First rout of the Jiangnan Battalion | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Qing Dynasty | Taiping Heavenly Kingdom | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Imperial Commissioner Xiang Rong Second Class Senior General Her Chyun Lieutenant General:Zhang GuoLiang |
Yang Xiuqing Qin Rigang Shi Dakai Li Xiucheng | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
80,000 Green Standard Army | 460,000 militia forces | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
39,000 killed or wounded Imperial Commissioner Xiang Rong (suicide) Governor of Jiangsu Jeer Hungar (吉爾杭阿) KIA by artillery bomb | unknown |
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The First rout of the Jiangnan Battalion (simplified Chinese: 一破江南大营; traditional Chinese: 一破江南大營) took place between 1853 and 1856 when the Qing government raised the Green Standard Army to fight against the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. The action involved Qing forces surrounding the city of Nanking, the capital capital of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.
First rout of the Jiangnan Army Group[]
After the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom militia successfully occupied Nanking in the southern Chinese territory of Jiangnan, within 10 days, First Class Senior General Xiang Rong, in command of 10,000 Green Standard Army troops surrounded the walls of the city.
The remnants of the former Qing garrison defending Nanjing were barricaded inside the Ming Xiaoling Mausoleum.
Alongside Xiang Rong, the Green Standard Army was led by Second Class Senior General Her Chyun and Lieutenant General Zhang Guoliang. The leaders of the Taiping forces were Shi Dakai, Yang Xiuqing, Qin Rigang(秦日綱) and Li Xiucheng.
The regular Army numbered 80,000 and the Taiping Rebellion militia force had 460,000 militia.
Outcome[]
On June 1, 1856, the Nanjing army tried to stop Taiping forces but the Governor of Jiangsu Jeer Hungar(吉爾杭阿), Mayor of Nanjing and their entire army of 7,800 were totally wiped out. The Qing army lost another battle later in the month and the remaining 36,000 retreated north. On August 9 Xiang Rong committed suicide by hanging himself, although others claimed he had a fatal overdose of Opium due to the pain of his battle wounds in Danyang.
See also[]
References[]
- Draft History of Qing
The original article can be found at Battle of Jiangnan (1856) and the edit history here.