Song conquest of Southern Tang

In 975 AD the Song managed through force to subdue the state now known as Southern Tang, to distinguish it from the synonymously named Tang dynasty, of which the Southern Tang proclaimed itself to be successor, as part of a series of Song conquests to reunify China.

Song–Southern Tang War
Date974–975
Location
Result Conquest of Southern Tang by Song
Belligerents
Song dynasty
Wuyue
Southern Tang dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Cao Bin
Pan Mei
Wang Ming
Liu Yu
Li Yu
Du Zhen
Zheng Yanhua
Zhu Lingyun 

Battle on the Yangtze

On the river Yangtze near Nanking, the capital of the Southern Tang, a major naval battle took place in 975 between the Song empire and the Southern Tang.[1][2]

Forces

Southern Tang

The Tang had a fleet of ships that were ten decks high[3] and equipped with multiple flamethrowers. There were at least 150,000 soldiers and sailors under the command of Zhu Lingyun.[4]

Song

The admiral for the Song was Cao Bin.[5] The Song ships were smaller,[6] but the crew on board were better archers. The ships had flamethrowers[7] and were filled with bundles of reed soaked in oil[8] to be thrown at the enemy ships.

Battle

The Song ships attacked ferociously, firing so many arrows that soon, the Tang ships were studded with them.[9] Zhu Lingyun then ordered the flamethrowers to be fired.[10] Normally, any attacker would be destroyed; however, the wind blew in the opposite direction of the flamethrowers so the burning oil flew back onto the Tang.[11] At that moment, the Song started throwing the bundles of burning reeds into the wind to cause more damage.[12] The Song may have started using their own flamethrowers at this stage.[13] About 150,000 Tang soldiers and sailors were killed in the fire and Zhu Lingyun committed suicide by jumping into the flames.[14]

Analysis of battle

Considering the position of Nanking in China, where the imperial capital would have been, and the above "evidence", it can be assumed that there was a strong westerly wind on the day of that battle. The attackers would have had the advantage of having a good wind behind them, their ships would have travelled much faster, and their arrows, "burning bundles" and burning oil would have had extra propulsion. However, the defending side would have had the exact opposite to this. Considering the claimed size of the defenders ships, Zhu Lingyun would have probably been inside the ship and may have not been aware of what the weather was like, which would have led him to make the mistake of ordering the flamethrowers to be fired. On a technological note, we know that the Wujing Zongyao, written in 1044 (although the oldest edition is from around the 1560s), describes the flamethrowers oil being lit by fire drug (a flammable, quasi explosive compound that would in later cultures and generations be refined into gunpowder) and we know that fire drug was invented as a medicine sometime in the 9th century, but whether this battle did use gunpowder is speculative.

Aftermath

Li Houzhu, the emperor of the Southern Tang, was more interested in poetry than ruling, and soon after this battle the Southern Tang were absorbed into the new Song Empire. He was captured and sent to the Song capital, one of his wives raped and he was eventually poisoned.

After the fall of Tang, Lu Jiang acting Military Governor of Zhaowu Circuit continued to resist Song army after seizing She Prefecture before persuaded to surrender; General Hu Ze at Jiang Prefecture also continued the resistance for four months more.

See also

References

Citations

  1. line 2
  2. line 3
  3. line 6
  4. line 5
  5. line 19.
  6. line 7
  7. line 23
  8. line 20
  9. lines 8-9
  10. lines 9-10
  11. lines 10-12
  12. line 21
  13. lines 22-23
  14. lines 12-14

Sources

  • Joseph Needham's Science and Civilisation in China Volume 5 Part 7 the Gunpowder Epic, page 89
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.