Ma Xiang | |
---|---|
Native name | 馬相 |
Born | Liang Province |
Died | c. 188 Yi Province |
Allegiance | Yellow Turban rebels |
Years of service | ?–188 |
Rank | Self-declared Emperor of China |
Commands held | Yellow Turbans of Yi Province |
Battles/wars | Late Yellow Turban Rebellion |
Ma Xiang (died c. 188) was a self-declared Emperor of China, Yellow Turban rebel, warlord, and bandit leader who lived in the late 2nd century. Although operating after the main Yellow Turban Rebellion had been defeated, Ma proved highly successful in leading a large insurgency in the western Han Empire of China. At the peak of his power, he controlled most of the northern Yi Province before being defeated and killed by Han loyalist Jia Long.
According to Chang Qu's Chronicles of Huayang , Ma was born in Liang Province. [1] There, he became a bandit leader, operating alongside Zhao Zhi (趙祗). [2] It is unlikely that Ma had any actual links to the Yellow Turban movement of Zhang Jue in eastern China. [3] When Ma and his forces marched southward into Yi Province, [2] ex-Han army troops of Qiang origin were still engaged in an open rebellion in Liang Province. [4] According to researcher J.M. Farmer, it is possible that Ma had enlisted some Qiang soldiers. [5]
Ma and Zhao initially entered Yi Province at Guanghan commandery. [2] The exact timing of their invasion is unclear, as the primary sources differ in the dating. The Chronicles of Huayang record the year 184, while the Book of the Later Han claims 189. [6] Farmer and historian Rafe de Crespigny regard 188 as most likely. [1] [2]
Ma and Zhao proclaimed themselves Yellow Turbans to the locals at Mianzhu. In just one or two days, they gathered thousands of discontented peasants, and killed the local prefect Li Sheng. [1] [lower-alpha 1] Their army consequently grew even further to over 10,000 rebels, as more peasants and clerks joined their cause. [1] [2] Based on the sparse accounts of the events, Farmer argued that the uprising was a reaction to corrupt Han government officials and not religiously motivated like the Yellow Turban uprisings in eastern China. [8] Using their growing army, Ma and Zhao overran Luo city, the headquarters of Yi Province, where Inspector Xi Jian was killed. [1] [2] Xi Jian had been notorious for his deeply corrupt governance, and the Han imperial court had actually ordered his dismissal at the time when Ma and Zhao invaded Yi Province. [3]
After overthrowing Xi, the rebels conquered the Shu [lower-alpha 2] and Qianwei commanderies, whereupon Ma Xiang declared himself Emperor of China (Son of Heaven). [1] [9] At this point, Farmer argued that Ma was a regional warlord, [5] and Crespigny stated that Ma effectively dominated the entire northern Yi Province. [9] In their march from Luo to Qianwei, Ma and his followers had crossed a distance of over 100 kilometres (62 mi). [1] Yellow Turban insurgents under Zhao Fa also assaulted the Ba commandery where they ordered the local nobles to turn over their wives and daughters. Many noble women consequently sought refuge in the walled city of Langzhong which the Yellow Turbans were unable to conquer. [10]
As a result of the uprising, the new Inspector of Yi Province, Liu Yan, dared not to enter the Chengdu Plain. While the regular Han government forces were incapable of stopping his forces, Ma Xiang encountered fierce opposition from a member of the region's elite: A noble named Jia Long raised a small private army from his family's estates and various low-ranking volunteers, amassing about 1,000 men. Despite Ma's army greatly outnumbering his opponent, he was defeated, although all sources for the events are extremely vague on how Jia Long achieved this success. [3] Ma was killed during the fighting. [9]
Despite Ma's defeat, the region remained chaotic, as bandits, rebel remnants, private armies, and rogue soldiers roamed the area. [3] After having endured the previous Yellow Turban attack, Langzhong was plundered during this time. Farmer and researcher Ren Naiqiang have argued that Jia Long's troops were probably responsible. [5] Jia initially helped Liu Yan to set up a new regional government and was promoted to colonel for his role in defeating Ma's uprising. [11] However, Jia later rebelled against Liu Yan, but was also defeated and killed. [12] Ren regarded it as possible that a later religious rebel, Zhang Xiu (張脩), was in fact leader of Yellow Turban remnants from Ma's uprising. [6] Researcher T.F. Kleeman agreed that this was possible, believing Zhang to be most probably a Yellow Turban or an independent insurgent. [13]
The Three Kingdoms from 220 to 280 AD was the tripartite division of China among the states of Wei, Shu, and Wu. The Three Kingdoms period started with the end of the Han dynasty and was followed by the Jin dynasty. The short-lived Yan kingdom in the Liaodong Peninsula, which lasted from 237 to 238, is sometimes considered as a "4th kingdom".
The Yellow Turban Rebellion, also translated as the Yellow Scarves Rebellion, was a peasant revolt in China against the Eastern Han dynasty. The uprising broke out in 184 AD during the reign of Emperor Ling. Although the main rebellion was suppressed by 185 AD, pockets of resistance continued and smaller rebellions emerged in later years. It took 21 years until the uprising was fully suppressed in 205 AD. The rebellion, which got its name from the colour of the cloths that the rebels wore on their heads, marked an important point in the history of Taoism due to the rebels' association with secret Taoist societies. The revolt was also used as the opening event in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.
The military history of the Three Kingdoms period encompasses roughly a century's worth of prolonged warfare and disorder in Chinese history. After the assassination of General-in-chief He Jin in September 189, the administrative structures of the Han government became increasingly irrelevant. By the time of death of Cao Cao, the most successful warlord of North China, in 220, the Han empire was divided between the three rival states of Cao Wei, Shu Han and Eastern Wu. Due to the ensuing turmoil, the competing powers of the Three Kingdoms era found no shortage of willing recruits for their armies, although press-ganging as well as forcible enlistment of prisoners from defeated armies still occurred. Following four centuries of rule under the Han dynasty, the Three Kingdoms brought about a new era of conflict in China that shifted institutions in favor of a more permanent and selective system of military recruitment. This ultimately included the creation of a hereditary military class as well as increasing reliance on non-Chinese cavalry forces and the end of universal conscription.
Li Jue, courtesy name Zhiran, was a Chinese military general, politician, and warlord serving under the autocratic warlord Dong Zhuo during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. He later succeeded Dong Zhuo as the leader of the Liang Province faction after Dong Zhuo was murdered in a coup d'état, and was able to take over the Han imperial capital Chang'an, keeping Emperor Xian as a hostage. Despite being adept in military affairs, he was inept at politics, quarrelling with his fellow generals and making the bad decision to let Emperor Xian escape, greatly decreasing his power and precipitating his downfall.
Nanyue, was an ancient kingdom ruled by Chinese monarchs of the Zhao family that covered the modern Chinese subdivisions of Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Hong Kong, Macau, southern Fujian and central to northern Vietnam. Nanyue was established by Zhao Tuo, then Commander of Nanhai of Qin Empire, in 204 BC after the collapse of the Qin dynasty. At first, it consisted of the commanderies Nanhai, Guilin, and Xiang.
Li Hui, courtesy name De'ang, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China. After refusing Liu Zhang's service, Li joined Liu Bei early in his campaign to pacify Yi province. After Liu Bei's death, Li Hui proved his talents during Zhuge Liang's Southern Campaign and was appointed the area commander in the south. He set the standard for his successors, such as Ma Zhong, for sound governance. After Shu-Han's co-regent Li Yan was removed from office, Li Hui was promoted again and sent to Hanzhong to assist in the Northern Expeditions but died a year later.
Liu Yan, courtesy name Junlang, was a Chinese politician and warlord who lived in the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. He was also a member of the extended family of the Han emperors. For most of his career he served as the Governor of Yi Province, which he developed into an independent power base. His domain was passed on to his son Liu Zhang, and eventually to Liu Bei, who founded the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period.
Ma Zhong, courtesy name Dexin, originally named Hu Du, was a military general of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China. Liu Bei was quite impressed by Ma Zhong and praised him highly, comparing him to the recently defected Huang Quan, Ma Zhong was trusted and respected by the following head of the government Zhuge Liang, Jiang Wan and Fei Yi. After Liu Bei's death, he served under Zhuge Liang during the Southern Campaign and helped to quell the rebellion. He was appointed as the area commander in the south after Li Hui's death. He spends most of his life pacify the region and protecting the people of the south often with the help of Zhang Ni. Ma Zhong was known as a generous and whimsical man but he was also decisive in handling affairs. Hence the southern tribes both feared him and respected him. His duty in the south could be comparable to Wang Ping in the north and Deng Zhi in the east. After his death, the foreigners sorely missed him and later established a temple in his honor.
Zhang Yi, courtesy name Bogong, was a military general of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China. Born in the late Eastern Han dynasty, Zhang Yi was a 10th-generation descendant of Zhang Liang. He started his career as a scribe under the warlord Liu Bei, who founded Shu later, and gradually rose to the positions of a county prefect and commandery administrator. In the early 230s, he served as an area commander tasked with maintaining the peace in Shu's southern commanderies. In 234, he led the Shu vanguard during the Battle of Wuzhang Plains against Shu's rival state Wei. From 238 to 259, Zhang Yi steadily rose through the ranks to become one of Shu's top generals. During this time, although he strongly opposed the Shu general Jiang Wei's aggressive stance towards Wei, he still accompanied Jiang Wei on his military campaigns against Wei. In 263, he surrendered to Wei forces along with the Shu emperor Liu Shan when Wei launched a large-scale invasion of Shu. In the following year, Zhang Yi was killed by mutineers during a rebellion by the Wei general Zhong Hui. Like Liao Hua and Zong Yu, Zhang was one of few officials who served the Shu-Han state throughout its entire existence.
The Heishan bandits or Black Mountain bandits was a bandit confederacy in the Taihang Mountain range during the later years of the Eastern Han dynasty in China. They played a part in the internecine feuds that followed the Eastern Han dynasty's descent into chaos preceding the Three Kingdoms period, during which they eventually surrendered to the warlord Cao Cao.
Qin's wars of unification were a series of military campaigns launched in the late 3rd century BC by the Qin state against the other six major Chinese states — Han, Zhao, Yan, Wei, Chu and Qi.
The Liang Province rebellion from 184 to 189 started as an insurrection of the Qiang peoples against the Han dynasty in the western province of Liang in second century AD China, but the Lesser Yuezhi and sympathetic Han rebels soon joined the cause to wrestle control of the province away from central authority. This rebellion, which closely followed the Yellow Turban Rebellion, was part of a series of disturbances that led to the decline and ultimate downfall of the Han dynasty. Despite receiving relatively little attention in the hands of traditional historians, the rebellion nonetheless had lasting importance as it removed Han Chinese power in the northwest and prepared that land for a number of non-Han Chinese states in the centuries to come.
Lü Yi, courtesy name Jiyang, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China.
The Yellow Turban Army, also known as the Yellow Turban Bandits, was a peasant rebel force led by the late Eastern Han Dynasty mystic Zhang Jue from Julu Commandery. The Yellow Turbans launched an uprising against the central government in 184, the year of the Jiazi in the Sexagenary cycle. The Yellow Turban Rebellion became one of the biggest rebellions in Chinese history, but it was mostly quelled within a year by the Eastern Han government. As result, the Chinese historiography has always placed it as the progenitor of the Three Kingdoms Era. Some Yellow Turban factions continued their insurgency for decades, however, and the last known remnants of the movement were defeated in the first decade of the 3rd century.
Yang Xi, courtesy name Wenran, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He is best known for writing the Ji Han Fuchen Zan, a collection of praises of notable persons who served in the Shu Han state. Chen Shou, the third-century historian who wrote the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi), extensively quoted and annotated Yang Xi's collection.
Gong Lu (195–225), courtesy name Dexu, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China.
Li Fu, courtesy name Sunde, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China.
Li Miao, courtesy name Hannan, was an official of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He previously served under the warlord Liu Zhang and later Liu Bei in the late Eastern Han dynasty.
The military of the Han dynasty was the military apparatus of China from 202 BC to 220 AD, with a brief interregnum by the reign of Wang Mang and his Xin dynasty from 9 AD to 23 AD, followed by two years of civil war before the refounding of the Han.