Jin-Liao-Song (aqua),
Xi Liao (light green) were the major empires of China at the time, with Song and Jin occupying China's east The
Song (960–1276) was a Han-led dynasty that ruled over Southeast China. To their north was the Jin dynasty, a Jurchen-Han mixed dynasty that ruled over Northeast China. The Jin were led by the
Jurchens, a confederation of semi-agrarian tribes from
Manchuria in northeast China, though many northern Han nobles were also part of the Jin. The
Liao were a
Khitan-led dynasty covering parts of Mongolia, West China, and Central Asia. Like the Jin, the Liao also adopted Han culture, spoke Chinese, and practiced Buddhism. The Song and Jin had once been military allies. However, in 1114, the Jurchen, unified under the rule of
Wanyan Aguda, plotted a revolt against their former overlords: the
Khitan-led
Liao dynasty. In 1115, Aguda established the Jin dynasty and adopted the
title of emperor. The Jin negotiated a joint attack with the Song against the Khitans. They planned the attack for 1121 and then rescheduled to 1122. In 1122, the Jin captured the Khitan Supreme and Western Capitals. The Song tried to capture the
Liao Southern Capital of Yan (modern
Beijing), but it fell later that year to the Jin. Negotiations between the Song and Jin produced a treaty in 1123, but bilateral relations deteriorated because of territorial disputes over the
Sixteen Prefectures. In 1125, the Jin invaded the Song.
Start of Jin-Song wars By 1127, Jin had unified most of northern China and besieged the Song capital of
Kaifeng twice. In the second siege of Kaifeng,
Emperor Qinzong of the Song was captured. The Jin took him and the Song royal family to Northeast China as hostages. Members of the Song court who had evaded capture fled south, where they established a temporary capital, first in the Song southern capital (modern
Shangqiu), and then in
Hangzhou in 1129. The move of the Song capital south to Hangzhou signalled the transition from the
Northern Song era to the Southern Song. Qinzong's younger brother, Prince Zhao Gou, was enthroned as Qinzong's successor in the southern capital in 1127. Zhao is
known posthumously as
Emperor Song Gaozong. The Jin general
Wuzhu crossed the
Yangzi River in 1130 and tried to capture Gaozong, but the Emperor escaped. Wuzhu retreated north across the Yangzi, where he fought off a stronger Song fleet commanded by
Han Shizhong. The Jin persisted with their advance into the remaining Song territories south of the Yangzi. They faced an insurgency of Song loyalists in the north, the deaths of some important leaders, and military offensives by Song generals like
Yue Fei. The Jin created the puppet government of (大齊) to serve as a buffer state between Song and Jin, but Qi failed to defeat the Song. The Jin abolished Qi in 1137. As the Jin gave up advancing south, diplomatic talks for a peace treaty resumed. Signed in 1142, the
Treaty of Shaoxing established the boundary between the two states along the
Huai River, which runs north of the Yangzi. The treaty forbade the Song from purchasing horses from the Jin, but smuggling continued in the border markets. The relations between the two states were mostly peaceful from 1142 to 1161, the year Wanyan Liang went to war.
Jin preparations for Caishi Wanyan Liang was crowned Jin emperor in 1150 after killing his cousin and predecessor,
Emperor Xizong, in a palace
coup. Wanyan Liang considered himself more of a
Han authoritarian emperor than a Jurchen leader who ruled through a tribal council. The
History of Jin contends that Wanyan Liang told his officials that the three desires of his life were conquest, absolute power, and women. His ultimate ambition was to rule over all of China, not just the north. In his childhood, Wanyan Liang adopted Song practices like drinking tea by learning from Song emissaries, and once he had become emperor, he pursued a policy of
sinicizing (汉化) the state. His affinity for Song culture earned him the Jurchen nickname of 'Han imitator'. He moved the Supreme Capital of the Jin from
Huining in the northeast to Beijing and promoted Kaifeng to his Southern Capital in 1157. He also moved government institutions south, tore down palaces of Jurchen chieftains in Manchuria, and constructed new palaces in Beijing and Kaifeng. He made plans to move the Jin capital further south to the center of China. Wanyan Liang's construction projects drained the Jin treasury. Plans for a war against the Southern Song began in 1158. That year, Wanyan Liang claimed that the Song had broken the 1142 treaty that banned them from acquiring horses. In 1159, he began building up his army in preparation for an invasion. He acquired weapons, which he stored in Beijing, as well as horses allegedly numbering 560,000. Wanyan Liang understood that an invasion of the Song would require a lot of men. He ensured that Han soldiers were
drafted into the war effort alongside Jurchen soldiers. The recruitment drive lasted until 1161. Naval confrontations were likely because the Jin planned on traveling by river. Ships were seized for the war and 30,000 of the recruits were assigned to the Jin fleet. Wanyan Liang authorized the building of ships for the war in March 1159, under the auspices of the Ministry of War. Construction began in the Tong () prefecture near Beijing. Wanyan Liang appointed himself head of the army and took personal command of the Jin forces. The draft was unpopular. Several revolts erupted against it, many of them in the Jin provinces neighboring the Song. But Wanyan Liang allowed no dissent; he had his stepmother executed after hearing that she was critical of the war effort. In order to eliminate any challenge to his legitimacy as emperor of a united China, Wanyan Liang ordered the execution of all male members of the Song and Liao royal families residing in Jin territory. The execution of 130 members of the two royal clans in the span of a few months proved unpopular, and the Khitans soon revolted in Northeast China. They refused to be drafted into the army, maintaining that conscription would leave their homeland unprotected from rival tribes on the steppes. Wanyan Liang rebuffed their demands. The Khitan rebels then killed several Jurchen officials. The rebellion was fragmented, and there were separate plans either to spread the revolt further by operating from
Shangjing, the former Liao capital, or to move the Khitan people from Northeast China to Central Asia, where the
Western Liao empire had formed after the demise of Liao. Regardless, Wanyan Liang was forced to divert resources and men away from the war effort to suppress the rebellion.
Song preparations for Caishi Diplomatic exchanges between the Song and Jin did not stop during the period preceding the war. The
History of Song claims that the Song realized that the Jin were planning for an invasion when they noticed the discourtesy of one of the Jin diplomats. Some Song officials foresaw the impending war, but Emperor Gaozong hoped to maintain peaceful relations with the Jin. His reluctance to antagonize the Jin delayed the fortification of the Song border defenses. The Song quickly built just three military garrisons in 1161. Wanyan Liang departed from Kaifeng on 1161 October 15. The offensive comprised four armies, and Wanyan Liang personally led the army that entered Anhui. The Jin passed the Huai River boundary on October 28, advancing into Song territory. The Song resistance was minimal because they had fortified the southern shore of the Yangzi River and not the Huai.
Chen Kangbo (
陈康伯), prime minister (宰相) of the Song dynasty, commanded the
Song navy and designed the anti-Jin offensive strategy.
Yu Yunwen, a
civil official, commanded the defending
Song army. The
paddle-wheel warships of the
Song fleet, equipped with
trebuchets that launched
incendiary bombs made of
gunpowder and
lime, decisively defeated the light ships of the Jin navy. ==Naval battle of Caishi==