Battle of Anqing

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Battle of Anqing
Part of the Taiping Rebellion
DateSeptember 1860 – September 5, 1861
Location
Anqing, Anhui, China
Result Qing victory
Belligerents

 Qing dynasty

Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Zeng Guofan
Zeng Guoquan
Chen Yucheng
Ye Yunlai (叶芸来) 
Wu Dincai (吴定彩) 
Strength
10,000+ Hunan Army soldiers[1] 20,000+ garrisoned troops

The Battle of Anqing (安慶之戰) was a prolonged siege of the prefecture-level city of Anqing in Anhui, China, initiated by Hunan Army forces loyal to the Qing Dynasty against the armies of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. The siege began in September 1860 and ended on September 5, 1861, when imperial forces under the command of Zeng Guoquan breached the walls of the city and occupied it.[2]

Anqing was strategically important as it allowed access to the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, including the Taiping capital of Nanjing downriver. It served as the base of Taiping activities in Anhui, Hubei and Hunan.[1] It had been held by the Taiping since the early stages of the Rebellion in June 1853.[3] Zeng Guofan, commander of the provincial Hunan Army and de facto leader of the dynasty's war against the Taiping, saw a need to reclaim the walled city to further his campaign against the rebellion along the Yangtze. A siege of Anqing was initiated in late-1860 involving up to 10,000 Hunan Army troops.

In October 1860, the "Brave King", Chen Yucheng, was dispatched by the Taiping leadership with an army of over 100,000 to test imperial forces at Anqing, with the ultimate aim of seizing Wuchang upriver. However, while en route to Anqing, they were intercepted by 20,000 elite Manchu cavalry at Tongcheng and forced to retreat.[4]

Foreign intervention also strengthened the Qing position at Anqing. In a family letter dated June 13, 1861, Zeng Guofan ordered his own ships to monitor British commercial vessels after noticing foreign merchants unloading rice to the rebels at Anqing.[5] Zeng successfully obtained the support of British Consul Frederick Bruce in enforcing a naval blockade at Anqing to prevent the rebels from trading with foreign merchants.[6]

As the protracted siege continued into the summer of 1861, the population of Anqing was increasingly starved and cannibalism was reported.[7] In late August, Chen Yucheng made a final desperate attempt to break the siege of Anqing, but was repelled at the Jixian Pass after vigorous fighting with Zeng Guofan's land and naval forces.[7] With his troops exhausted, Chen retreated on September 3, and two days later the city's walls were breached.

With Anqing in imperial hands, the Taiping lost their stronghold in central China. Zeng would establish Anqing as his new headquarters and use it to coordinate the imperial assault on the Taiping capital at Nanjing.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Platt (2012), p. 191
  2. ^ Hummel (1943), p. 743
  3. ^ The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom: Rebellion and the Blasphemy of Empire. Thomas H. Reilly
  4. ^ Platt (2012), p. 193
  5. ^ Zeng (2003), p. 870
  6. ^ Jen (1973), p. 426
  7. ^ a b Platt (2012), p. 215

Bibliography[edit]

  • Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). "Index" . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.
  • Jen, Yu-Wen (1973). The Taiping Revolutionary Movement. Forge Village, MA: Murray Printing Co.
  • Platt, Stephen R. (2012). Autumn in the Heavenly Kingdom: China, the West and the Epic Story of the Taiping Civil War. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 9780307271730.
  • Zeng, Guofan (2003). Zeng Guofan Quan Ji Jia Shu [The Complete Works of Zeng Guofan – Family Letters]. Vol. 2. Zhongguo Huaqiao Chubanshe.