Difference between revisions of "Wu Sangui" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Wu Sangui''' ({{zh-cpw|c=吳三桂|p=Wú Sānguì|w=Wu San-kuei}}; [[courtesy name|styled]] '''Changbai''' 長白 or '''Changbo''' 長伯) (1612 – October 2, 1678) was a [[Ming Dynasty|Ming Chinese general]] who was instrumental in the succession of rule for the [[Qing Dynasty]] in 1644. Considered by some to be a traitor to both the Ming and the Qing dynasties, Wu declared himself [[Emperor of China]] as ruler of the '''Zhou Dynasty''' in 1678, but his revolt was quelled by the [[Kangxi Emperor]].
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'''Wu Sangui''' ({{zh-cpw|c=吳三桂|p=Wú Sānguì|w=Wu San-kuei}}; [[courtesy name|styled]] '''Changbai''' 長白 or '''Changbo''' 長伯) (1612 October 2, 1678) was a [[Ming Dynasty|Ming Chinese general]] who was instrumental in the [[Qing Dynasty]] conquest of China proper in 1644. After the rebel leader Li Tzu'cheng took Peking and the Ming emperor was killed,  Wu Sangui opened the gates of the [[Great Wall of China]] ( 長城) at [[Shanhai Pass]] ( 山海關) to let [[Manchu]] soldiers, under the leadership of  [[Dorgon]]( 多爾袞; Manchu:  ), into [[China proper]]. Popular legend relates that Li Zicheng had captured Wu’s concubine, the famous beauty Chen Yuanyuan, and that Wu asked the Manchu for assistance against his forces.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Later, in southwest China, he led the [[Revolt of the Three Feudatories]] against the Qing (Ch'ing). Wu declared himself [[Emperor of China]] as ruler of the '''Zhou Dynasty''' in 1678, but died of dysentery the same year. He was succeeded by his grandson, but the revolt was quelled by the [[Kangxi Emperor]] in 1681. Wu Sangui was considered by some of his contemporaries to be a traitor to both the Ming and the Qing dynasties.  
  
 
==Ming to Qing==
 
==Ming to Qing==
Wu was born in [[Gaoyou]], [[Jiangsu]] Province to Wu Xiang (襄). In 1644, Wu opened the gates of the [[Great Wall of China]] at [[Shanhai Pass]] to let [[Manchu]] soldiers, enemies of the Empire which he served, into [[China proper]].
+
Wu Sangui was born in 1612 in [[Gaoyou]]( 高郵), [[Jiangsu]] (江蘇) Province, to Wu Xiang (襄), a frontier general. Little is known about his childhood or his military career.  It is known that Wu Sangui was the Ningyuan garrison commander and one of eight generals subordinate to Hong Chengchou in 1643, when the Ming court sent Hong to lift the Manchu siege of Jinzhou.
 +
 
 +
General Zu Dashou had held the forward fortress of Jinzhou against the Manchu for several years. In 1643, Huang Taiji, the second ruler of the Manchu, renewed his assault on Jinzhou. Huang Taiji had subdued all his rivals and given his people a new identity, proclaiming the establishment of the Qing dynasty and renaming them “Manchu.” He had added captured Chinese and European cannons to his weaponry; absorbed the the Chahar Mongols and conquered Han Chinese into his military organization; and taken the Ming fortress of Dalinghe from Zu Dashou. In 1937, he had invaded Korea and made it a tributary state of the Qing. The Manchu had made numerous raids into China, following the circuitous route through the Inner Mongolian desert, but were unable to retain their territorial conquests because of logistical difficulties. In order to open a direct route into China, Huang would have to take the Ming garrisons of Shanhaiguan, Ningyuan, and Jinzhou along the Bohai littoral. 
 +
The Ming court sent an army of over 130,000 men under Hong Chengchou to lift the siege and save the vital fortress at Jinzhou.  Wu Sangui was one of the eight generals subordinate to Hong. The Manchu cavalry first raided Hong’s food supplies in the rear.  When the Ming armies ran out of food and began to retreat, Huang Taiji’s forces ambushed and massacred them at night. In the Battle of Songshan alone, the Ming lost over 50,000 troops and a large number of weapons. Jinzhou capitulated and General Hong Chengchou became Huang Taiji's special prisoner.<ref> http://www.china-defense.com/history/1644/1644-13.html  ChinaDefense.com 1644: Showdown At Shanhaiguan.  Retrieved 8/23/2007</ref>
 +
 
 +
Wu Sangui and Tang Tong were in the rear and were among the few Ming commanders who were able to escape the Manchu ambush. They returned to their original stations in Ningyuan and Miyun, respectively. When the Imperial capital at Peking was threatened by the rebel bandit leader Li Tzu-ch'eng (Chuǎng Wáng,闖王, "The Roaming King"), the emperor ordered Wu Sangui and Tang Tong to save the capital. Tang Tong arrived in time to face Li Tzu-ch'eng, but was overwhelmed by the Shun forces.  Wu Sangui did not reach the capital in time.
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 +
Historians have conflicting theories about why Wu Sanghui did not arrive in time to save the capital. Some believe that he purposely slowed his advance. Others point out that, since Wu’s family was in Peking, he would not have deliberately allowed the city to fall. Instead they advance the theory that the Imperial court did not alert Wu Sanghui in time because they did not realize how quickly Li Tzu-ch'eng was approaching, and because the Emperor was reluctant to re-deploy the troops who were protecting the Great Wall. Tang Tong was closer to the capital and able to reach it sooner. When Wu Sanghui learned that Li Tzu-ch'eng  Wu Sangui stopped in his march toward Beijing and bivouacked in Shanhaiguan. There, he contacted the Manchu and their leader [[Dorgon]]( 多爾袞; Manchu:  ), and opened the gates of the [[Great Wall of China]] ( 長城) at [[Shanhai Pass]] ( 山海關) to let [[Manchu]] soldiers, enemies of the Ming, into [[China proper]].  It is commonly believed that this act led to the ultimate destruction of the Ming Empire and the establishment of the [[Qing]] (Manchu) Dynasty.
  
He did not surrender to the Manchus until after the defensive capability of the Ming Empire had been greatly weakened by the armies of [[Li Zicheng]]. Wu was about to join the rebel forces of Li, who had already sacked Beijing, when he heard that his concubine [[Chen Yuanyuan]] had been taken by Li. Enraged, he contacted the Manchu and their leader [[Dorgon]]. The gates opened.  
+
==Wu Sanghui and the Manchu==
 +
Historians have also advanced various theories about Wu Sanghui’s motivation for defecting to the Manchu and opposing Li Tzu-ch'eng. A popular legend says that Wu was about to join the rebel forces of Li, who had already sacked Beijing, when he heard that Li had captured his concubine [[Chen Yuanyuan]] ( 陈圆圆). Enraged, he asked the Manchu and their leader [[Dorgon]]( 多爾袞; Manchu:  ) for assistance in overcoming Li Tzu-ch'eng, and opened the gates of the [[Great Wall of China]] ( 長城). Historical records about the famous beauty Chen Yuanyuan are scarce; most of them came from either court writers or common legends. Ming loyalists may have preferred to blame one woman for the Manchu conquest than to admit that Ming officials and citizens willingly aided the Manchu. Whether the story of the concubine Chen Yuanyuan is true or not, it appears that in the spring of 1644, Wu Sangui's actions were probably motivated by his personal ambitions. Wu Sangui had two possibilities: surrender to either the Manchu or Li Tzu-ch'eng, or do nothing and possibly allow the two forces to ally against him.  
  
It is commonly believed that this act led to the ultimate destruction of the Ming Empire and the establishment of the [[Qing]] (Manchu) Dynasty.
+
By surrendering to Li Tzu-ch'eng, Wu would probably have become only a subordinate general to Li Tzu-ch'eng, like Tang Tong or Bai Guangen, who had joined Li Tzu-ch'eng when Li overran Shaanxi. The Manchu, however, had already bestowed hereditary office on many former Ming officers who had joined them, including Li Yongfang, Kong Youde, Shang Kexi, and Geng Jimao. Li Zicheng was responsible for the death of the Ming emperor, and it seemed that the subjects of Ming hated Li Tzu-ch'eng more than they hated the Manchu. Wu decided to  lead his army against Li Tzu-ch'eng. At the same time, a Manchu force under the command of Prince Regent Dorgon was advancing toward Ningyuan. Caught between two large forces, Wu proposed to surrender to the Manchu in order to eliminate Li Tzu-ch'eng.
  
 
==Loyalty and Revolt==
 
==Loyalty and Revolt==
He was rewarded with the position of Pingxi Wang (平西王) in [[Yunnan]] by the Qing imperial court, after he conquered the region from the remnants of Ming loyalists. It had been extremely rare for someone outside of the royal family, especially a non-Manchu, to be granted the title of ''Wang'' ([[Monarch|king]]). Those being awarded the title of ''Wang'' who were not members of the royal family were called ''Yixing Wang'' (异姓王, literally meaning "kings whose surnames are different from that of the emperor"). It was believed that ''Yixing Wang''s didn't usually have good ends, largely because they were not trusted by emperors as members of the emperors' own family were.  
+
In 1659 Wu was put in charge of eliminating the remnants of Ming resistance in the southwest. After Wu conquered the region, the Qing imperial court rewarded him with the position of Pingxi Wang (平西王) in [[Yunnan]] (雲南). It was extremely rare for someone outside of the royal family, especially a non-Manchu, to be granted the title of ''Wang'' ([[Monarch|king]]). Those being awarded the title of ''Wang'' who were not members of the royal family were called ''Yixing Wang'' (异姓王, literally meaning "kings whose surnames are different from that of the emperor"). It was believed that ''Yixing Wang''s did not usually meet a good end, because they were not trusted by emperors as members of the emperors' own family were.
 +
 
 +
Wu Sangui was not trusted by the [[Qing]] imperial court, but he was able to rule with little or no interference because the Manchu, an ethnic minority, were preoccupied after their prolonged conquest in organizing their rule over a vast Han Chinese society. Wu Sangui, from his outpost in faraway [[Kunming]]( 昆明), had foreseen an eventual clash with the imperial court, so he spent the years of peace consolidating his power in Yunnan and neighboring Kweichow Province, and building up his armies. Two other commanders set up similar independent domains in the neighboring southern provinces of Kwangtung and Fukien, and South China became an independent power rivaling the Qing government in the north.
  
Wu Sangui was not trusted by the Qing imperial court, but he was still able to rule his land with little or no interference from the imperial court, largely because the Manchus, an enthic minority, needed time after their prolonged conquest to figure out how to impose the rule of a dynasty of minority people on the vast han-Chinese society they held in their hands.
+
In 1673, when the Qing dynasty tried to check these southern kingdoms, Wu led them in the [[Revolt of the Three Feudatories]], declaring himself the "All-Supreme-Military Generalissimo" (''Tiānxià Dōuzhāotǎo Bīngmǎ Dàyuánshuài'' 天下都招討兵馬大元帥). In 1678, he went further and declared himself the emperor of a new '''Zhou Dynasty''', with the [[Chinese era name|era name]] of '''Zhaowu''' (昭武).  He made his capital at [[Hengzhou]] (衡州), which is now [[Hengyang]], [[Hunan]].  He advanced into central China but then hesitated, possibly because the Manchu were holding his son as hostage. The Manchu then took the initiative, and, soon afterward, with the battle turning against him, Wu died of dysentery. He was succeeded by his grandson [[Wu Shifan]] who continued the rebellion until the remnants of his armies were defeated in 1681.
  
Wu Sangui, from his outpost in faraway [[Kunming]], had foreseen an eventual clash with the imperial court, so he spent the years of peace consolidating his power in the region and building up his armies.  
+
Wu Sangui's son, [[Wu Yingxiong]] (吳應熊), married the fourteenth daughter (建寧公主) of Manchu emperor [[Hung Taiji]].
  
In 1674, he revolted against the Qing and started the [[Revolt of the Three Feudatories]], declaring himself the "All-Supreme-Military Generalissimo" (''Tiānxià Dōuzhāotǎo Bīngmǎ Dàyuánshuài'' 天下都招討兵馬大元帥). In 1678, he went further and declared himself the emperor of a new '''Zhou Dynasty''', with the [[Chinese era name|era name]] of '''Zhaowu''' (昭武)He made his capital at [[Hengzhou]] (衡州), which is now [[Hengyang]], [[Hunan]]He died there in the same year of natural causes and was succeeded by his grandson [[Wu Shifan]]. The remnants of his armies were defeated soon thereafter.
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==Legend of Chen Yuanyuan==
 +
Yuanyuan was a courtesan famous for her beauty.  Wu Sangui fell in love with her, but when he went to buy her freedom from the owner of the brothel where she worked, he learned that Tianwan, the sixty-year-old father one of the emperor’s concubines, had already purchased her. Yuanyuan was very unhappy about this.
 +
 +
The Qing armies were attacking outside of the Great Wall, and rebellions were going inside China.  The Emperor Huaizong entrusted Wu Sangui, who was then a general of the Ming imperial court, with the protection of Shanhai Fortress. Wealthy families were concerned that their enemies might take all their property, and sought protection from those in powerful positions, such as Wu Sangui. Tianwan sought protection from General Wu and invited him to his house. After some food and entertainment, as Wu was about to leave, Tianwan led him to a room where Yuanyuan poured wine for them. Tianwan soon recognized that General Wu was in love with herSangui offered protection to the Tian family only if Tianwan would give Yuanyuan to him. Tianwan consented, and  Sangui sent the girl to safety at his father’s house in Peking.  
  
Wu Sangui's son, [[Wu Yingxiong]] (吳應熊), married the fourteenth daughter (建寧公主) of Manchu emperor [[Hung Taiji]].
+
Soon, the rebel leader Li Tzu-ch'eng captured Peking and the emperor, Ming Huaizong, was killed. The rebels searched all the treasures inside the palace. Li Tzu-ch'eng heard about the beauty of Yuanyuan, and immediately went to Sangui’s father’s house and forced him to give up the girl. He also commanded him to write to his son and tell him to surrender to Li’s army.  Wu Sangui’s father  wrote to him telling him everything that had happened, and urging him to surrender to the Qing armies. Since the Ming emperor was already dead, and Li Tzu-ch'eng had killed over thirty of his family members, Wu Sangui opened the gate of Shanhai Fortress and led the Qing armies to the capital, where he was finally united with Yuanyuan. <ref>http://library.thinkquest.org/28491/html/wu.htm  Thinkquest.org  “Wu Sangui and Chen Yuanyuan" Retrieved 8/23/2007 </ref>
  
 
==In modern culture==
 
==In modern culture==
Wu Sangui in contemporary China was regarded as a traitor and opportunist, due to his betrayal of both the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty.  
+
In contemporary China, Wu Sangui was regarded as a traitor and opportunist, due to his betrayal of both the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty.  
  
 
His early life and military career were portrayed in the [[China Central Television]] show ''Jiangshan Fengyuqing'' (江山风雨情, which could be loosely translated as "Turmoil and love stories of the late Ming Dynasty").
 
His early life and military career were portrayed in the [[China Central Television]] show ''Jiangshan Fengyuqing'' (江山风雨情, which could be loosely translated as "Turmoil and love stories of the late Ming Dynasty").
  
==Zhou Dynasty (1678 &ndash; 1681)==
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==Zhou Dynasty (1678 1681)==
  
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
Line 37: Line 53:
 
| Tai Zu (太祖)
 
| Tai Zu (太祖)
 
| Wú Sānguì (吳三桂)
 
| Wú Sānguì (吳三桂)
| March 1678 &ndash; August 1678
+
| March 1678 August 1678
 
| Zhāowǔ (昭武)
 
| Zhāowǔ (昭武)
 
|-
 
|-
 
|  
 
|  
 
| Wú Shìfán (吳世璠)
 
| Wú Shìfán (吳世璠)
| August 1678 &ndash; 1681
+
| August 1678 1681
 
| Hónghuà (洪化)
 
| Hónghuà (洪化)
 
|}
 
|}
 +
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
 +
==References==
 +
*Crossley, Pamela Kyle, Helen F. Siu, and Donald S. Sutton. 2006. ''Empire at the margins culture, ethnicity, and frontier in early modern China''. Studies on China, 28. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 1423745426 ISBN 9781423745426
 +
*Elliott, Mark C. 2001. ''The Manchu way ; the eight banners and ethnic identity in late imperial China.'' Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804736065 ISBN 9780804736060
 +
*Perdue, Peter C. 2005. ''China marches west: the Qing conquest of Central Eurasia''. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 067401684X ISBN 9780674016842
 +
*Rawski, Evelyn Sakakida. 1998. ''The last emperors a social history of Qing imperial institutions.'' Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0585131864 ISBN 9780585131863
 +
*Stary, Giovanni. 2000. ''A dictionary of Manchu names: a name index to the Manchu version of the "Complete genealogies of the Manchu clans and families of the eight banners"'' = ''Jakun gusai Manjusai mukun hala be uheri ejehe bithe = Ba qi Manzhou shi zu tong pu.'' Aetas Manjurica, t. 8. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz in K. ISBN 3447042176 ISBN 9783447042178
 +
*Waley-Cohen, Joanna. 2006. ''The culture of war in China empire and the military under the Qing Dynasty.'' International library of war studies, 7. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9781429453677 ISBN 1429453672
  
 
[[Category:1612 births]]
 
[[Category:1612 births]]
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[[Category:Ming Dynasty generals]]
 
[[Category:Ming Dynasty generals]]
 
[[Category:The Deer and the Cauldron|Wu Sangui]]
 
[[Category:The Deer and the Cauldron|Wu Sangui]]
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{{credits|Wu_Sangui|145032616}}
 
{{credits|Wu_Sangui|145032616}}

Revision as of 21:16, 24 August 2007

Wu Sangui (Chinese: 吳三桂; pinyin: Wú Sānguì; Wade-Giles: Wu San-kuei; styled Changbai 長白 or Changbo 長伯) (1612 – October 2, 1678) was a Ming Chinese general who was instrumental in the Qing Dynasty conquest of China proper in 1644. After the rebel leader Li Tzu'cheng took Peking and the Ming emperor was killed, Wu Sangui opened the gates of the Great Wall of China ( 長城) at Shanhai Pass ( 山海關) to let Manchu soldiers, under the leadership of Dorgon( 多爾袞; Manchu: ), into China proper. Popular legend relates that Li Zicheng had captured Wu’s concubine, the famous beauty Chen Yuanyuan, and that Wu asked the Manchu for assistance against his forces.


Later, in southwest China, he led the Revolt of the Three Feudatories against the Qing (Ch'ing). Wu declared himself Emperor of China as ruler of the Zhou Dynasty in 1678, but died of dysentery the same year. He was succeeded by his grandson, but the revolt was quelled by the Kangxi Emperor in 1681. Wu Sangui was considered by some of his contemporaries to be a traitor to both the Ming and the Qing dynasties.

Ming to Qing

Wu Sangui was born in 1612 in Gaoyou( 高郵), Jiangsu (江蘇) Province, to Wu Xiang (襄), a frontier general. Little is known about his childhood or his military career. It is known that Wu Sangui was the Ningyuan garrison commander and one of eight generals subordinate to Hong Chengchou in 1643, when the Ming court sent Hong to lift the Manchu siege of Jinzhou.

General Zu Dashou had held the forward fortress of Jinzhou against the Manchu for several years. In 1643, Huang Taiji, the second ruler of the Manchu, renewed his assault on Jinzhou. Huang Taiji had subdued all his rivals and given his people a new identity, proclaiming the establishment of the Qing dynasty and renaming them “Manchu.” He had added captured Chinese and European cannons to his weaponry; absorbed the the Chahar Mongols and conquered Han Chinese into his military organization; and taken the Ming fortress of Dalinghe from Zu Dashou. In 1937, he had invaded Korea and made it a tributary state of the Qing. The Manchu had made numerous raids into China, following the circuitous route through the Inner Mongolian desert, but were unable to retain their territorial conquests because of logistical difficulties. In order to open a direct route into China, Huang would have to take the Ming garrisons of Shanhaiguan, Ningyuan, and Jinzhou along the Bohai littoral. The Ming court sent an army of over 130,000 men under Hong Chengchou to lift the siege and save the vital fortress at Jinzhou. Wu Sangui was one of the eight generals subordinate to Hong. The Manchu cavalry first raided Hong’s food supplies in the rear. When the Ming armies ran out of food and began to retreat, Huang Taiji’s forces ambushed and massacred them at night. In the Battle of Songshan alone, the Ming lost over 50,000 troops and a large number of weapons. Jinzhou capitulated and General Hong Chengchou became Huang Taiji's special prisoner.[1]

Wu Sangui and Tang Tong were in the rear and were among the few Ming commanders who were able to escape the Manchu ambush. They returned to their original stations in Ningyuan and Miyun, respectively. When the Imperial capital at Peking was threatened by the rebel bandit leader Li Tzu-ch'eng (Chuǎng Wáng,闖王, "The Roaming King"), the emperor ordered Wu Sangui and Tang Tong to save the capital. Tang Tong arrived in time to face Li Tzu-ch'eng, but was overwhelmed by the Shun forces. Wu Sangui did not reach the capital in time.

Historians have conflicting theories about why Wu Sanghui did not arrive in time to save the capital. Some believe that he purposely slowed his advance. Others point out that, since Wu’s family was in Peking, he would not have deliberately allowed the city to fall. Instead they advance the theory that the Imperial court did not alert Wu Sanghui in time because they did not realize how quickly Li Tzu-ch'eng was approaching, and because the Emperor was reluctant to re-deploy the troops who were protecting the Great Wall. Tang Tong was closer to the capital and able to reach it sooner. When Wu Sanghui learned that Li Tzu-ch'eng Wu Sangui stopped in his march toward Beijing and bivouacked in Shanhaiguan. There, he contacted the Manchu and their leader Dorgon( 多爾袞; Manchu: ), and opened the gates of the Great Wall of China ( 長城) at Shanhai Pass ( 山海關) to let Manchu soldiers, enemies of the Ming, into China proper. It is commonly believed that this act led to the ultimate destruction of the Ming Empire and the establishment of the Qing (Manchu) Dynasty.

Wu Sanghui and the Manchu

Historians have also advanced various theories about Wu Sanghui’s motivation for defecting to the Manchu and opposing Li Tzu-ch'eng. A popular legend says that Wu was about to join the rebel forces of Li, who had already sacked Beijing, when he heard that Li had captured his concubine Chen Yuanyuan ( 陈圆圆). Enraged, he asked the Manchu and their leader Dorgon( 多爾袞; Manchu: ) for assistance in overcoming Li Tzu-ch'eng, and opened the gates of the Great Wall of China ( 長城). Historical records about the famous beauty Chen Yuanyuan are scarce; most of them came from either court writers or common legends. Ming loyalists may have preferred to blame one woman for the Manchu conquest than to admit that Ming officials and citizens willingly aided the Manchu. Whether the story of the concubine Chen Yuanyuan is true or not, it appears that in the spring of 1644, Wu Sangui's actions were probably motivated by his personal ambitions. Wu Sangui had two possibilities: surrender to either the Manchu or Li Tzu-ch'eng, or do nothing and possibly allow the two forces to ally against him.

By surrendering to Li Tzu-ch'eng, Wu would probably have become only a subordinate general to Li Tzu-ch'eng, like Tang Tong or Bai Guangen, who had joined Li Tzu-ch'eng when Li overran Shaanxi. The Manchu, however, had already bestowed hereditary office on many former Ming officers who had joined them, including Li Yongfang, Kong Youde, Shang Kexi, and Geng Jimao. Li Zicheng was responsible for the death of the Ming emperor, and it seemed that the subjects of Ming hated Li Tzu-ch'eng more than they hated the Manchu. Wu decided to lead his army against Li Tzu-ch'eng. At the same time, a Manchu force under the command of Prince Regent Dorgon was advancing toward Ningyuan. Caught between two large forces, Wu proposed to surrender to the Manchu in order to eliminate Li Tzu-ch'eng.

Loyalty and Revolt

In 1659 Wu was put in charge of eliminating the remnants of Ming resistance in the southwest. After Wu conquered the region, the Qing imperial court rewarded him with the position of Pingxi Wang (平西王) in Yunnan (雲南). It was extremely rare for someone outside of the royal family, especially a non-Manchu, to be granted the title of Wang (king). Those being awarded the title of Wang who were not members of the royal family were called Yixing Wang (异姓王, literally meaning "kings whose surnames are different from that of the emperor"). It was believed that Yixing Wangs did not usually meet a good end, because they were not trusted by emperors as members of the emperors' own family were.

Wu Sangui was not trusted by the Qing imperial court, but he was able to rule with little or no interference because the Manchu, an ethnic minority, were preoccupied after their prolonged conquest in organizing their rule over a vast Han Chinese society. Wu Sangui, from his outpost in faraway Kunming( 昆明), had foreseen an eventual clash with the imperial court, so he spent the years of peace consolidating his power in Yunnan and neighboring Kweichow Province, and building up his armies. Two other commanders set up similar independent domains in the neighboring southern provinces of Kwangtung and Fukien, and South China became an independent power rivaling the Qing government in the north.

In 1673, when the Qing dynasty tried to check these southern kingdoms, Wu led them in the Revolt of the Three Feudatories, declaring himself the "All-Supreme-Military Generalissimo" (Tiānxià Dōuzhāotǎo Bīngmǎ Dàyuánshuài 天下都招討兵馬大元帥). In 1678, he went further and declared himself the emperor of a new Zhou Dynasty, with the era name of Zhaowu (昭武). He made his capital at Hengzhou (衡州), which is now Hengyang, Hunan. He advanced into central China but then hesitated, possibly because the Manchu were holding his son as hostage. The Manchu then took the initiative, and, soon afterward, with the battle turning against him, Wu died of dysentery. He was succeeded by his grandson Wu Shifan who continued the rebellion until the remnants of his armies were defeated in 1681.

Wu Sangui's son, Wu Yingxiong (吳應熊), married the fourteenth daughter (建寧公主) of Manchu emperor Hung Taiji.

Legend of Chen Yuanyuan

Yuanyuan was a courtesan famous for her beauty. Wu Sangui fell in love with her, but when he went to buy her freedom from the owner of the brothel where she worked, he learned that Tianwan, the sixty-year-old father one of the emperor’s concubines, had already purchased her. Yuanyuan was very unhappy about this.

The Qing armies were attacking outside of the Great Wall, and rebellions were going inside China. The Emperor Huaizong entrusted Wu Sangui, who was then a general of the Ming imperial court, with the protection of Shanhai Fortress. Wealthy families were concerned that their enemies might take all their property, and sought protection from those in powerful positions, such as Wu Sangui. Tianwan sought protection from General Wu and invited him to his house. After some food and entertainment, as Wu was about to leave, Tianwan led him to a room where Yuanyuan poured wine for them. Tianwan soon recognized that General Wu was in love with her. Sangui offered protection to the Tian family only if Tianwan would give Yuanyuan to him. Tianwan consented, and Sangui sent the girl to safety at his father’s house in Peking.

Soon, the rebel leader Li Tzu-ch'eng captured Peking and the emperor, Ming Huaizong, was killed. The rebels searched all the treasures inside the palace. Li Tzu-ch'eng heard about the beauty of Yuanyuan, and immediately went to Sangui’s father’s house and forced him to give up the girl. He also commanded him to write to his son and tell him to surrender to Li’s army. Wu Sangui’s father wrote to him telling him everything that had happened, and urging him to surrender to the Qing armies. Since the Ming emperor was already dead, and Li Tzu-ch'eng had killed over thirty of his family members, Wu Sangui opened the gate of Shanhai Fortress and led the Qing armies to the capital, where he was finally united with Yuanyuan. [2]

In modern culture

In contemporary China, Wu Sangui was regarded as a traitor and opportunist, due to his betrayal of both the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty.

His early life and military career were portrayed in the China Central Television show Jiangshan Fengyuqing (江山风雨情, which could be loosely translated as "Turmoil and love stories of the late Ming Dynasty").

Zhou Dynasty (1678 – 1681)

Convention: use personal name
Temple names Family name and first name Period of reign Era name
Tai Zu (太祖) Wú Sānguì (吳三桂) March 1678 – August 1678 Zhāowǔ (昭武)
Wú Shìfán (吳世璠) August 1678 – 1681 Hónghuà (洪化)

Notes

  1. http://www.china-defense.com/history/1644/1644-13.html ChinaDefense.com 1644: Showdown At Shanhaiguan. Retrieved 8/23/2007
  2. http://library.thinkquest.org/28491/html/wu.htm Thinkquest.org “Wu Sangui and Chen Yuanyuan" Retrieved 8/23/2007

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Crossley, Pamela Kyle, Helen F. Siu, and Donald S. Sutton. 2006. Empire at the margins culture, ethnicity, and frontier in early modern China. Studies on China, 28. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 1423745426 ISBN 9781423745426
  • Elliott, Mark C. 2001. The Manchu way ; the eight banners and ethnic identity in late imperial China. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804736065 ISBN 9780804736060
  • Perdue, Peter C. 2005. China marches west: the Qing conquest of Central Eurasia. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 067401684X ISBN 9780674016842
  • Rawski, Evelyn Sakakida. 1998. The last emperors a social history of Qing imperial institutions. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0585131864 ISBN 9780585131863
  • Stary, Giovanni. 2000. A dictionary of Manchu names: a name index to the Manchu version of the "Complete genealogies of the Manchu clans and families of the eight banners" = Jakun gusai Manjusai mukun hala be uheri ejehe bithe = Ba qi Manzhou shi zu tong pu. Aetas Manjurica, t. 8. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz in K. ISBN 3447042176 ISBN 9783447042178
  • Waley-Cohen, Joanna. 2006. The culture of war in China empire and the military under the Qing Dynasty. International library of war studies, 7. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9781429453677 ISBN 1429453672


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