Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Qing reconquest of Xinjiang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reconquest of Xinjiang by the Qing dynasty after the Dungan revolt (19th century)
For the earlier Qing conquest of Xinjiang, seeTen Great Campaigns § Three campaigns against the Dzungars and the pacification of Xinjiang (1755–1759).
Qing reconquest of Xinjiang

Ruins inTacheng in the 1870s
Date1876–1877
Location
ResultQing victory
Territorial
changes
Xinjiang returned to the Qing Empire
Belligerents
Qing dynastyYettishar (Kokandi Uzbek Andijanis under Yaqub Beg)
Commanders and leaders
Yaqub Beg 
Bai Yanhu
Units involved
Han ChineseXiang Army
Khufiyya Sufi Hui Muslims (Dungans) from Gansu
Gedimu Sunni Hui Muslims from Shaanxi[1]
Kokandi Uzbek Andijanis
Qing reconquest of Xinjiang
Traditional Chinese清軍收復新疆
Simplified Chinese清军收复新疆
Transcriptions
General Zuo's reconquest of Xinjiang
Traditional Chinese左宗棠收復新疆[2][3][4]
Simplified Chinese左宗棠收复新疆
Transcriptions

TheQing dynasty reconqueredXinjiang after theDungan Revolt in the late 19th century. After a century ofQing rule, theUzbek adventurerYakub Beg conquered almost all of Xinjiang during the revolt, but was eventually defeated by the Qing GeneralZuo Zongtang (also known as General Tso). Furthermore, the Qing recovered theGulja region through diplomatic negotiations with theRussian Empire and theTreaty of Saint Petersburg in 1881. Xinjiang was converted into a province in 1884.

Background

[edit]
Further information:Xinjiang under Qing rule,Dungan Revolt (1862–1877), andYettishar

TheQing dynasty under theQianlong Emperor conquered Xinjiang from theDzungar Khanate during the final stage of theDzungar–Qing Wars in the late 1750s andput Xinjiang under its rule. However, the Qing dynasty declined in the late 19th century following theOpium War. A major revolt known as theDungan Revolt occurred in the 1860s and 1870s inNorthwest China, andQing rule almost collapsed in all of Xinjiang except for places such asTacheng. Taking advantage of this revolt,Yakub Beg, commander-in-chief of the army ofKokand occupied most of Xinjiang and declared himself theAmir ofKashgaria. Yakub Beg ruled at the height ofThe Great Game era when theBritish,Russian, and Qing empires were all vying forCentral Asia.[5]

Campaign

[edit]
Ruins of a mosque in Hami destroyed by rebels in 1872.
Chinese Soldiers in uniform of wool jackets, velveteen trousers covered with a wrapped skirt, hair wrapped in turbans in Hami, 1875.

In the late 1870s, the Qing decided to reconquer Xinjiang with GeneralZuo Zongtang as its commander. As Zuo Zongtang moved into Xinjiang to crush the Muslim rebels under Yaqub Beg, he was joined by Dungan Khufiyya Sufi (Hui) GeneralMa Anliang and his forces, which were composed entirely out of Muslim Dungan people. Ma Anliang and his Dungan troops fought alongside Zuo Zongtang to attack the Muslim rebel forces.[5] In addition, GeneralDong Fuxiang had an army of both Hans and Dungan people, and his army tookKashgaria andKhotan area during the reconquest.[6][7] Also, the ShaanxiGedimu Hui Muslim (Dungan) Generals Cui Wei and Hua Decai, who had defected back to the Qing, joined Zuo Zongtang and led the attack on Yaqub Beg's forces in Xinjiang.[8]

General Zuo implemented a conciliatory policy toward the Muslim rebels, pardoning those who did not rebel and those who surrendered if they had joined in only for religious reasons. If rebels assisted the government against the rebel Muslims they received rewards.[5] In contrast to General Zuo, the Manchu leader Dorongga sought to massacre all the Muslims and saw them all as the enemy.[5] Zuo also instructed General Zhang Yao that "The Andijanis are tyrannical to their people; government troops should comfort them with benevolence. The Andijanis are greedy in extorting from the people; the government troops should rectify this by being generous", telling him to not mistreat the Turkic Muslim natives of Xinjiang.[9] Zuo wrote that the main targets were only the "die-hard partisans" and their leaders,Yaqub Beg andBai Yanhu.[10] The natives were not blamed or mistreated by the Qing troops, a Russian wrote that soldiers under General Liu "acted very judiciously with regard to the prisoners whom he took . . . His treatment of these men was calculated to have a good influence in favour of the Chinese."[11]

Zuo Zongtang, previously a general in theXiang Army, was the commander in chief of all Qing troops participating in this counterinsurgency. His subordinates were the Han Chinese GeneralLiu Jintang and Manchu Jin Shun.[12] Liu Jintang's army had modern German artillery, which Jin Shun's forces lacked and neither was Jin's advance as rapid as Liu's. After Liu bombarded Ku-mu-ti, Muslim rebel casualties numbered 6,000 dead whileBai Yanhu was forced to flee for his life. Thereafter Qing forces entered Ürümqi unopposed.Zuo Zongtang wrote that Yaqub Beg's soldiers had modern western weapons but were cowardly: "The Andijani chieftain Yaqub Beg has fairly good firearms. He has foreign rifles and foreign guns, including cannon using explosive shells [Kai Hua Pao]; but his are not as good nor as effective as those in the possession of our government forces. His men are not good marksmen, and when repulsed they simply ran away."[13]

Timeline

[edit]
Qing reconquest of Xinjiang is located in Xinjiang
Kashgar
Kashgar
Uqturpan
Uqturpan
Aksu
Aksu
Kucha
Kucha
Lontai
Lontai
Korla
Korla
Karashar
Karashar
Toksun
Toksun
Turfan
Turfan
Hami
Hami
Jade Gate
Jade Gate
Yangi Hissar
Yangi Hissar
Yarkand
Yarkand
Khotan
Khotan
Tacheng
Tacheng
Kulja
Kulja
Manas
Manas
Urumchi
Urumchi
Gucheng
Gucheng
Jade Gate
Jade Gate
Kokand
Kokand

Phase 1: 1876: From about 1874, with the end of thePanthay rebellion and most of theDungan Revolt (1862–1877), the Qing were able to turn their attention to Yakub Beg in the far west. In 1875Zuo Zongtang was given responsibility. It took a long time to collect men and supplies and move them 800 miles west along theGansu corridor. In August 1876, the Qing appeared atUrumchi. The place soon surrendered and the garrison was massacred. On 2 September they began the siege ofManas which was a much stronger place. On 6 November it surrendered. The garrison left town in marching order with their weapons. It appeared that they might be planning an armed break-out, so they were attacked and slaughtered. Every able-bodied man in the vicinity was also killed, but the women and children were spared. A headquarters was established atGucheng about 100 miles east of Urumchi (?[14]). They had about 50,000 men at Gucheng and another 10,000 under Chang Yao at Hami. The Qing army had now been trained by French and German officers, had Krupp cannon, at least 10,000Berdan rifles and were supplied, unofficially, by Russian merchants from Kulja. In September Russia annexed the Khanate of Kokand northwest of Kashgar, thereby tightening the noose around Yakub Beg.[citation needed]

Phase 2: 1877, spring: In September 1876 Yakub learned that a Qing army was 700 miles to the east. He spent the winter making preparations and by February 1877 he was atTurfan building forts.Aleksey Kuropatkin visited Yakub at Turfan and reported that he had 17000 troops spread over a large area, that there were many desertions and that Yakub had little hope. In the spring, the Qing attacked the fort of 'Davanchi' (probablyDabancheng on the road from Urumchi to Turfan). Meanwhile, in mid-April Chang Yao marched fromHami and tookPichuan[15] 50 miles east of Turfan. Yakub fought near Turfan and lost, withdrew toToksun, was defeated, withdrew toKarashar, stayed there a few days and moved toKorla. This withdrawal demoralized the troops and there were many desertions. In April or May Yakub metNikolay Przhevalsky near Korla. In May 1877, Yakub Beg died near Korla, possibly murdered.[citation needed]

Phase 3: 1877, autumn: The Qing halted near Turfan for a few months, possibly to bring up supplies or avoid the summer heat. The death of Yakub Beg had disorganized the rebels. There were various conflicts which need not be listed and no single leader arose to organize resistance. In August an advance party left Turfan and the main body left on 27 September. In early OctoberKarashar andKorla were occupied. The rebels dammed theKaidu River and flooded part of Karashar, but this did not stop the advance. Bayen Hu adopted a scorched earth policy, burning houses and crops and driving the people westward with his army. Kin Shun (Jin Shun) made a forced march and somewhere nearLuntai sighted a mob, said to be some tens of thousands of people. The rebel soldiers drew off from the civilians, a battle was fought and the Kashgaris fled toKucha. When the Qing reached Kucha they found the townspeople fighting the rebels, having no wish to accompany them westward. The Kashgaris fought the Qing with some success, were defeated and fled, leaving 1000 dead on the battlefield. A depot was set up at Kucha and some effort was made to clean up the mess left by Bayan Hu. By the end of October Chang Yao brought up the rear guard and the advance was resumed toward Aksu. During this time, General Zuo with the main army had been inactive north of the mountains. He somehow crossed the Tien Shan and joined the advance.[16] The Qing now had so many men and the rebels had been defeated so many times thatAksu andUqturpan surrendered without a fight. (The commander of Aksu abandoned his post, was captured by the rebels, and executed.) On 17 December, Kashgar was easily taken. Yarkand, Khotan and other places then submitted.[17]

Aftermath

[edit]

Xinjiang incorporated as a province

[edit]

No further rebellion was encountered afterwards, and the reestablished Qing authorities began the task of recovery and reorganization. The Qing forces beheaded Turkic rebel commanders, and also tortured Ottoman Turkish military officers who served with the rebels.[7] When the city of Kashgaria fell, the greater portion of the army, knowing that they could expect no mercy at the hands of Qing authorities, fled to Russian territory, and then spread reports of fresh Chinese massacres, which probably only existed in their own imagination.[18]

Qing forces captured the grandchildren and sons of Yaqub Beg after his death.[19] Aisan Ahung was among his grandson, while the sons who were captured were K'ati Kuli, Yima Kuli, and Maiti Kuli.[20] Yakuub Beg's 4 wives, 2 granddaughters, 2 grandsons and 4 sons fell into Qing hands.[21] 5 year old Aisan Ahung, six year old K'ati Kuli, 10 year old Yima Kuli, and 14 year old Maiti Kuli were sent to Lanzhou jail.[21] A disinterment of the graves and incineration of Ishana Beg's and his father Yaqub's Beg's corpses took place at the orders of the Qing.[21] The Qing crushed an attempted revolt by Hakim Khan Tufl.[21] Beijing received Yaqub Beg's cremated remains.[22]

Zuo Zongtang proposed establishing Xinjiang as a formal province, and this recommendation led to the creation of the Xinjiang Province in November 1884.[23]

Management of local Muslim affairs

[edit]

The use of Muslims in the Qing armies against the revolt was noted byYang Zengxin.[24]

The third reason is that at the time that Turkic Muslims were wagingrebellion in the early years of the Guangxu reign, the ‘five elitedivisions’ that governor general Liu Jintang led out of the Pass wereallDungan troops [Hui dui回隊]. Back then, Dungan militarycommanders such as Cui Wei and Hua Dacai were surrenderedtroops who had been redeployed. These are undoubtedly cases ofpawns who went on to achieve great merit. When Cen Shuying wasin charge of military affairs in Yunnan, the Muslim troops andgenerals that he used included many rebels, and it was because ofthem that the Muslim rebellion in Yunnan was pacified. These areexamples to show that Muslim troops can be used effectively evenwhile Muslim uprisings are still in progress. What is more, since theestablishment of the Republic, Dungan have demonstrated not theslightest hint of errant behaviour to suggest that they may prove tobe unreliable.

Xiang Army and other Han Chinese male soldiers and sojournersbought Turki Musulman (Uyghur) girls as wives from their parents after Zuo Zongtang's reconquest of Xinjiang, and the Han and Uyghurs often relied on Hui intermediaries to translate and broker the marriages. A Han Chinese man with the surname Li bought a young Uyghur men from two Uyghur men who kidnapped her in 1880. They were employed by the magistrate of Pichan. A Turpan Uyghur girl named Ruo-zang-le who was 12 was sold for 30 taels in 1889 in Qitai to a young Han Chinese Shanxi man named Liu Yun. She became pregnant with his child in 1892. Han Chinese men viewed the toyluq they paid in silver for their Uyghur brides as a bride price.[25][26] Uyghur Muslim women married Han Chinese men in Xinjiang in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[27] Han Chinese men, Hindu men, Armenian men, Jewish men and Russian men were married by Uyghur Muslim women who could not find husbands.[28]

Local reaction

[edit]

Yaqub Beg's rule was unpopular among the natives with one of the local Kashgaris, a warrior and a chieftain's son, commenting: "During the Chinese rule there was everything; there is nothing now." There was also a falling-off in trade.[29]

The local Uyghurs of Altishahr came to view Yaqub Beg as a Kokandi foreigner and his Kokandi associates behaved ruthlessly to the local Uyghurs, an anti Yaqub Beg poem was written by the Uyghur:[30]

From Peking the Chinese came, like stars in the heaven.
The Andijanis rose and fled, like pigs in the forest.
They came in vain and left in vain, the Andijanis!
They went away scared and languidly, the Andijanis!
Every day they took a virgin, and
They went hunting for beauties.
They played with thedancing boys,
Which the Holy Law has forbidden.

British reaction

[edit]

Demetrius Charles Boulger stated at the time that the strength of the Qing has been thoroughly demonstrated and that her prestige remained unsullied.[31][32]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^Garnaut (2008), p. 105.
  2. ^"楊東梁:試論左宗棠收復新疆" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved2025-12-05.
  3. ^左宗棠收复新疆 (in Chinese (China)). Retrieved2025-12-05 – via movie.douban.com.
  4. ^"「左宗棠收复新疆」入编教材".星岛头条 (in Simplified Chinese). 2023-09-04. Retrieved2025-12-05.
  5. ^abcdLanny B. Fields (1978).Tso Tsung-tʼang and the Muslims: statecraft in northwest China, 1868-1880. Limestone Press. p. 81.ISBN 0-919642-85-3.
  6. ^DeWitt C. Ellinwood (1981).Ethnicity and the military in Asia. Transaction Publishers. p. 72.ISBN 0-87855-387-8. Retrieved2010-06-28.
  7. ^abHo-dong Kim (2004).Holy war in China: the Muslim rebellion and state in Chinese Central Asia, 1864-1877. Stanford University Press. p. 176.ISBN 0-8047-4884-5. Retrieved2010-06-28.
  8. ^Garnaut (2008), p. 104.
  9. ^Fairbank, Liu & Twitchett (1980), p. 241. "From Su-chou, Tso wrote to Chang Yueh, who was to leave Hami on an invasion of Turfan, saying it was good policy to treat the inhabitants of southern Sinkiang well. 'The Andijanis are tyrannical to their people; government troops should comfort them with benevolence. The Andijanis are greedy in extorting from the people; the government troops should rectify this by being generous.'"
  10. ^Fairbank, Liu & Twitchett (1980), p. 241. "To Liu Chin-t'ang, Tso wrote that the two chief enemies to catch were Ya'qub Beg and Pai Yen-hu along with their 'diehard partisans' (ssu-tang)."
  11. ^Fairbank, Liu & Twitchett (1980), p. 241. "Tso did not find fault with the indigenous inhabitants of Altishahr. After the short Ta-fan-ch'eng campaign. Liu Chin-t'ang was reported by the Russians to have 'acted very judiciously with regard to the prisoners whom he took … His treatment of these men was calculated to have a good influence in favour of the Chinese.'"
  12. ^Fairbank, Liu & Twitchett (1980), p. 240. "Meanwhile, under Liu Chin-t'ang and the Manchu General Chin-shun, Tso's offensive in Sinkiang had started."
  13. ^Fairbank, Liu & Twitchett (1980), p. 241. "In a belt of towns north of Urumchi, the Sinkiang Tungans made their last stand as a cohesive group. The heavily walled city of Ku-mu-ti, fifteen miles north-east of Urumchi, was attacked by Liu Chin-t'ang's big German guns. Tso reported that 6,000 Muslims were killed and 215 captured; only a few, including Pai Yen-hu, escaped. The very next day, on 18 August, Urumchi fell without resistance … Tso, who directed battles from his headquarters at Su-chou, noted in a letter to a colleague: 'The Andijani chieftain [Ya'qub Beg] has fairly good firearms. He has foreign rifles and foreign guns, including cannon using explosive shells [k'ai-hua p'ao]; but his are not as good nor as effective as those in the possession of our government forces. His men are not good marksmen, and when repulsed they simply ran away.'"
  14. ^Probably.Boulger (1878, p. 247) has “Guchen near Urumchi”. He sometimes misunderstands geography. Gucheng seems likely in the absence of a better source.
  15. ^Boulger (1878) has “Pidjam”.
  16. ^Boulger's account of this is so vague that it may be inaccurate.
  17. ^G. J. Alder (1963).British India's Northern Frontier 1865-95.Longmans Green. p. 67 – viaInternet Archive.
  18. ^Boulger (1878), p. 274.
  19. ^Herbert Allen Giles (1898).A Chinese Biographical Dictionary. B. Quaritch. pp. 894–.
  20. ^Translations of the Peking Gazette. 1880. pp. 83–.
  21. ^abcdAppleton's Annual Cyclopedia and Register of Important Events of the Year 1879. D. Appleton & Company. 1890. pp. 145–.
  22. ^Clarence King memoirs. The helmet of Mambrino. Published for the King memorial committee of the Century association by G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1904. pp. 50–.
  23. ^"王震将军评左宗棠:屠夫还是功臣?" [General Wang Zhen’s Evaluation of Zuo Zongtang: Butcher or Meritorious Official?] (in Simplified Chinese). Phoenix New Media.Archived from the original on 11 September 2008. Retrieved8 September 2008.
  24. ^Garnaut (2008), pp. 104–105.
  25. ^Schluessel, Eric (2020)."Chinese Men Purchasing Musulman Brides".Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central Asia. Columbia University Press.ISBN 978-0231552226.
  26. ^Schluessel, Eric T.The Muslim Emperor of China: Everyday. Politics in Colonial Xinjiang, 1877-1933(PDF) (Doctoral dissertation). Harvard. pp. 187–189.
  27. ^Hultvall, p. 6.
  28. ^Hultvall, p. 11.
  29. ^Boulger (1878), p. 152. "As one of them expressed it, in pathetic language, "During the Chinese rule there was everything; there is nothing now." The speaker of that sentence was no merchant, who might have been expected to be depressed by the falling-off in trade, but a warrior and a chieftain's son and heir. If to him the military system of Yakoob Beg seemed unsatisfactory and irksome, what must it have appeared to those more peaceful subjects to whom merchandise and barter were as the breath of their nostrils?"
  30. ^Ildikó Bellér-Hann (2007).Situating the Uyghurs Between China and Central Asia. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 19.ISBN 978-0-7546-7041-4.
  31. ^Boulger (1878), p. 275.
  32. ^Boulger (1878), p. 298.

Sources

[edit]
History
Early
(1616–1683)
High Qing
(1683–1799)
19th century
(1801–1900)
20th century
(1901–1912)
Government
Military
Special regions
Palaces &
mausoleums
Society &
culture
Treaties
Currency
Coinage
Paper money
Other topics
Xinjiang topics
History
Pre-Han dynasty
Han dynasty
Tang dynasty
Yuan dynasty
Qing dynasty
Republic of China
People's Republic of China
Geography
"Three Mountains and Two Basins"
Other Landscapes
Transportation
Education
Research
Culture
Cuisine
Economy
Visitor attractions
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Qing_reconquest_of_Xinjiang&oldid=1330392411"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp