Li Yonghe

Li Yonghe (Chinese: 李永和) was a 19th-century rebel leader from Yunnan province, Qing dynasty China.[1]

Rebellion

In the autumn of 1859, as the Qing dynasty was plagued by the Taiping rebellion, Nian rebellion and Panthay rebellion, Li Yonghe, with two brothers Lan Chaoding (Chinese: 蓝朝鼎) and Lan Chaozhu (Chinese: 蓝朝柱) raised a rebellion in their home province of Yunnan under the slogan "No more payment of rents, no more tribute of grain, fight the rich and aid the poor". They used the name Daming Shuntian (Chinese: 大明顺天), or "Great Ming following Heaven". Li declared himself "King-following-Heaven" (Chinese: 顺天王), while Lan Chaoding and Lan Chaozhu were declared Grand Marshal and Vice Marshal respectively. The rebel army, numbering in excess of 100,000 troops, crossed into Sichuan province, occupying more than 40 prefectures and counties and capturing the city of Mianyang. The rebel army expanded to nearly 300,000.[2]

In 1861, Qing commander Luo Bingzhang was tasked to suppress the rebels with the newly established Xiang Army. By October 1862 Li had been defeated, captured and transported to Chengdu where he was executed. Lan Chaoding had similarly been killed in battle. The surviving rebels under Lan Chaozhu retreated northward to Shaanxi province, where Lan was declared Dahan Xianwang (Chinese: 大汉显王), or "Manifested King of the Great Han". The rebel forces linked up with Taiping Tianguo forces under Chen Baocai, and Lan received the title Wen Wang (Chinese: 文王), or "Cultured King" from the Heavenly King. He was also defeated and killed in 1864.[2] The total casualties of the rebellion are estimated at over 100,000.[3]

gollark: Oh, so like the Python "import from Stack Overflow" thing.
gollark: Or you could use Turi, my other other esolang: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Turi
gollark: Ah yes.
gollark: HQ9+ extended with the B command from Embedded HQ9+, C for "work as GNU `cat` program", and P for "test if input number is prime".
gollark: Hmm, we could make... BHQ9+CP.

References

  1. Theobald, Ulrich (2013). War Finance and Logistics in Late Imperial China: A Study of the Second Jinchuan Campaign (1771–1776. BRILL. p. 232. ISBN 9004255672.
  2. 王新龙 (2013). 大清王朝4. 青苹果数据中心.
  3. A. Ruf, Gregory (1999). Cadres and Kin: Making a Socialist Village in West China, 1921-1991. Stanford University Press. p. 170. ISBN 0804765189.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.