steadily advanced from city to city.[93]

In August 1226, Mongol troops approached Liangzhou, the second-largest city in Western Xia, which surrendered without resistance.[94] In autumn 1226, Genghis crossed the Helan Mountains, and in November laid siege to Lingwu, a mere 30 kilometers from the capital.[95] At this point, Xianzong died, leaving his relative, Xian, posthumously Emperor Mozhu of Western Xia, to deal with the Mongol invasion.[96]

Mo (1226–1227) edit

Emperor Mo of Western Xia led a 300,000 strong army against the Mongols and was defeated. The Mongols sacked Lingzhou.[96][97]

Genghis reached the Western Xia capital in 1227, laid siege to the city, and launched several offensives against the Jin to prevent them from sending reinforcements to Western Xia, with one force reaching as a far as Kaifeng, the Jin capital.[98] The siege lasted for six months before Genghis offered terms of surrender.[99] During the peace negotiations, Genghis continued his military operations around the Liupan mountains near Guyuan, rejected a peace offer from the Jin, and prepared to invade them near their border with the Song.[100]

In August 1227, Genghis died of uncertain causes, and, in order not to jeopardize the ongoing campaign, his death was kept a secret.[101][102] In September 1227, Emperor Mo surrendered to the Mongols and was promptly executed.[103][104] The Mongols then pillaged the capital, slaughtered the city's population, plundered the imperial tombs to the west, and completed the annihilation of the Western Xia state.[105][106][107]

Destruction edit

The destruction of Western Xia during the second campaign was nearly total. According to John Man, Western Xia is little known to anyone other than experts in the field due to Genghis Khan's policy calling for their complete eradication. He states that "There is a case to be made that this was the first ever recorded example of attempted genocide. It was certainly very successful ethnocide."[108] However, some members of the Western Xia royal clan emigrated to western Sichuan, northern Tibet, and even possibly Northeast India, in some instances becoming local rulers.[109] A small Western Xia state was established in Tibet along the upper reaches of the Yalong River while other Western Xia populations settled in what are now the modern provinces of Henan and Hebei.[110] In China, remnants of the Western Xia persisted into the middle of the Ming dynasty.[111]

Military edit

 
Mace, Western Xia
 
The Wuwei Bronze Cannon, early 13th century

The Western Xia had two elite military units, the Iron Hawks (tie yaozi), a 3,000 strong heavy cavalry unit, and Trekker infantry (bubazi), mountain infantry.[112] The brother of Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia, Chage, mentioned that Trekker infantry had difficulty fighting Mighty-Arm bows, a type of Song dynasty crossbow:

Since ancient times we have fought using both infantry and cavalry. Although we have the Iron Hawks that can charge on the plains and the Trekker infantry that can fight in the hills, if we happen to encounter some new tactic our cavalry will have difficulty deploying. If we encounter [Mighty- Arm bows], then our infantry will be scattered. The problem is our troops can only fight according to convention and are unable to adapt to changes during battle.[59]

— Chage

A remarkable Xia weapon was discovered in 1980, namely the Wuwei Bronze Cannon. Dating to the early 13th century, it was a primitive yet large (weighing 108 kg) bronze cannon shooting iron balls.[113]

Culture edit

 
Fragment of a stele with Tangut script
 
Tangut printing block

Language edit

The kingdom developed a Tangut script to write its own Tangut language, a now extinct Tibeto-Burman language[6][114] probably related to the Horpa taxon.[115]

Tibetans, Uyghurs, Han, and Tanguts served as officials in Western Xia.[116] It is unclear how distinct the different ethnic groups were in the Xia state as intermarriage was never prohibited. Tangut, Chinese and Tibetan were all official languages.[117]

A system of writing its language, based on Chinese and Khitan, was created in 1036, and many Chinese books were translated and then printed in this script. Gifts and exchanges of books were arranged with the Sung court from time to time; Buddhist sutras were donated no fewer than six times and some of them were translated and printed. After the Mongol conquest of Tangut and China, a Tangut edition of the Tripitaka in the Hsi-hsia script, in more than 3620 chüan, was printed in Hangchow and completed in 1302, and about a hundred copies were distributed to monasteries in the former Tangut region. Many fragments of books in Tangut and Chinese were discovered at the beginning of this century, including two editions of the Diamond sutra printed in 1016 and 1189, and two bilingual glossaries, the Hsi-Hsia Tzu Shu Yun Thung (+ 1132), and the Fan Han Ho Shih Chang Chung Chu (+ 1190). Apparently many books in their native tongue were also printed under the Tangut rulers.[118]

— Tsien Tsuen-hsuin

Dress edit

In 1034 Li Yuanhao (Emperor Jingzong) introduced and decreed a new custom for Western Xia subjects to shave their heads, leaving a fringe covering the forehead and temples, ostensibly to distinguish them from neighbouring countries. Clothing was regulated for different classes of official and commoners. Dress seemed to be influenced by Tibetan and Uighur clothing.[119]

Religion edit

The government-sponsored state religion was a blend of Tibetan Tantric Buddhism and Chinese Mahayana Buddhism with a Sino-Nepalese artistic style. The scholar-official class engaged in the study of Confucian classics, Taoist texts, and Buddhist sermons, while the Emperor portrayed himself as a Buddhist king and patron of Lamas.[117] Early in the kingdom's history, Chinese Buddhism was the most widespread form of Buddhism practiced. However, around the mid-twelfth century Tibetan Buddhism gained prominence as rulers invited Tibetan monks to hold the distinctive office of state preceptor.[120] The practice of Tantric Buddhism in Western Xia led to the spread of some sexually related customs. Before they could marry men of their own ethnicity when they reached 30 years old, Uighur women in Shaanxi in the 12th century had children after having relations with multiple ethnic Han men, with her desirability as a wife enhancing if she had been with a large number of men.[121][122][123]

Economy edit

The economy of the empire mainly consisted of agriculture, pastoralism, and trade (especially with Central Asia).[124][125]

Rulers edit

 
450 years after the destruction of the Tangut empire, the "Kingdom of Tenduc or Tangut" was still shown on some European maps as China's northwestern neighbor
Temple Name Posthumous Name Personal Name Reign Dates
Jǐngzōng 景宗 Emperor Wǔliè 武烈皇帝 Lǐ Yuánhào 李元昊 1038–1048
Yìzōng 毅宗 Emperor Zhāoyīng 昭英皇帝 Lǐ Liàngzuò 李諒祚 1048–1067
Huìzōng 惠宗 Emperor Kāngjìng 康靖皇帝 Lǐ Bǐngcháng 李秉常[126][127] 1067–1086
Chóngzōng 崇宗 Emperor Shèngwén 聖文皇帝 Lǐ Qiánshùn 李乾順[128][129] 1086–1139
Rénzōng 仁宗 Emperor Shèngdé 聖德皇帝 Lǐ Rénxiào 李仁孝[130] 1139–1193
Huánzōng 桓宗 Emperor Zhāojiǎn 昭簡皇帝 Lǐ Chúnyòu 李純佑 1193–1206
Xiāngzōng 襄宗 Emperor Jìngmù 敬慕皇帝 Lǐ Ānquán 李安全 1206–1211
Shénzōng 神宗 Emperor Yīngwén 英文皇帝 Lǐ Zūnxū 李遵頊 1211–1223
Xiànzōng 獻宗 None Lǐ Déwàng 李德旺[131][132][133] 1223–1226
None None Lǐ Xiàn 李晛 1226–1227

Each Western Xia emperor established one or more era name in Chinese and Tangut, although not all the Tangut versions of era names are known.

Emperor Era Name Dates
Jǐngzōng Tiānshòu Lǐfǎ Yánzuò 天授禮法延祚 1038–1048
Yìzōng Yánsì Níngguó 延嗣寧國 1049
Tiānyòu Chuíshèng 天祐垂聖 1050–1052
Fúshèng Chéngdào 福聖承道 (Tangut 𗼃𗼕 or 𗣼𗧯) 1053–1056
Duǒdū 奲都 1057–1062
Gǒnghuà 拱化 1063–1067
Huìzōng Qiándào 乾道 1068–1069
Tiāncì Lǐshèng Guóqìng 天賜禮盛國慶 (Tangut 𘀗𗙀𗅲𗯿𗂧𗴴) 1070–1074
Dà'ān 大安 (Tangut 𘜶𗵐) 1075–1085
Tiān'ān Lǐdìng 天安禮定 (Tangut 𘓺𗪚𗅲𗧯) 1086
Chóngzōng Tiānyí Zhìpíng 天儀治平 (Tangut 𘓺𗫸𗁣𘇚) 1086–1089
Tiānyòu Mín'ān 天祐民安 (Tangut 𘓺𗼕𘂀𗴴) 1090–1097
Yǒng'ān 永安 (Tangut 𗦷𗪚) 1098–1100
Zhēnguān 貞觀 (Tangut 𗣼𘝯) 1101–1113
Yōngníng 雍寧 (Tangut 𗖠𗪚) 1114–1118
Yuándé 元德 (Tangut 𗣼𗪟) 1119–1127
Zhèngdé 正德 (Tangut 𗣼𘇚) 1127–1134
Dàdé 大德 (Tangut 𘜶𗣼) 1135–1139
Rénzōng Daqing 大慶 (Tangut 𘜶𘅝) 1140–1143
Rénqìng 人慶 (Tangut 𗸦𘅝) 1144–1148
Tiānshèng 天盛 (Tangut 𘓺𘃸) 1149–1169
Qiányòu 乾祐 (Tangut 𘀗𘑨) 1170–1193
Huánzōng Tiānqìng 天慶 (Tangut 𘓺𘅝) 1194–1206
Xiāngzōng Yìngtiān 應天 1206–1209
Huángjiàn 皇建 (Tangut 𘓺𘚪) 1210–1211
Shénzōng Guāngdìng 光定 (Tangut 𗪚𗏴) 1211–1223
Xiànzōng Qiándìng 乾定 1223–1226
Lǐ Xiàn Bǎoqìng 寶慶 1226–1227

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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External links edit

  • 宁夏新闻网 (Ningxia News Web): .
  • 宁夏新闻网 (Ningxia News Web): .

western, xixia, redirect, here, chinese, general, whose, name, transliterated, locations, xixia, disambiguation, other, dynasties, with, same, name, disambiguation, chinese, 西夏, pinyin, xià, wade, giles, hsi1, hsia4, officially, great, 大夏, xià, hsia4, also, kn. Xi Xia and Xixia redirect here For the Chinese general whose name may be transliterated as Xi Xia see Xi Qia For locations see Xixia disambiguation For other dynasties with the same name see Xia disambiguation The Western Xia or the Xi Xia Chinese 西夏 pinyin Xi Xia Wade Giles Hsi1 Hsia4 officially the Great Xia 大夏 Da Xia Ta4 Hsia4 also known as the Tangut Empire and known as Mi nyak 6 to the Tanguts and Tibetans was a Tangut led Buddhist imperial dynasty of China that existed from 1038 to 1227 At its peak the dynasty ruled over the modern day northwestern Chinese provinces of Ningxia Gansu eastern Qinghai northern Shaanxi northeastern Xinjiang and southwest Inner Mongolia and southernmost Outer Mongolia measuring about 800 000 square kilometres 310 000 square miles 7 8 9 Great Xia大夏 白高大夏國 大白高國 1038 1227Location of Western Xia in 1111 green in north west Western Xia in 1150CapitalXingqing modern Yinchuan Common languagesTangut ChineseReligionPrimary BuddhismSecondary TaoismConfucianismChinese folk religionGovernmentMonarchyEmperor 1038 1048Emperor Jingzong founder 1139 1193Emperor Renzong longest reigned 1226 1227Li Xian last Historical eraPost classical history Li Jiqian rebels against Song dynasty984 Dynasty established by Emperor Jingzong1038 Subjugated by Mongol Empire1210 Destroyed by Mongol Empire after rebellion1227Area1100 est 1 1 000 000 km2 390 000 sq mi Population peak3 000 000 2 3 4 CurrencyBarter with some copper coins in the cities 5 see Western Xia coinage Preceded by Succeeded byDingnan JiedushiXiliangfuGuiyi CircuitGansu Uyghur KingdomLiao dynastySong dynasty Mongol EmpireToday part ofChinaMongoliaThis article contains Tangut text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Tangut characters East Asia and Central Asia in AD 1142 the Southern Song dynasty in orange the Jin dynasty in grey in the northeast the Western Xia in turquoise and the Western Liao Qara Khitai in lime green in the northwest and the Dali Kingdom in dark green in the southwest The capital of Western Xia was Xingqing modern Yinchuan another major Xia city and archaeological site is Khara Khoto Western Xia was annihilated by the Mongols in 1227 Most of its written records and architecture were destroyed so the founders and history of the empire remained obscure until 20th century research in China and the West Today the Tangut language and its unique script are extinct only fragments of Tangut literature remain The Western Xia occupied the area around the Hexi Corridor a stretch of the Silk Road the most important trade route between northern China and Central Asia They made significant achievements in literature art music and architecture which was characterized as shining and sparkling 10 Their extensive stance among the other empires of the Liao Song and Jin was attributable to their effective military organizations that integrated cavalry chariots archery shields artillery cannons carried on the back of camels and amphibious troops for combat on land and water 11 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 1 1 Dingnan Jiedushi 2 2 Jingzong 1038 1048 2 3 Yizong 1048 1068 2 4 Huizong 1068 1086 2 5 Chongzong 1086 1139 2 6 Renzong 1139 1193 2 7 Huanzong 1193 1206 2 8 Xiangzong 1206 1211 2 9 Shenzong 1211 1223 2 10 Xianzong 1223 1226 2 11 Mo 1226 1227 2 12 Destruction 3 Military 4 Culture 4 1 Language 4 2 Dress 4 3 Religion 4 4 Economy 5 Rulers 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 External linksName editThe full title of the Western Xia as named by their own state is L1572 L1890 L2937 L4456 reconstructed as phiow bjij lhjij lhjij which word by word denotes white high kingdom great or 𗴂𗹭𘜶𗴲𗂧 white high great summer kingdom The corresponding Chinese name 白高大夏國 White High Great Xia State was also used Chinese and Japanese scholars commonly interpret the first two words as upper reaches of the White River which was possibly referring to the Yellow River 12 Kepping 1994 proposed the translation the Kingdom of the Great Xia of the White and Lofty and suggested that the name refers to a peak in the Helan Mountains named the White and Lofty Mother 13 The region was known to the Tanguts as mjɨ njaa and to the Tibetans as Minyak 6 14 Another name the Tanguts used for their state was khjɨ dwuu lhjij 萬祕國 which means the State of Ten Thousand Secrets 13 Western Xia or Xi Xia is the state s Chinese name Western refers to its location to the west of the Liao 916 1125 and Jin 1115 1234 dynasties as well as the Song Xia pointing to the Xia dynasty is a historical name for the region that originated from the 5th century Hu Xia dynasty 15 The name Tangut is derived from a form first found in the Orkhon inscriptions dated to 735 which is transcribed in Chinese as Tangwu or Tangute Tangghut Tangɣud in Mongolian Tangut was used a common name for certain tribes in the Amdo Kokonor Gansu region until the 19th century The Tanguts called themselves Minag transcribed in Chinese as Mianyao or Miyao 16 History edit nbsp Tangut officialsSee also Timeline of the Tanguts Origins edit Further information Dingnan Jiedushi Guiyi Circuit and Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom The Tanguts originally came from the Qinghai Sichuan Tibet region whose home originally was in the highlands of western Sichuan 17 According to Chinese records which called them the Dangxiang the Tanguts were descended from the Western Qiang people and occupied the steppes around Qinghai Lake and the mountains to its south 16 In 608 the Tanguts helped the Sui dynasty defeat the Tuyuhun however they were betrayed by the Sui forces who took the chance to loot the Tanguts In 635 they were requested to serve as guides for Emperor Taizong s campaign against Tuyuhun but the Tang forces double crossed them in a surprise attack and seized thousands of livestock In retaliation the Tanguts attacked the Tang and killed thousands of their soldiers 18 By the 650s the Tanguts had left their homeland to escape pressure from the Tibetans and migrated eastward to what are now modern Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces In 584 5 Tuoba Ningzong led the first group of Tanguts to submit to the Sui In 628 9 another group under the leadership of Xifeng Bulai surrendered to the Tang After the Tuyuhun were defeated in 635 the Tanguts under Tuoba Chici also surrendered The 340 000 Tanguts were divided into 32 jimi prefectures under the control of Tangut chieftains appointed as prefects Another wave of Tanguts entered Tang territory in 692 adding as many as 200 000 persons to the population in Lingzhou and Xiazhou In 721 2 Tuoba Sitai a descendant of Tuoba Chici aided the Tang in putting down a Sogdian led revolt in Shuofang 19 By the time of the An Lushan Rebellion in the 750s the Tanguts had become the primary local power in the Ordos region in northern Shaanxi In the 760s the military commander Ashina Sijian harassed six Tangut tribes and took their camels and horses The Tanguts fled west across the Yellow River and started working for the Tibetans as guides on raiding expeditions In 764 the Tanguts joined the Tibetans and Uyghurs in supporting the Tang rebel Pugu Huaien 18 After the Tang reasserted their authority a descendant of Tuoba Chici Tuoba Chaoguang was put in charge of the loyal Tanguts The Yeli Bali and Bozhou clans continued to side with the Tibetans however the Tanguts also came under Tibetan predation and frontier settlements continued switching between Tang and Tibetan control for many years 20 In 806 the Acting Minister of Works Du You admitted that they treated the Tanguts badly In recent years corrupt frontier generals have repeatedly harassed and mistreated the Tanguts Some profited from unfair trading in their fine horses some seized their sons and daughters Some accepted their local products as bribes and some imposed corvee on them Having suffered so much hardship the Tanguts rebelled and fled They either sent envoys to contact the Uighurs or cooperated with the Tibetans to raid our borders These are the consequences of Tang frontier generals wrong deeds We must discipline them 21 Du You In 814 the Tang appointed a Commissioner for Pacifying the Tanguts to Youzhou modern Otog Banner however this did not resolve the Tangut problem In 820 the Tanguts were subjected to the tyranny of a local governor Tian Jin They retaliated by joining the Tibetans in raids on Tang garrisons Sporadic conflict with the Tanguts lasted until the 840s when they rose in open revolt against the Tang but the rebellion was suppressed Eventually the Tang court was able to mollify the Tanguts by admonishing their frontier generals and replacing them with more disciplined ones 22 The Tanguts also fought against the Uyghurs after the collapse of the Uyghur Khaganate because they both wanted to monopolize the horse trade which passed through Lingzhou 23 Dingnan Jiedushi edit See also Song Xia wars In 873 the senior Tangut leader at Xiazhou Tuoba Sigong occupied Youzhou and declared himself prefect When Chang an fell to Huang Chao in 880 Sigong led a Chinese Tangut army to assist Tang forces in driving out the rebels For his service he was granted in 881 control of Xiazhou Youzhou Suizhou Yinzhou and later also Jingbian Together the territory was called Dingnan Jiedushi also known as Xiasui centered on modern Yulin Shaanxi After the Huang Chao rebellion s defeat in 883 Sigong was granted the dynastic surname Li and enfeoffed as Duke of Xia In 878 the Shatuo chieftain Li Guochang attacked the Tanguts but was repelled by a Tuyuhun intervention 24 nbsp Xixia stone inscriptionsSigong died in 886 and was succeeded by his brother Sijian In 905 Li Keyong s independent regime allied with the Khitans which pushed the Tanguts into an alliance with Later Liang which awarded the Dingnan rulers with honorary titles Sijian died in 908 and was succeeded by his adopted son Yichang who was murdered by his officer Gao Zongyi in 909 Gao Zongyi was himself murdered by soldiers of Dingnan and was replaced by Yichang s uncle Renfu who was a popular officer in the army In 910 Dingnan came under a monthlong siege by the forces of Qi and Jin but was able to repel the invasion with the aid of Later Liang In 922 Renfu sent 500 horses to Luoyang perhaps to aid the Later Liang in fighting the Shatuo In 924 Renfu was enfeoffed as Prince of Shuofang by Later Tang When Renfu died in 933 Later Tang tried to replace his son Yichao with a Sogdian governor An Congjin An Congjin besieged Xiazhou with 50 000 soldiers but the Tanguts mounted a successful defensive by rallying the tribes and stripping the countryside of any resources The Later Tang army was forced to retreat after three months Despite Later Tang aggression Yichao made peace with them by sending 50 horses as an offering 25 Yichao died in 935 and was succeeded by his brother Yixing Yixing discovered a plot by his brother Yimin to overthrow him in 943 Yimin fled to Chinese territory but was returned to Xiazhou for execution Over 200 clan members were implicated in the plot resulting in a purge of the core ranks Yimin s post was taken by a loyal official Renyu Not long afterward Renyu was killed by the Yemu Qiang who departed for Chinese territory In 944 Yixing may have attacked the Liao dynasty on behalf of the Later Jin The sources are not clear on the event In 948 Yixing requested permission to cross the border and attack the Yemu Qiang but was refused Instead Yixing attacked a neighboring circuit under encouragement from the rebel Li Shouzhen but retreated upon encountering an imperial force In 952 the Yeji people north of Qingzhou rebelled causing the Tanguts significant difficulty Honorary titles were given out by the Later Han to appease local commanders including Yixing In 960 Dingnan came under attack by Northern Han and successfully repelled invading forces In 962 Yixing offered horses as tribute to the Song dynasty Yixing died in 967 and was succeeded by his son Kerui 26 Kerui died in 978 and was succeeded by Jiyun Jiyun ruled for only a year before dying in 980 His son was still an infant so Jiyun s brother Jipeng assumed leadership Jipeng did not go through the traditional channel of acquiring consent from the elders which caused dissent among the Tangut elites The Tangut prefect of Suizhou challenged Jipeng s succession In 982 Jipeng fled to the Song court and surrendered control of Dingnan Jiedushi His brother or cousin Jiqian did not agree to this and refused to submit to Song administration Jiqian led a group of bandit holdouts and resisted Song control In 984 the Song attacked his camp and captured his mother and wife but he narrowly escaped He rebounded from this defeat by capturing Yinzhou the next year 27 Along with Yinzhou Jiqian captured large amounts of supply allowing him to increase his following In 986 Jiqian submitted to the Khitans and in 989 Jiqian married into Khitan nobility 28 Jiqian also made symbolic obeisance to the Song but the Song remained unconvinced of his intentions Jipeng was sent by the Song to destroy Jiqian but he was defeated in battle on 6 May 994 and fled back to Xiazhou Jiqian sent tribute on 9 September as well as his younger brother on 1 October to the Song court Emperor Taizong of Song was receptive of these gestures but Jiqian returned to raiding Song territory the next year In April 996 Taizong sent troops to suppress Jiqian who raided Lingzhou in May and again in November 997 For a brief period after 998 Jiqian accepted Song suzerainty until the fall of 1001 when he began raiding again Jiqian died on 6 January 1004 from an arrow wound His son and successor Deming proved to be more amicable towards the Song than his predecessor 29 Jingzong 1038 1048 edit nbsp Western Xia painting on silk depicting the Daoist deity Emperor Xuanwu discovered in the Hongfo Pagoda in 1990Deming sent tribute missions to both the Liao dynasty and the Song dynasty At the same time he expanded Tangut territory to the west In 1028 he sent his son Yuanhao to conquer the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom Two years later the Guiyi Circuit surrendered to the Tanguts Yuanhao invaded the Qinghai region as well but was repelled by the newly risen Tibetan kingdom of Tsongkha In 1032 Yuanhao annexed the Tibetan confederation of Xiliangfu and soon after his father died leaving him ruler of the Tangut state 30 Upon his father s death Yuanhao adopted the Tangut surname of Weiming Tangut Nweimi for his clan He levied all able bodied men between 15 and 60 years of age providing him with a 150 000 strong army By 1036 he had annexed both the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom and the Guiyi Circuit to his west In the same year the Tangut script was disseminated for use in the Tangut government and translations of Chinese and Tibetan works began at once The script s creation is attributed to Yeli Renrong and work on it likely began during the reign of Deming 31 In 1038 Yuanhao declared himself emperor wu zu or Blue Son of Heaven posthumously Emperor Jingzong of Western Xia of the Great Xia with his capital at Xingqing in modern Yinchuan Jingzong expanded the bureaucratic apparatus mirroring Chinese institutional practices A Secretariat Zhongshu sheng Bureau of Military Affairs Shumi yuan Finance Office San si Censorate Yushi tai and 16 bureaus shiliu si under the supervision of a chancellor shangshu ling were created Jingzong enacted a head shaving decree that ordered all his countrymen to shave the top of their heads so that if within three days someone had not followed his order they were allowed to be killed 32 In response the Song dynasty offered to bestow ranks on the Tanguts which Jingzong rejected The Song then cut off border trade and put a bounty on his head 33 34 The Xia s chief military leader Weiming Shanyu also fled to seek asylum with the Song however he was executed at Youzhou 32 What ensued was a prolonged war with the Song dynasty which resulted in several victories at great cost to the Xia economy Beyond establishing a Chinese style central government for the militarized kingdom which included sixteen bureaus he also designated eighteen military control commissions spread among five military zones 1 70 000 soldiers to deal with the Liao 2 50 000 assigned to deal with Huan Qing Zhenrong and Yuan prefectures 3 50 000 opposite Fuyan circuit and Lin and Fu 1 prefectures 4 30 000 to deal with the Xifan and Huige to the west and 5 50 000 in the eastern skirtlands of Helan Mountains 50 000 at Ling and 70 000 spread between Xing prefecture and Xingqing fu or superior prefecture Altogether Yuanhao had as many as 370 000 men under arms These were mounted forces which had been stretched thin by hard warfare and probably excessive use of non warrior horsemen impressed to fill the army He maintained a six unit bodyguard of 5 000 and his elite cavalry force Iron Cavalry tieqi of 3 000 It was a fearful concentration of military might overlaying a relatively shallow economic base 35 Michael C McGrath nbsp Painting of a warrior from a late Western Xia tomb in GansuIn the winter of 1039 1040 Jingzong laid siege to Yanzhou now Yan an with over 100 000 troops The prefect of Yanzhou Fan Yong gave contradictory orders to his military deputy Liu Ping making him move his forces 9 000 in random directions until they were defeated by Xia forces 50 000 at Sanchuan Pass Liu Ping was taken captive 36 Despite the defenders mediocre performance Jingzong was forced to lift the siege and retreat to a ring of forts overlooking Yanzhou when heavy winter snows set in 37 A Song army of 30 000 returned later that winter under the command of Ren Fu They were ambushed at Haoshuichuan and annihilated 38 Despite such victories Jingzong failed to make any headway against Song fortifications garrisoned by 200 000 troops on rotation from the capital 39 and remained unable to seize any territory 40 In 1042 Jingzong advanced south and surrounded the fort of Dingchuan 41 The defending commander Ge Huaimin lost his nerve and decided to run abandoning his troops to be slaughtered 42 Again Jingzong failed to gain significant territory Half his soldiers had died from attrition and after two years Xia could no longer support his military endeavors Tangut forces began suffering small defeats being turned back by Song forces at Weizhou and Linzhou 43 By 1043 there were several hundred thousand trained local archer and crossbow militiamen in Shaanxi and their archery skills were now generally effective Crucial to defense or offense was the use of local non Chinese allies to screen Song from the monetary costs and social costs of full scale war By mid 1042 the accumulated efforts of men like Fan Zhongyan and others to entice the fan to settle in the in between areas were paying off The fan generally and the Qiang specifically were siding with the Song much more than with the Xia at this point By now also there were enough forts and walled cities to limit Yuanhao s maneuverability and to improve mutual support against him 44 Michael C McGrath The Liao dynasty took advantage of the Song s dire predicaments by increasing annual tribute payments by 100 000 units of silk and silver each 43 The Song appealed to the Liao for help and as a result Emperor Xingzong of Liao invaded Western Xia with a force of 100 000 in 1044 45 Liao forces enjoyed an initial victory but failed to take the Xia capital and were brutally mauled by Jingzong s defenders 46 According to Song spies there was a succession of carts bearing Liao dead across the desert 47 Having exhausted his resources Jingzong made peace with the Song who recognized him as the ruler of Xia lands and agreed to pay an annual tribute of 250 000 units of silk silver and tea 47 Toward the end of the war Jingzong took the intended bride of his son Lady Moyi as his concubine Jingzong s designated heir Ninglingge was the son of the Yeli empress whose uncle Yeli Wangrong was concerned about the development Ninglingge was thus arranged to marry the daughter of Wangrong who planned to kill the emperor on the eve of the wedding The plot leaked and Wangrong as well as four other Yeli conspirators were executed The Yeli empress was demoted and Lady Moyi was installed in her place Another concubine Lady Mocang bore the emperor a male child in 1047 named Liangzuo who was raised by Mocang Epang The disinherited heir apparent stabbed Jingzong in the nose and fled to Mocang Epang s residence where he was arrested and executed Jingzong died the next day on 19 January 1048 at the age of 44 48 Yizong 1048 1068 edit nbsp Western Xia explosive caltropAfter Emperor Jingzong of Western Xia died in 1048 a council of elders selected his cousin as the new ruler Mocang Epang objected on grounds of primogeniture and put forth his nephew the son of Jingzong and Lady Mocang as candidate No dissent was forthcoming so the two year old Liangzuo became emperor posthumously known as Emperor Yizong of Western Xia 49 In 1056 the empress dowager died In 1061 Yizong eliminated Mocang Epang and married Lady Liang formerly the wife of Epang s son Yizong appointed Lady Liang s brother Liang Yimai as palace minister This would start two generations of Liang dominance in Xia During Yizong s reign he attempted to enact more Chinese forms of governance by replacing Tangut rites with Chinese court ritual and dress which was opposed by the Liang faction that favored Tangut forms At the same time Song and Xia emissaries regularly exchanged insults 50 The emperor supported sinification through the import of Chinese books revived the use of his Chinese surname Li and other Chinese protocols and pursued accommodation with the Song dynasty in border disputes and opening of trade However these diplomatic overtures were squandered by arrogant Song representatives who insulted the Xia envoy The Liang clan was reportedly of Han Chinese ancestry albeit assimilated into Tangut culture but their faction would later lead the opposition to the pro Chinese policy 51 The Han Chinese empresses of the Liang clan Paul Forage notes were more aggressive in their stance against the Song dynasty than the emperors they were representing 52 In 1064 Yizong raided the Song dynasty In the fall of 1066 he mounted two more raids and in September an attack on Qingzhou was launched The Tangut forces destroyed several fortified settlements Song forces were surrounded for three days before cavalry reinforcements arrived Yizong was wounded by a crossbow and forced to retreat Tangut forces attempted another raid later on but failed and a night attack by Song forces scattered the Tangut army Yizong regrouped at Qingtang and launched another attack on Qingzhou in December but withdrew after threats by Emperor Yingzong of Song to escalate the conflict 53 The next year the Song commander Chong E attacked and captured Suizhou 54 Yizong died in January 1068 presumably from his wounds at the age of 20 50 Huizong 1068 1086 edit nbsp Bronze Xia seals bearing the Tangut seal script characters 𗥦𗖅 ɣu sjwi commander nbsp Impression of the commander sealThe seven year old Bingchang posthumously Emperor Huizong of Western Xia succeeded his father Emperor Yizong of Western Xia 50 Huizong s reign began with an inconclusive war with the Song dynasty in 1070 1 over Suizhou 55 In 1072 Huizong s sister was married to Linbuzhi Rinpoche the son of the Tsongkha ruler Dongzhan These events occurred under the regency of the Empress Dowager Liang and her brother Liang Yimai Huizong was married to one of Yimai s daughters to ensure the continued control of the Liang over the imperial Weiming clan In 1080 Huizong rebelled against his mother s dominance by discarding with Tangut ritual in favor of Chinese ceremonies A year later a plot by Huizong and his concubine Li Qing to turn over the Xia s southern territory to the Song was uncovered Li Qing was executed and Huizong was imprisoned The emperor s loyalists immediately rallied their forces to oppose Liang rule while Yimai tried to in vain to summon them with the imperial silver paiza 56 Seeing the infighting breaking out in the Xia the Song decided to go on the offensive 51 In 1081 the Song dynasty launched a five pronged attack on the Xia After initial victories Song forces failed to take the capital of Xia Xingqing and remained on the defensive for the next three years Xia counterattacks also experienced initial success before failing to take Lanzhou multiple times In 1085 the war ended with the death of Emperor Shenzong of Song In the summer of 1081 the five Song armies invaded Western Xia Chong E defeated a Xia army killing 8 000 57 In October Li Xian took Lanzhou 57 58 On 15 October Liu Changzuo s 50 000 strong army met a Xia force of 30 000 led by the Empress Regent Liang s brother Liu s commanders advised him to take a defensive position but he refused and led a contingent of shield warriors with two ranks of crossbowmen and cavalry behind with himself leading at the front with two shields The battle lasted for several hours before the Xia forces retreated suffering 2 700 casualties 59 Afterwards Liu captured a large supply of millet at the town of Mingsha and headed towards Lingzhou 59 Liu s vanguard attacked the town s gate before the defenders had a chance to close it dealing several hundred casualties and seizing more than 1 000 cattle before retreating Liu wanted Gao Zunyu to help him take Lingzhou but Gao refused Then Liu suggested they take the Xia capital instead to which Gao also refused and instead took it as a slight that he could not take Lingzhou Gao relayed his version of events to the Song court then had Liu removed from command merging the two forces 60 By November the Xia had abandoned the middle of the Ordos plateau losing Xiazhou 57 On 20 November Wang Zhongzheng took Youzhou and slaughtered its inhabitants 57 At this point Wang became concerned that he would run out of supplies and quarreled with Chong E over provisions He also forbade his troops from cooking their meals because he feared it would alert Xia raiders of their position His troops became ill from their uncooked food started to starve and came under attack by enemy cavalry anyway Wang was ordered to withdraw while Chong E covered his retreat Wang lost 20 000 men 61 On 8 December Gao Zunyu decided to attack Lingzhou only to realize he had forgotten to bring any siege equipment and there were not enough trees around for their construction Gao took out his frustration on Liu Changzuo who he tried to have executed Liu s troops were on the verge of mutiny before Fan Chuncui a Circuit judge convinced Gao to reconcile with Liu On 21 December Xia forces breached the dikes along the Yellow River and flooded the camps of the two besieging Song armies forcing them to retreat Xia harassment turned the retreat into a rout 61 62 By the end of 1081 only Chong E remained in active command 61 In September 1082 the Xia counterattacked with a 300 000 strong army laying siege to Yongle a fortress town west of Mizhi The Xia sent out cavalry to prevent Song relief attempts The defending commander Xu Xi deployed his troops outside the town gates but refused to attack the enemy troops while they forded the river Then he refused to let his troops in when the Tangut Iron Hawk cavalry attacked decimating the defending army With the capture of Yongle the Song lost 17 300 troops 63 In March 1083 Xia forces attacked Lanzhou The defending commander Wang Wenyu led a small contingent out at night and made a surprise attack on the Xia encampment forcing them to retreat The Tanguts made two more attempts to take Lanzhou in April and May but failed on both accounts Their simultaneous attack on Linzhou also failed 64 After multiple defeats the Xia offered peace demands to the Song which they refused 64 In January 1084 Xia forces made a last attempt to take Lanzhou The siege lasted for 10 days before the Tangut army ran out of supplies and was forced to retreat 64 The war ended in 1085 with the death of Emperor Shenzong in April In exchange for 100 Chinese prisoners the Song returned four of the six captured towns Hostilities between the Song and Xia would flare up again five years later and conflict would continue sporadically until the Song lost Kaifeng in the Jingkang incident of 1127 64 Huizong was returned to his throne in 1083 Liang Yimai died in 1085 and his son Liang Qipu succeeded his position as chief minister The Empress Dowager Liang also died later that year In 1086 Huizong passed away at the age of 26 65 Chongzong 1086 1139 edit nbsp Western Xia paiza with four Tangut characters reading 𗿢𗯼𘆝𗪊 By imperial command a pass to burn the horses i e to ride with great urgency The three year old Qianshun succeeded his father Emperor Huizong of Western Xia as emperor posthumously Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia His mother the new Empress Dowager Liang the younger sister of Liang Qipu ruled as regent The Song dynasty continued to campaign against the Xia in 1091 and 1093 In 1094 Rende Baozhuang and Weiming Awu slew Liang Qipu and exterminated his clan In 1096 the Song stopped paying tribute to the Xia and the next year launched an advance and fortify campaign centered on guarding key locations along river valleys and mountains to erode the Xia position From 1097 to 1099 the Song army constructed 40 fortifications across the Ordos plateau In 1098 the Empress Regent Liang sent a 100 000 strong army to recapture Pingxia The Tangut army was completely defeated in their attempt to dislodge the Song from their high ground position and their generals Weiming Amai and Meiledubu were both captured 66 Empress Dowager Liang died in 1099 apparently poisoned by assassins from the Liao dynasty At the same time the Tanguts were also involved in a war with the Zubu to their north 65 In 1103 the Song annexed Tsongkha and spent the following year weeding out native resistance The expansion of Song territory threatened the Xia s southern border resulting in Tangut incursions in 1104 and 1105 Eventually the Xia launched an all out attack on Lanzhou and Qingtang However after the Advance and Fortify campaign of 1097 1099 Xia forces were no longer able to defeat Song positions Failing to take major cities the Tangut forces went on a rampage killing tens of thousands of local civilians The next year Chongzong made peace with the Song but was unable to clearly demarcate their borders leading to another war in 1113 67 In 1113 the Xia started building fortifications in disputed territory with the Song and took the Qingtang region Incensed at this provocation Emperor Huizong of Song dispatched Tong Guan to evict the Tanguts In 1115 150 000 troops under the command of Liu Fa penetrated deep into Xia territory and slaughtered the Tangut garrison at Gugulong Meanwhile Wang Hou and Liu Chongwu attacked the newly built Tangut fortress of Zangdihe The siege ended in failure and the death of half the invasion force Wang bribed Tong to keep the number of casualties a secret from the emperor The next year Liu Fa and Liu Chongwu took a walled Tangut city called Rendequan Another 100 000 troops were sent against Zangdihe and succeeded in taking the fortress The Xia made a successful counterattack in the winter of 1116 1117 Despite piling casualties on the Song side Tong was adamant about eradicating the Xia once and for all He gave orders for Liu Fa to lead 200 000 into the heart of the Xia empire aiming straight at the capital region It quickly became apparent that this was a suicide mission The Song army was met outside the city by an even larger Tangut army led by the Xia prince Chage The Tangut army surrounded the Song forces killing half of them with the remaining falling back during the night The Tanguts pursued the Song and defeated them again the next day Liu was beheaded A ceasefire was called in 1119 and Huizong issued an apology to Xia 68 nbsp nbsp 1100KARAKHANIDKHANATEKIEVANRUS CumansPechenegsKyrgyzsFATIMIDCALIPHATEGEORGIAXI XIAJurchenKimeksKHITAN EMPIREQOCHOGHAZNAVIDEMPIRECHOLAEMPIREWESTERNCHALUKYASPAGANDALIKHMERMALAYUPALAEMPIRESELJUKEMPIRESONGDYNASTYSULTANATEOF RUMGO RYEO class notpageimage The Western Xia and main contemporary Asian polities circa 1100 In 1122 the Jurchen Jin dynasty took the Southern Capital of the Liao dynasty and the remaining Khitans fled in two groups to the west One group led by Xiao Gan fled to Xia where they set up a short lived Xi dynasty that lasted only five months before Gan died at the hands of his own troops The other group led by Yelu Dashi joined Emperor Tianzuo of Liao at the Xia border In the early summer of 1123 Dashi was captured by the Jin and forced to lead them to Tianzuo s camp where the entire imperial family except for Tianzuo and one son were captured Tianzuo sought refuge with Chongzong who while initially receptive changed his mind after warnings from the Jurchens and declared himself a vassal of Jin in 1124 69 Domestically the reign of Chongzong saw a formal consolidation of the relationship between the imperial court and the great clans whose positions were assured in legal documents After his mother s death in 1099 Chongzong stripped the Rende clan of its military power Rende Baozhuang was demoted Chongzong s brother Chage was given command of the Tangut army which he led to many victories against the Song A state school was established with 300 students supported by government stipends A civilian faction arose under the leadership of the imperial Prince Weiming Renzhong who often denounced Chage for corruption and abuse of power Chongzong shuffled appointments to play the two factions against each other In 1105 Chongzong married a Liao princess who along with her son apparently died of heartbreak in 1125 when the Khitan emperor was captured by the Jurchens In 1138 the penultimate year of his reign Chongzong took the daughter of Ren Dejing as his empress 70 Chongzong died at the age of 56 in the summer of 1139 71 Renzong 1139 1193 edit nbsp Western Xia coin c 1149 1169 nbsp Praying Tangut manThe 16 year old Renxiao succeeded his father Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia as emperor posthumously Emperor Renzong of Western Xia His mother was the Chinese concubine Lady Cao 71 In 1140 a group of Khitan exiles led by Xiao Heda rebelled The Xia forces under Ren Dejing crushed them Renzong wanted to reward Ren with a palace appointment but his councilor Weiming Renzhong convinced him to keep him as a field commander 71 In 1142 3 famine and earthquake caused unrest in Xiazhou Renzong responded with tax remissions and relief measures 71 In 1144 Renzong decreed the establishment of schools throughout the country and a secondary school opened for imperial scions aged seven to fifteen A Superior School of Chinese Learning was opened the following year and Confucian temples were built throughout the land In 1147 imperial examinations were instituted although Tangut records do discuss using them for selection of officials The Tangut law code only discusses inheritance of office and rank In 1148 an Inner Academy was established and staffed with renowned scholars 72 Renzong also greatly patronized Buddhist learning The majority of the Tangut Tripitaka was completed during his reign In 1189 the 50th anniversary of Renzong s accession 100 000 copies of the Sutra on the visualization of the Maitreya Bodhisattva s ascent and rebirth in Tushita Heaven Guan Mile pusa shang sheng Toushuai tian jing was printed and distributed in both Chinese and Tangut and 50 000 copies of other sutras were also printed 73 After the deaths of Renzhong and Chage in 1156 Ren Dejing rose through the ranks and became very powerful In 1160 he obtained the noble title of Chu the first Chinese to do so in the Tangut state Ren tried to have the schools shut down and called them useless Chinese institutions wasting resources on parasitic scholars It is unknown how the emperor responded but the schools were not closed In 1161 the emperor opened a Hanlin Academy to compile the Xia historical records 74 In 1161 2 the Tanguts briefly occupied territory of both the Jurchen Jin dynasty and Song dynasty during the Jin Song Wars 75 From 1165 to 1170 Ren Dejing tried to establish his own semi autonomous realm and in the process meddled in the affairs of the Zhuanglang tribes who lived in the border region of the Tao River valley He also tried to enlist the help of the Jurchens but they refused his overtures Ren started construction of fortifications along the Jin border In 1170 Ren pressured Renzong to grant him the eastern half of the realm as well as for Emperor Shizong of Jin to grant him investiture In the summer of that year Renzong s men secretly rounded up Ren Dejing and his adherents executing them 76 Wo Daochong succeeded Ren Dejing as chief minister A Confucian scholar he translated the Analects and provided commentary to it in the Tangut language Upon his death Renzong honored him by having his portrait displayed in all the Confucian temples and schools 77 The Jurchens closed down border markets in Lanzhou and Baoan in 1172 and would not reopen them until 1197 They accused the Tanguts of trading worthless gems and jades for their silk Tangut border raids increased during this period until the Jurchens reopened one market in 1181 In 1191 some Tangut herdsmen strayed into Jurchen territory and was chased away by a Jin patrol They them ambushed and killed the pursuing patrol officer Renzong refused to extradite the herdsmen and assured the Jurchens that they would be punished 78 Renzong died in 1193 at the age of 70 78 Huanzong 1193 1206 edit nbsp The Tangut Emperor and a boy 13th centuryMain article Mongol conquest of Western Xia The 17 year old Chunyou succeeded his father Emperor Renzong of Western Xia as emperor posthumously Emperor Huanzong of Western Xia Little besides the rise of Temujin and his conflict with Western Xia is known about Huanzong s reign In 1203 Toghrul was defeated by Temujin Toghrul s son Nilqa Senggum fled through Tangut territory and although the Tanguts refused to provide him with refuge and he raided their territory Temujin used this as pretext to raid Western Xia The resulting attack in 1205 caused one local Tangut noble to defect to the Mongols the plundering of several fortified settlements and loss of livestock 79 80 81 In 1206 Temujin was formally proclaimed Genghis Khan ruler of all Mongols marking the official start of the Mongol Empire In the same year Huanzong was deposed in a coup by his cousin Anquan who installed himself as Emperor Xiangzong of Western Xia Huanzong died much later in captivity 82 Xiangzong 1206 1211 edit In 1207 Genghis led another raid into Western Xia invading the Ordos Loop and sacking Wulahai the main garrison along the Yellow River before withdrawing in the spring of 1208 83 The Tanguts tried to form a united front with the Jurchen Jin dynasty against the Mongols but the usurper monarch Wanyan Yongji refused to cooperate and declared that it was to their advantage that enemies attack one another 82 In the autumn of 1209 Genghis received the submission of the Uyghurs to the west and invaded Western Xia After defeating an army led by Gao Lianghui outside Wulahai Genghis captured the city and pushed up along the Yellow River capturing several garrisons and defeating another imperial army The Mongols besieged the capital Zhongxing which held a well fortified garrison of 150 000 84 and attempted to flood the city by diverting the Yellow River The dike they built broke and flooded the Mongol camp forcing them to withdraw 80 In 1210 Xiangzong agreed to submit to Mongol rule and demonstrated his loyalty by giving a daughter Chaka in marriage to Genghis and paying a tribute of camels falcons and textiles 85 After their defeat in 1210 Western Xia attacked the Jin dynasty in response to their refusal to aid them against the Mongols 86 The following year the Mongols joined Western Xia and began a 23 year long campaign against Jin In the same year Xiangzong s nephew Zunxu seized power in a coup and became Emperor Shenzong of Western Xia Xiangzong died a month later 87 Shenzong 1211 1223 edit Emperor Shenzong of Western Xia was the first person in the imperial family to pass the palace examinations and receive a jinshi degree 87 Shenzong appeased the Mongols by attacking the Jurchens and in 1214 supported a rebellion against the Jurchens In 1216 Western Xia provided auxiliary troops to the Mongols for an attack on Jin territory The Tanguts also invited the Song dynasty to join them in attacking the Jin but nothing came of this except an aborted joint action in 1220 The antagonistic policy towards the Jurchen Jin was unpopular at court as was cooperating with the Mongols A certain Asha Gambu emerged as an outspoken proponent of anti Mongol policy In the winter of 1217 18 the Mongols called on Western Xia to provide them troops for campaigns further west but they refused to comply No immediate retaliation occurred since Genghis left for the west in 1219 and left Muqali in charge of North China In 1223 Muqali died At the same time Shenzong abdicated to his son Dewang posthumously Emperor Xianzong of Western Xia 88 Xianzong 1223 1226 edit nbsp Western Xia mail armourEmperor Xianzong of Western Xia began peace talks with the Jurchen Jin in 1224 and the peace agreement was finalized in the fall of 1225 The Tanguts continued to defy the Mongols by refusing to send a hostage prince to the Mongol court 88 After defeating Khwarazm in 1221 Genghis prepared his armies to punish Western Xia In 1225 Genghis attacked with a force of approximately 180 000 89 According to the Secret History of the Mongols Genghis was injured in 1225 during a horse hunt when his horse bolted from under him Genghis then tried to offer Western Xia the chance to willingly submit but Asha Gambhu mocked the Mongols and challenged them to battle Genghis pledged to avenge this insult 90 Genghis ordered his generals to systematically destroy cities and garrisons as they went 91 Genghis divided his army and sent general Subutai to take care of the westernmost cities while the main force under Genghis moved east into the heart of the Western Xia and took Suzhou and Ganzhou which was spared destruction upon its capture due to it being the hometown of Genghis s commander Chagaan 92 After taking Khara Khoto in early 1226 the Mongols began a steady advance southward Asha commander of the Western Xia troops could not afford to meet the Mongols as it would involve an exhausting westward march from the capital through 500 kilometers of desert so the Mongols steadily advanced from city to city 93 In August 1226 Mongol troops approached Liangzhou the second largest city in Western Xia which surrendered without resistance 94 In autumn 1226 Genghis crossed the Helan Mountains and in November laid siege to Lingwu a mere 30 kilometers from the capital 95 At this point Xianzong died leaving his relative Xian posthumously Emperor Mozhu of Western Xia to deal with the Mongol invasion 96 Mo 1226 1227 edit Emperor Mo of Western Xia led a 300 000 strong army against the Mongols and was defeated The Mongols sacked Lingzhou 96 97 Genghis reached the Western Xia capital in 1227 laid siege to the city and launched several offensives against the Jin to prevent them from sending reinforcements to Western Xia with one force reaching as a far as Kaifeng the Jin capital 98 The siege lasted for six months before Genghis offered terms of surrender 99 During the peace negotiations Genghis continued his military operations around the Liupan mountains near Guyuan rejected a peace offer from the Jin and prepared to invade them near their border with the Song 100 In August 1227 Genghis died of uncertain causes and in order not to jeopardize the ongoing campaign his death was kept a secret 101 102 In September 1227 Emperor Mo surrendered to the Mongols and was promptly executed 103 104 The Mongols then pillaged the capital slaughtered the city s population plundered the imperial tombs to the west and completed the annihilation of the Western Xia state 105 106 107 Destruction edit The destruction of Western Xia during the second campaign was nearly total According to John Man Western Xia is little known to anyone other than experts in the field due to Genghis Khan s policy calling for their complete eradication He states that There is a case to be made that this was the first ever recorded example of attempted genocide It was certainly very successful ethnocide 108 However some members of the Western Xia royal clan emigrated to western Sichuan northern Tibet and even possibly Northeast India in some instances becoming local rulers 109 A small Western Xia state was established in Tibet along the upper reaches of the Yalong River while other Western Xia populations settled in what are now the modern provinces of Henan and Hebei 110 In China remnants of the Western Xia persisted into the middle of the Ming dynasty 111 Military edit nbsp Mace Western Xia nbsp The Wuwei Bronze Cannon early 13th centuryThe Western Xia had two elite military units the Iron Hawks tie yaozi a 3 000 strong heavy cavalry unit and Trekker infantry bubazi mountain infantry 112 The brother of Emperor Chongzong of Western Xia Chage mentioned that Trekker infantry had difficulty fighting Mighty Arm bows a type of Song dynasty crossbow Since ancient times we have fought using both infantry and cavalry Although we have the Iron Hawks that can charge on the plains and the Trekker infantry that can fight in the hills if we happen to encounter some new tactic our cavalry will have difficulty deploying If we encounter Mighty Arm bows then our infantry will be scattered The problem is our troops can only fight according to convention and are unable to adapt to changes during battle 59 Chage A remarkable Xia weapon was discovered in 1980 namely the Wuwei Bronze Cannon Dating to the early 13th century it was a primitive yet large weighing 108 kg bronze cannon shooting iron balls 113 Culture edit nbsp Fragment of a stele with Tangut script nbsp Tangut printing blockLanguage edit The kingdom developed a Tangut script to write its own Tangut language a now extinct Tibeto Burman language 6 114 probably related to the Horpa taxon 115 Tibetans Uyghurs Han and Tanguts served as officials in Western Xia 116 It is unclear how distinct the different ethnic groups were in the Xia state as intermarriage was never prohibited Tangut Chinese and Tibetan were all official languages 117 A system of writing its language based on Chinese and Khitan was created in 1036 and many Chinese books were translated and then printed in this script Gifts and exchanges of books were arranged with the Sung court from time to time Buddhist sutras were donated no fewer than six times and some of them were translated and printed After the Mongol conquest of Tangut and China a Tangut edition of the Tripitaka in the Hsi hsia script in more than 3620 chuan was printed in Hangchow and completed in 1302 and about a hundred copies were distributed to monasteries in the former Tangut region Many fragments of books in Tangut and Chinese were discovered at the beginning of this century including two editions of the Diamond sutra printed in 1016 and 1189 and two bilingual glossaries the Hsi Hsia Tzu Shu Yun Thung 1132 and the Fan Han Ho Shih Chang Chung Chu 1190 Apparently many books in their native tongue were also printed under the Tangut rulers 118 Tsien Tsuen hsuin Dress edit See also Fashion in Western XiaIn 1034 Li Yuanhao Emperor Jingzong introduced and decreed a new custom for Western Xia subjects to shave their heads leaving a fringe covering the forehead and temples ostensibly to distinguish them from neighbouring countries Clothing was regulated for different classes of official and commoners Dress seemed to be influenced by Tibetan and Uighur clothing 119 Religion edit The government sponsored state religion was a blend of Tibetan Tantric Buddhism and Chinese Mahayana Buddhism with a Sino Nepalese artistic style The scholar official class engaged in the study of Confucian classics Taoist texts and Buddhist sermons while the Emperor portrayed himself as a Buddhist king and patron of Lamas 117 Early in the kingdom s history Chinese Buddhism was the most widespread form of Buddhism practiced However around the mid twelfth century Tibetan Buddhism gained prominence as rulers invited Tibetan monks to hold the distinctive office of state preceptor 120 The practice of Tantric Buddhism in Western Xia led to the spread of some sexually related customs Before they could marry men of their own ethnicity when they reached 30 years old Uighur women in Shaanxi in the 12th century had children after having relations with multiple ethnic Han men with her desirability as a wife enhancing if she had been with a large number of men 121 122 123 Economy edit The economy of the empire mainly consisted of agriculture pastoralism and trade especially with Central Asia 124 125 Rulers editFurther information Western Xia emperors family tree nbsp 450 years after the destruction of the Tangut empire the Kingdom of Tenduc or Tangut was still shown on some European maps as China s northwestern neighborTemple Name Posthumous Name Personal Name Reign DatesJǐngzōng 景宗 Emperor Wǔlie 武烈皇帝 Lǐ Yuanhao 李元昊 1038 1048Yizōng 毅宗 Emperor Zhaoying 昭英皇帝 Lǐ Liangzuo 李諒祚 1048 1067Huizōng 惠宗 Emperor Kangjing 康靖皇帝 Lǐ Bǐngchang 李秉常 126 127 1067 1086Chongzōng 崇宗 Emperor Shengwen 聖文皇帝 Lǐ Qianshun 李乾順 128 129 1086 1139Renzōng 仁宗 Emperor Shengde 聖德皇帝 Lǐ Renxiao 李仁孝 130 1139 1193Huanzōng 桓宗 Emperor Zhaojiǎn 昭簡皇帝 Lǐ Chunyou 李純佑 1193 1206Xiangzōng 襄宗 Emperor Jingmu 敬慕皇帝 Lǐ Anquan 李安全 1206 1211Shenzōng 神宗 Emperor Yingwen 英文皇帝 Lǐ Zunxu 李遵頊 1211 1223Xianzōng 獻宗 None Lǐ Dewang 李德旺 131 132 133 1223 1226None None Lǐ Xian 李晛 1226 1227Each Western Xia emperor established one or more era name in Chinese and Tangut although not all the Tangut versions of era names are known Emperor Era Name DatesJǐngzōng Tianshou Lǐfǎ Yanzuo 天授禮法延祚 1038 1048Yizōng Yansi Ningguo 延嗣寧國 1049Tianyou Chuisheng 天祐垂聖 1050 1052Fusheng Chengdao 福聖承道 Tangut 𗼃𗼕 or 𗣼𗧯 1053 1056Duǒdu 奲都 1057 1062Gǒnghua 拱化 1063 1067Huizōng Qiandao 乾道 1068 1069Tianci Lǐsheng Guoqing 天賜禮盛國慶 Tangut 𘀗𗙀𗅲𗯿𗂧𗴴 1070 1074Da an 大安 Tangut 𘜶𗵐 1075 1085Tian an Lǐding 天安禮定 Tangut 𘓺𗪚𗅲𗧯 1086Chongzōng Tianyi Zhiping 天儀治平 Tangut 𘓺𗫸𗁣𘇚 1086 1089Tianyou Min an 天祐民安 Tangut 𘓺𗼕𘂀𗴴 1090 1097Yǒng an 永安 Tangut 𗦷𗪚 1098 1100Zhenguan 貞觀 Tangut 𗣼𘝯 1101 1113Yōngning 雍寧 Tangut 𗖠𗪚 1114 1118Yuande 元德 Tangut 𗣼𗪟 1119 1127Zhengde 正德 Tangut 𗣼𘇚 1127 1134Dade 大德 Tangut 𘜶𗣼 1135 1139Renzōng Daqing 大慶 Tangut 𘜶𘅝 1140 1143Renqing 人慶 Tangut 𗸦𘅝 1144 1148Tiansheng 天盛 Tangut 𘓺𘃸 1149 1169Qianyou 乾祐 Tangut 𘀗𘑨 1170 1193Huanzōng Tianqing 天慶 Tangut 𘓺𘅝 1194 1206Xiangzōng Yingtian 應天 1206 1209Huangjian 皇建 Tangut 𘓺𘚪 1210 1211Shenzōng Guangding 光定 Tangut 𗪚𗏴 1211 1223Xianzōng Qianding 乾定 1223 1226Lǐ Xian Bǎoqing 寶慶 1226 1227Gallery edit nbsp A clay head of the Buddha Western Xia dynasty 12th century nbsp A winged kalavinka made of grey pottery Western Xia dynasty nbsp A painting of the Buddhist manjusri from the Yulin Caves of Gansu China from the Tangut led Western Xia dynasty nbsp Concubines of the Tangut ruler nbsp Wooden figure of a Tangut soldier nbsp Tangut women nbsp Tangut bride nbsp Printed text using pottery argile movable type from Western Xia around the mid 12th century Found in Xinhua Xiang 新华乡 Wuwei City Gansu province nbsp The Golden Light Sutra written in the Tangut scriptSee also edit nbsp China portal nbsp History portalEastern Xia Ethnic groups in Chinese history History of Central Asia History of China Hongfo Pagoda Khara Khoto List of Tangut books One Hundred and Eight Stupas Tangut people TangutologyReferences editCitations edit Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research 12 2 222 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 16 September 2016 Kuhn Dieter 15 October 2011 The Age of Confucian Rule The Song Transformation of China Harvard University Press p 50 ISBN 9780674062023 Bowman Rocco 2014 Bounded Empires Ecological and Geographic Implications in Sino Tangut Relations 960 1127 PDF The Undergraduate Historical Journal at UC Merced 2 11 doi 10 5070 H321025689 McGrath Michael C Frustrated Empires The Song Tangut Xia War of 1038 44 In Wyatt p 153 Chinaknowledge de Chinese History Western Xia Empire Economy 2000 ff c Ulrich Theobald Retrieved 13 July 2017 a b c Stein 1972 pp 70 71 Wang Tianshun 王天顺 1993 Xixia Zhan Shi The Battle History of Western Xia 西夏战史 Yinchuan 银川 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 Bian Ren 边人 2005 Xixia xiaoshi zai lishi jiyi zhong de guodu Western Xia the kingdom lost in historical memories 西夏 消逝在历史记忆中的国度 Beijing 北京 Waiwen Chubanshe Foreign Languages Press 外文出版社 Li Fanwen 李范文 2005 Xixia tong shi Comprehensive History of Western Xia 西夏通史 Beijing 北京 and Yinchuan 银川 Ren min chu ban she People s Press 人民出版社 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 Zhao Yanlong 赵彦龙 2005 Qian tan xi xia gong wen wen feng yu gong wen zai ti A brief discussion on the writing style in official documents and documental carrier 浅谈西夏公文文风与公文载体 Xibei min zu yan jiu Northwest Nationalities Research 西北民族研究 45 2 78 84 Qin Wenzhong 秦文忠 Zhou Haitao 周海涛 and Qin Ling 秦岭 1998 Xixia jun shi ti yu yu ke xue ji shu The military sports science and technology of West Xia 西夏军事体育与科学技术 Ningxia Daxue Xuebao Journal of Ningxia University 宁夏大学学报 79 2 48 50 Kepping 1994 p 364 a b Kepping 1994 p 373 Dorje 1999 p 444 Kepping 1994 pp 359 361 a b Twitchett 1994 p 156 Waugh Daniel C The Tanguts depts washington edu Retrieved 24 March 2023 a b Wang 2013 p 226 227 Twitchett 1994 p 157 159 Twitchett 1994 p 161 Wang 2013 p 277 Wang 2013 p 227 228 Twitchett 1994 p 162 Twitchett 1994 p 163 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151 Twitchett 1994 p 197 198 a b c d Twitchett 1994 p 199 Twitchett 1994 p 200 Twitchett 1994 p 204 205 Twitchett 1994 p 200 201 Twitchett 1994 p 201 Twitchett 1994 p 201 202 Twitchett 1994 p 204 a b Twitchett 1994 p 205 Twitchett 1994 p 205 7 a b May Timothy 2012 The Mongol Conquests in World History London Reaktion Books p 1211 ISBN 9781861899712 J Bor Mongol hiigeed Eurasiin diplomat shashtir vol II p 204 a b Twitchett 1994 p 207 Rossabi William 2009 Genghis Khan and the Mongol empire Seattle University of Washington Press p 156 ISBN 978 9622178359 Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World p 85 Man 2004 p 133 Kessler Adam T 2012 Song Blue and White Porcelain on the Silk Road Leiden Brill Publishers p 91 ISBN 9789004218598 a b Twitchett 1994 p 208 a b Twitchett 1994 p 210 Emmons James B 2012 Genghis Khan In Li Xiaobing ed China at War An Encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 139 ISBN 9781598844153 Twitchett 1994 p 211 Mote 2003 pp 255 256 Man 2004 pp 212 213 Man 2004 p 212 Man 2004 p 213 Man 2004 p 214 de Hartog 2004 p 134 a b Man 2004 p 214 Tucker Spencer C ed 2010 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 276 ISBN 978 1851096725 de Hartog 2004 p 135 Man 2004 p 219 Man 2004 de Hartog 2004 p 137 Lange Brenda 2003 Genghis Khan New York City Infobase Publishing p 71 ISBN 9780791072226 Man 2004 p 238 de Hartog 2004 p 137 Sinor D Shimin Geng Kychanov Y I 1998 Asimov M S Bosworth C E eds The Uighurs the Kyrgyz and the Tangut Eighth to the Thirteenth Century Vol 4 Paris UNESCO p 214 ISBN 9231034677 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2012 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History 3rd ed Stamford Connecticut Cengage Learning p 199 ISBN 9781133606475 de Hartog 2004 p 137 Mote 2003 p 256 Boland Crewe Tara Lea David eds 2002 The Territories of the People s Republic of China London Europa Publications p 215 ISBN 9780203403112 Man 2004 p 116 117 Franke Herbert and Twitchett Denis ed 1995 The Cambridge History of China Vol VI Alien Regimes amp Border States 907 1368 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pg 214 Mote 2003 p 256 Mote 2003 pp 256 257 Forage 1991 p 11 Andrade 2016 pp 53 54 Leffman et al 2005 p 988 Beaudouin Mathieu 2023 Tangut and Horpa languages some shared morphosyntactic features Language and Linguistics 24 4 Yang Shao yun 2014 Fan and Han The Origins and Uses of a Conceptual Dichotomy in Mid Imperial China ca 500 1200 In Fiaschetti Francesca Schneider Julia eds Political Strategies of Identity Building in Non Han Empires in China Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag p 24 a b Denis C Twitchett Herbert Franke John King Fairbank 1994 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press pp 154 155 ISBN 978 0 521 24331 5 Tsien 1985 p 169 Denis C Twitchett Herbert Franke John King Fairbank 1994 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press pp 181 182 ISBN 978 0 521 24331 5 Atwood Christopher Pratt 2004 Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire Facts On File p 590 ISBN 978 0 8160 4671 3 Michal Biran 15 September 2005 The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History Between China and the Islamic World Cambridge University Press pp 164 ISBN 978 0 521 84226 6 Dunnell Ruth W 1983 Tanguts and the Tangut State of Ta Hsia Princeton University page 228 洪 皓 松漠紀聞 Dillon Michael ed 1998 China A Cultural and Historical Dictionary London Curzon Press p 351 ISBN 0 7007 0439 6 Rossabi Morris 2014 A History of China Wiley Blackwell p 195 ISBN 978 1 57718 113 2 Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1883 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland Cambridge University Press for the Royal Asiatic Society pp 463 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain 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of 1038 1044 Millward James 2009 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press Mote F W 2003 Imperial China 900 1800 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674012127 Needham Joseph 1986 Science amp Civilisation in China vol 7 The Gunpowder Epic Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30358 3 Perry John C L Smith Bardwell 1976 Essays on T ang Society The Interplay of Social Political and Economic Forces Leiden The Netherlands E J Brill ISBN 90 04 047611 Rong Xinjiang 2013 Eighteen Lectures on Dunhuang Brill Shaban M A 1979 The ʿAbbasid Revolution Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29534 3 Sima Guang 2015 Boyangbǎn Zizhitōngjian 54 huanghou shizōng 柏楊版資治通鑑54皇后失蹤 Yuǎnliu chubǎnshiye gǔfen yǒuxian gōngsi ISBN 978 957 32 0876 1 Skaff Jonathan Karam 2012 Sui Tang China and Its Turko Mongol Neighbors Culture Power and Connections 580 800 Oxford Studies in Early Empires Oxford University Press Smith Paul Jakov 2015 A Crisis in the Literati State Stein R A 1972 Tibetan Civilization London and Stanford University Press Twitchett D 1979 Cambridge History of China Sui and T ang China 589 906 Part I vol 3 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 21446 7 Tsien Tsuen hsuin 1985 Science and Civilization in China 5 Twitchett Denis 1994 The Liao The Cambridge History of China vol 6 Alien Regime and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 43 153 ISBN 0521243319 Twitchett Denis 2009 The Cambridge History of China vol 5 The Sung dynasty and its Predecessors 907 1279 Cambridge University Press Wang Zhenping 2013 Tang China in Multi Polar Asia A History of Diplomacy and War University of Hawaii Press Wilkinson Endymion 2015 Chinese History A New Manual 4th edition Cambridge MA Harvard University Asia Center distributed by Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674088467 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2000 Sui Tang Chang an A Study in the Urban History of Late Medieval China Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies U OF M CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES ISBN 0892641371 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2009 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China United States of America Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0810860537 Xu Elina Qian 2005 HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRE DYNASTIC KHITAN Institute for Asian and African Studies 7 Xue Zongzheng 1992 Turkic peoples 中国社会科学出版社 Yuan Shu 2001 Boyang bǎn Tōngjian Jishibenmo 28 diercihuanguanshidai 柏楊版通鑑記事本末28第二次宦官時代 Yuǎnliu chubǎnshiye gǔfen yǒuxian gōngsi ISBN 957 32 4273 7External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Western Xia Dynasty 宁夏新闻网 Ningxia News Web 西夏研究 Xixia Research 宁夏新闻网 Ningxia News Web 文化频道 Cultural Channel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western Xia amp oldid 1194945884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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