Second rout the Army Group Jiangnan | |||||||
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Part of the Taiping Rebellion | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Qing Dynasty Green Standard Army | Taiping rebels | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
†Chief commander Zhang Guoliang †Imperial Inspector Minister Her Chyun General Zhang Youliang |
Chief commander Li Xiucheng Vice chief commander Chen Yucheng Yang Fuqing Lai Wenguang Tong Zonghai Li Shixian | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
180,000 men | 360,000 men | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
~40,000 military personnel kia; Prisoner of war100,000 | 8,000 KIA |
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The Second rout of the Jiangnan Army Group (Chinese: 太平軍二破江南大營) or the Jiangnan DaYing; (1857–1860) was the deployment of the Qing government's Green Standard Army to crush the Taiping Rebellion. The Green Standard Army twice attempted to besiege the Taiping rebels' capital Nanjing but was defeated both times by the rebel force's military strategies and tactics.
Jiangnan[]
General Li Xiucheng of the rebel forces encircled the region of Jiangnan, taking over Hangzhou in the process, leading to its mayor committing suicide.
Li's daring act attracted the attention of Zhang Guoliang who ordered General Tidu Zhang Youliang(張玉良), in command of 36,000 troops, to track Li's corps. Li routed Zhang's troops and crippled the Army Group Jiangnan. When Zhang Youliang arrived in Hangzhou he believed that Li was occupying the city but Li's corps had left two days earlier on March 19 and attacked another city while waiting for reinforcements.
In Nanjing Hong Rengan ordered Chen Yucheng's troops to cross the river. Chen commanded over 100,000 forces along the river and on 29 April he received the signal to attack from Hong Rengan and began the crossing.
Zeng Guofan[]
When Chief commander Zhang Guoliang and Imperial Inspector Minister Her Chyun died the Qing government promoted Zeng Guofan which changed the course of the war in favor of the Qing and their western allies.
See also[]
- First rout the Army Group Jiangnan
- Second Opium War
- Draft History of Qing
References[]
The original article can be found at Second rout of the Jiangnan Daying and the edit history here.