Founding Revolt and rebel rivalry The
Mongol-led
Yuan dynasty (1271–1368) ruled before the establishment of the Ming. Explanations for the demise of the Yuan include institutionalized ethnic discrimination against the
Han people that stirred resentment and rebellion, overtaxation of areas hard-hit by
inflation, and massive flooding of the
Yellow River as a result of the abandonment of irrigation projects. Consequently, agriculture and the economy were in shambles, and rebellion broke out among the hundreds of thousands of peasants called upon to work on repairing the
levees of the Yellow River. A number of Han groups revolted, including the
Red Turbans in 1351. The Red Turbans were affiliated with the
White Lotus, a
Buddhist secret society.
Zhu Yuanzhang was a penniless peasant and Buddhist monk who joined the Red Turbans in 1352; he soon gained a reputation after marrying the foster daughter of a rebel commander. In 1356, Zhu's rebel force captured the city of
Nanjing, which he would later establish as the capital of the Ming dynasty. With the Yuan dynasty crumbling, competing rebel groups began fighting for control of the country and thus the right to establish a new dynasty. In 1363, Zhu Yuanzhang eliminated his archrival and leader of the rebel Han faction,
Chen Youliang, in the
Battle of Lake Poyang, arguably the
largest naval battle in history. Known for its ambitious use of
fire ships, Zhu's force of 200,000 Ming sailors were able to defeat a Han rebel force over triple their size, claimed to be 650,000-strong. The victory destroyed the last opposing rebel faction, leaving Zhu Yuanzhang in uncontested control of the bountiful
Yangtze valley and cementing his power in the south. After the dynastic head of the Red Turbans suspiciously died in 1367 while a guest of Zhu, there was no one left who was remotely capable of contesting his march to the throne, and he made his imperial ambitions known by sending an army toward the Yuan capital
Dadu (present-day
Beijing) in 1368. The last Yuan emperor fled north to the upper capital
Shangdu, and Zhu declared the founding of the Ming dynasty after razing the Yuan palaces in Dadu to the ground; the city was renamed Beiping in the same year. Zhu Yuanzhang took Hongwu, or "Vastly Martial", as his
era name.
Reign of the Hongwu Emperor () The Hongwu Emperor made an immediate effort to rebuild state infrastructure. He built a
wall around Nanjing, as well as new palaces and government halls. The
History of Ming states that as early as 1364 Zhu Yuanzhang had begun drafting a new
Confucian law code, the
Great Ming Code, which was completed by 1397 and repeated certain clauses found in the old
Tang Code of 653. The Hongwu Emperor organized a military system known as the
weisuo, which was similar to the
fubing system of the
Tang dynasty (618–907). In 1380 the Hongwu Emperor had the Chancellor
Hu Weiyong executed upon suspicion of a conspiracy plot to overthrow him; after that the Hongwu Emperor abolished the
Chancellery and assumed this role as chief executive and emperor, a precedent mostly followed throughout the Ming period. With a growing suspicion of his ministers and subjects, the Hongwu Emperor established the
Embroidered Uniform Guard, a network of
secret police drawn from his own palace guard. Some 100,000 people were executed in a series of purges during his rule. The Hongwu Emperor issued many edicts forbidding Mongol practices and proclaiming his intention to purify China of barbarian influence. However, he also sought to use the Yuan legacy to legitimize his authority in China and other areas ruled by the Yuan. He continued policies of the Yuan dynasty such as continued request for Korean concubines and eunuchs, Mongol-style hereditary military institutions, Mongol-style clothing and hats, promoting archery and horseback riding, and having large numbers of Mongols serve in the Ming military. Until the late 16th century, Mongols still constituted one-third of officers serving in capital forces like the Embroidered Uniform Guard, and other peoples such as
Jurchens were also prominent. He frequently wrote to Mongol, Japanese, Korean, Jurchen, Tibetan, and Southwest frontier rulers offering advice on their governmental and dynastic policy, and insisted on leaders from these regions visiting the Ming capital for audiences. He resettled 100,000 Mongols into his territory, with many serving as guards in the capital. The emperor also strongly advertised the hospitality and role granted to Chinggisid nobles in his court. The Hongwu Emperor insisted that he was not a rebel, and he attempted to justify his conquest of the other rebel warlords by claiming that he was a Yuan subject and had been divinely-appointed to restore order by crushing rebels. Most Chinese elites did not view the Yuan's Mongol ethnicity as grounds to resist or reject it. The Hongwu Emperor emphasised that he was not conquering territory from the Yuan dynasty but rather from the rebel warlords. He used this line of argument to attempt to persuade Yuan loyalists to join his cause. The Ming used the tribute they received from former Yuan vassals as proof that the Ming had taken over the Yuan's legitimacy. Tribute missions were regularly celebrated with music and dance in the Ming court.
South-Western frontier In 1381, the Ming dynasty annexed the areas of the southwest that had once been part of the
Kingdom of Dali following the successful effort by Hui Muslim Ming armies to defeat Mongol and Hui Muslim troops loyal to the Yuan holding out in Yunnan. The Hui troops under General
Mu Ying, who was appointed Governor of Yunnan, were resettled in the region as part of a colonization effort. By the end of the 14th century, some 200,000 military colonists settled some 2,000,000
mu (350,000 acres) of land in what is now
Yunnan and
Guizhou. Roughly half a million more Chinese settlers came in later periods; these migrations caused a major shift in the ethnic make-up of the region, since formerly more than half of the population were non-Han peoples. Resentment over such massive changes in population and the resulting government presence and policies sparked more
Miao and
Yao revolts in 1464 to 1466, which were crushed by an army of 30,000 Ming troops (including 1,000 Mongols) joining the 160,000 local
Guangxi. After the scholar and philosopher
Wang Yangming (1472–1529) suppressed another rebellion in the region, he advocated single, unitary administration of Chinese and indigenous ethnic groups in order to bring about
sinicisation of the local peoples.
Campaign in the North-East : while segments of earlier
rammed earth walls were first unified by the
Qin and
Han dynasties, the vast majority of the brick and stone Great Wall is a product of the Ming. After the overthrow of the
Yuan dynasty in 1368, Manchuria remained under control of the
Northern Yuan based in
Mongolia.
Naghachu, a former Yuan official and a
Uriankhai general of the Northern Yuan, won hegemony over the Mongol tribes in Manchuria (the former Yuan province of
Liaoyang). He grew strong in the northeast, with forces large enough (numbering hundreds of thousands) to threaten invasion of the newly founded Ming dynasty in order to restore the Mongols to power in China. The Ming decided to defeat him instead of waiting for the Mongols to attack. In 1387 the Ming sent
a military campaign to attack Naghachu, which concluded with the surrender of Naghachu and Ming conquest of Manchuria. The early Ming court could not, and did not, aspire to the control imposed upon the
Jurchens in Manchuria by the Mongols, yet it created a norm of organization that would ultimately serve as the main instrument for the relations with peoples along the northeast frontiers. By the end of the Hongwu Emperor's reign, the essentials of a policy toward the Jurchens had taken shape. Most of the inhabitants of Manchuria, except for the
Wild Jurchens, were at peace with China. In 1409, under the Yongle Emperor, the Ming established the
Nurgan Regional Military Commission on the banks of the
Amur River, and
Yishiha, a eunuch of
Haixi Jurchen origin, was ordered to lead an expedition to the mouth of the Amur to
pacify the Wild Jurchens. After the death of Yongle Emperor, the Nurgan Regional Military Commission was abolished in 1435, and the Ming court ceased to have substantial activities there, although the guards continued to exist in Manchuria. Throughout its existence, the Ming established a total of 384 guards (,
wei) and 24 battalions (,
suo) in Manchuria, but these were probably only nominal offices and did not necessarily imply political control. By the late Ming period, Ming's political presence in Manchuria has declined significantly.
Relations with Tibet of Guhyasamaja Akshobhyavajra; the Ming court gathered various tribute items that were native products of Tibet (such as thangkas), and in return granted gifts to Tibetan tribute-bearers. The
History of Ming—the official dynastic history compiled in 1739 by the subsequent
Qing dynasty (1644–1912)—states that the Ming established itinerant commanderies overseeing Tibetan administration while also renewing titles of ex-Yuan dynasty officials from
Tibet and conferring new princely titles on leaders of
Tibetan Buddhist sects. However, Turrell V. Wylie states that censorship in the
History of Ming in favor of bolstering the Ming emperor's prestige and reputation at all costs obfuscates the nuanced history of Sino-Tibetan relations during the Ming era. Modern scholars debate whether the Ming had
sovereignty over Tibet. Some believe it was a relationship of loose
suzerainty that was largely cut off when the
Jiajing Emperor () persecuted Buddhism in favor of
Taoism at court. Others argue that the significant religious nature of the relationship with Tibetan lamas is underrepresented in modern scholarship. Others note the Ming need for Central Asian horses and the need to maintain the
tea-horse trade. The Ming sporadically sent armed forays into Tibet during the 14th century, which the Tibetans successfully resisted. Several scholars point out that unlike the preceding Mongols, the Ming did not garrison permanent troops in Tibet. The
Wanli Emperor () attempted to reestablish Sino-Tibetan relations in the wake of a
Mongol–Tibetan alliance initiated in 1578, an alliance which affected the foreign policy of the subsequent Qing dynasty in their support for the
Dalai Lama of the
Yellow Hat sect. By the late 16th century, the Mongols proved to be successful armed protectors of the Yellow Hat Dalai Lama after their increasing presence in the
Amdo region, culminating in the
conquest of Tibet by
Güshi Khan (1582–1655) in 1642, establishing the
Khoshut Khanate.
Reign of the Yongle Emperor Rise to power () The
Hongwu Emperor specified his grandson Zhu Yunwen as his successor, and he assumed the throne as the
Jianwen Emperor () after the Hongwu Emperor's death in 1398. The Jianwen Emperor's uncle Zhu Di, the most powerful of the Hongwu Emperor's sons, opposed his ascension and soon came into conflict with the young emperor. After the Jianwen Emperor arrested many of Zhu Di's associates, Zhu Di plotted a rebellion that sparked a
three-year civil war. Under the pretext of rescuing the Jianwen Emperor from corrupting officials, Zhu Di personally led forces in the revolt; the palace in Nanjing was burned to the ground, along with the Jianwen Emperor himself, his wife, mother, and courtiers. Zhu Di assumed the throne as the
Yongle Emperor (); his reign is universally viewed by scholars as a "second founding" of the Ming dynasty since he reversed many of his father's policies.
New capital and foreign engagement The Yongle Emperor demoted Nanjing to a secondary capital and in 1403 announced the new capital of China was to be at his power base in Beijing. Construction of a new city there lasted from 1407 to 1420, employing hundreds of thousands of workers daily. At the center was the political node of the
Imperial City, and at the center of this was the
Forbidden City, the palatial residence of the emperor and his family. By 1553, the Outer City was added to the south, which brought the overall size of Beijing to . , located north of Beijing Beginning in 1405, the Yongle Emperor entrusted his favored
eunuch commander
Zheng He (1371–1433) as the admiral for a gigantic new fleet of ships designated for international
tributary missions. Among the kingdoms visited by Zheng He, the Yongle Emperor proclaimed the
Kingdom of Cochin to be its protectorate. The Chinese had
sent diplomatic missions over land since the
Han dynasty (202 BCE220 CE) and engaged in
private overseas trade, but these missions were unprecedented in grandeur and scale. To service seven different tributary voyages, the Nanjing shipyards constructed two thousand vessels from 1403 to 1419, including
treasure ships measuring in length and in width. The Yongle Emperor used
woodblock printing to spread Chinese culture. He also
used the military to expand China's borders. This included the
brief occupation of Vietnam, from the initial invasion in 1406 until the Ming withdrawal in 1427 as a result of protracted
guerrilla warfare led by
Lê Lợi, the founder of the Vietnamese
Lê dynasty.
Tumu Crisis and the Ming Mongols of Bengal () to the Yongle Emperor The
Oirat leader
Esen Tayisi launched an invasion into Ming China in July 1449. The chief eunuch
Wang Zhen encouraged the
Zhengtong Emperor () to lead a force personally to face the Oirats after a recent Ming defeat; the emperor left the capital and put his half-brother
Zhu Qiyu in charge of affairs as temporary regent. On 8 September, Esen routed Zhengtong's army, and Zhengtong was captured—an event known as the
Tumu Crisis. The Oirats held the Zhengtong Emperor for ransom. However, this scheme was foiled once the emperor's younger brother assumed the throne under the era name
Jingtai (); the Oirats were also repelled once the Jingtai Emperor's confidant and defense minister
Yu Qian (1398–1457) gained control of the Ming armed forces. Holding the Zhengtong Emperor in captivity was a useless bargaining chip for the Oirats as long as another sat on his throne, so they released him back into Ming China. The former emperor was placed under house arrest in the palace until the coup against the Jingtai Emperor in 1457 known as the "Wresting the Gate Incident". The former emperor retook the throne under the new era name
Tianshun (). Tianshun proved to be a troubled time and Mongol forces within the Ming military structure continued to be problematic. On 7 August 1461, the Chinese general Cao Qin and his Ming troops of Mongol descent
staged a coup against the Tianshun Emperor out of fear of being next on his purge-list of those who aided him in the Wresting the Gate Incident. Cao's rebel force managed to set fire to the western and eastern gates of the
Imperial City (doused by rain during the battle) and killed several leading ministers before his forces were finally cornered and he was forced to commit suicide. While the Yongle Emperor had staged
five major offensives north of the Great Wall against the Mongols and the Oirats, the constant threat of Oirat incursions prompted the Ming authorities to fortify the Great Wall from the late 15th century to the 16th century; nevertheless, John Fairbank notes that "it proved to be a futile military gesture but vividly expressed China's siege mentality." Yet the Great Wall was not meant to be a purely defensive fortification; its towers functioned rather as a series of lit beacons and signalling stations to allow rapid warning to friendly units of advancing enemy troops.
Decline Reign of the Wanli Emperor () in state ceremonial court dress The reign of the
Wanli Emperor (1572–1620) featured many problems, some of them fiscal in nature. In the beginning of his reign, Wanli surrounded himself with able advisors and made a conscientious effort to handle state affairs. His Grand Secretary
Zhang Juzheng (1572–1582) built up an effective network of alliances with senior officials. However, there was no one after him skilled enough to maintain the stability of these alliances; officials soon banded together in opposing political factions. Over time Wanli grew tired of court affairs and frequent political quarreling amongst his ministers, preferring to stay behind the walls of the Forbidden City and out of his officials' sight. Scholar-officials lost prominence in administration as eunuchs became intermediaries between the aloof emperor and his officials; any senior official who wanted to discuss state matters had to persuade powerful eunuchs with a bribe simply to have his demands or message relayed to the emperor. There were several military campaigns during the Wanli Emperor's reign,
Ordos campaign, the response to the
Bozhou rebellion, and the
Imjin War.
Role of eunuchs teacups, from the Nantoyōsō Collection in Japan; the Tianqi Emperor was heavily influenced and largely controlled by the eunuch
Wei Zhongxian (1568–1627). The Hongwu Emperor forbade eunuchs to learn how to read or engage in politics. Whether or not these restrictions were carried out with absolute success in his reign, eunuchs during the Yongle Emperor's reign (1402–1424) and afterwards managed huge imperial workshops, commanded armies, and participated in matters of appointment and promotion of officials. The Yongle Emperor put 75 eunuchs in charge of foreign policy; they traveled frequently to vassal states including Annam, Mongolia, the Ryukyu Islands, and Tibet and less frequently to farther-flung places like Japan and Nepal. In the later 15th century, however, eunuch envoys generally only traveled to Korea. The eunuchs developed their own bureaucracy that was organized parallel to but was not subject to the civil service bureaucracy. Although there were several dictatorial eunuchs throughout the Ming, such as
Wang Zhen, Wang Zhi, and
Liu Jin, excessive tyrannical eunuch power did not become evident until the 1590s when the
Wanli Emperor increased their rights over the civil bureaucracy and granted them power to collect provincial taxes. The eunuch
Wei Zhongxian (1568–1627) dominated the court of the
Tianqi Emperor () and had his political rivals tortured to death, mostly the vocal critics from the faction of the
Donglin Society. He ordered temples built in his honor throughout the Ming Empire, and built personal palaces created with funds allocated for
building the previous emperor's tombs. His friends and family gained important positions without qualifications. Wei also published a historical work lambasting and belittling his political opponents. Constant changes at court became the norm, and there was also an intensification of natural disasters, epidemics, rebellions, and foreign invasions. Although the
Chongzhen Emperor () dismissed Wei, who later committed suicide, problems involving palace eunuchs persisted until the fall of the dynasty, which occurred less than twenty years later.
Economic breakdown and natural disasters (1494–1552); excessive luxury and decadence marked the late Ming period, spurred by the enormous state
bullion of incoming silver and by private transactions involving silver. During the last years of the Wanli era and those of his two successors, an economic crisis developed that was centered on a sudden widespread lack of the empire's chief medium of exchange: silver.
The Portuguese first
established trade with China in 1516. Following the Ming Emperor's decision to ban direct trade with Japan, Portuguese traders acted as an intermediary between China and Japan by buying Chinese silks from China and selling it to Japan for silver. After some
initial hostilities the Portuguese gained consent from the Ming court in 1557 to settle
Macau as their permanent trade base in China. Their role in providing silver was gradually surpassed by
the Spanish, while even
the Dutch challenged them for control of this trade.
Philip IV of Spain () began cracking down on illegal smuggling of silver from
New Spain and
Peru across the
Pacific through the
Philippines towards China, in favor of
shipping silver mined in the Spanish Latin American colonies through Spanish ports. People began hoarding precious silver as there was progressively less of it, forcing the ratio of the value of copper to silver into a steep decline. In the 1630s a string of one thousand
copper coins equaled an ounce of silver; by 1640 that sum could fetch half an ounce; and, by 1643 only one-third of an ounce. For peasants this meant economic disaster, since they paid taxes in silver while conducting local trade and crop sales in copper. Atwell and others have argued that disruptions to silver imports in the 1630s–40s were central to the Ming fiscal collapse. Famines became common in northern China in the early 17th century because of unusually dry and cold weather that shortened the growing season—effects of a larger ecological event now known as the
Little Ice Age. Famine, alongside tax increases, widespread military desertions, a declining relief system, and natural disasters such as flooding and inability of the government to properly manage irrigation and flood-control projects caused widespread loss of life and normal civility. The central government, starved of resources, could do very little to mitigate the effects of these calamities. Making matters worse, a widespread epidemic, the
Great Plague of 1633–1644, spread across China from Zhejiang to Henan, killing an unknown but large number of people. One of the deadliest earthquake of all time, the
Shaanxi earthquake of 1556, occurred during the
Jiajing Emperor's reign, killing approximately 830,000 people.
Fall of the Ming Rise of the Manchus along the Great Wall, the gate where the Manchus were repeatedly repelled before being finally let through by Wu Sangui in 1644 was built in the Yuan and
rebuilt in the Ming. Originally a Ming vassal who officially considered himself a guardian of the Ming border and a local representative of imperial Ming power,
Nurhaci, leader of the
Jianzhou Jurchens,
unified other Jurchen clans to create a new Manchu ethnic identity. He offered to lead his armies to support Ming and
Joseon armies against the
Japanese invasions of Korea in the 1590s. Ming officials declined the offer, but granted him the title of dragon-tiger general for his gesture. Recognizing the weakness of Ming authority in Manchuria at the time, he consolidated power by co-opting or conquering surrounding territories. In 1616 he declared himself
Khan and established the
Later Jin dynasty in reference to the
previous Jurchen-ruled Jin dynasty. In 1618, he openly renounced the Ming overlordship and effectively declared war against the Ming with the "
Seven Grievances". In 1636, Nurhaci's son
Hong Taiji renamed his dynasty the "
Great Qing" at
Mukden (modern Shenyang), which had been made their capital in 1625. Hong Taiji also adopted the Chinese imperial title
huangdi, declared the
Chongde ("Revering Virtue") era, and changed the ethnic name of his people from "Jurchen" to "
Manchu". In 1636, Banner Armies defeated Joseon during the
Second Manchu invasion of Korea and forced Joseon to become a Qing tributary. Shortly after, the Koreans renounced their long-held loyalty to the Ming dynasty.
Rebellion, invasion, collapse A peasant soldier named
Li Zicheng mutinied with his fellow soldiers in western Shaanxi in the early 1630s after the Ming government failed to ship much-needed supplies there. In 1634 he was captured by a Ming general and released only on the terms that he return to service. The agreement soon broke down when a local magistrate had thirty-six of his fellow rebels executed; Li's troops retaliated by killing the officials and continued to lead a rebellion based in Rongyang,
Henan by 1635. By the 1640s, an ex-soldier and rival to Li—
Zhang Xianzhong (1606–1647)—had created a firm rebel base in
Chengdu,
Sichuan, with the establishment of the
Xi dynasty, while Li's center of power was in
Hubei with extended influence over Shaanxi and Henan. In 1640, masses of Chinese peasants who were starving, unable to pay their taxes, and no longer in fear of the frequently defeated Chinese army, began to form into huge bands of rebels. The Chinese military, caught between fruitless efforts to defeat the Manchu raiders from the north and huge peasant revolts in the provinces, essentially fell apart. Unpaid and unfed, the army was defeated by Li Zicheng—now self-styled as the Prince of
Shun—and deserted the capital without much of a fight. On 25 April 1644, Beijing fell to a rebel army led by Li Zicheng when the city gates were opened by rebel allies from within. During the turmoil,
Chongzhen, the last Ming emperor, accompanied only by a eunuch servant, hanged himself
on a tree in the imperial garden right outside the Forbidden City. Seizing opportunity, the
Eight Banners crossed the
Great Wall after the Ming border general
Wu Sangui (1612–1678) opened the gates at
Shanhai Pass. This occurred shortly after he learned about the fate of the capital and an army of Li Zicheng marching towards him; weighing his options of alliance, he decided to side with the Manchus. The Eight Banners under the Manchu Prince
Dorgon (1612–1650) and Wu Sangui approached Beijing after the army sent by Li was destroyed at
Shanhaiguan; the Prince of Shun's army fled the capital on the fourth of June. On 6 June, the Manchus and Wu entered the capital and proclaimed the young
Shunzhi Emperor ruler of China. After being forced out of
Xi'an by the Qing, chased along the
Han River to
Wuchang, and finally along the northern border of
Jiangxi, Li Zicheng died there in the summer of 1645, thus ending the
Shun dynasty. One report says his death was a suicide; another states that he was beaten to death by peasants after he was caught stealing their food. Despite the loss of Beijing and the death of the emperor, the Ming were not yet totally destroyed. Nanjing, Fujian, Guangdong, Shanxi, and Yunnan were all strongholds of Ming resistance. However, there were several pretenders for the Ming throne, and their forces were divided. These scattered Ming remnants in southern China after 1644 were collectively designated by 19th-century historians as the
Southern Ming. Each bastion of resistance was individually defeated by the Qing until 1662, when the last Southern Ming emperor,
Zhu Youlang, the Yongli Emperor, was captured and executed. In 1683, the Qing forces
conquered Taiwan and dismantled the
Kingdom of Tungning, which had been established by
Zheng Chenggong and was the final stronghold of forces loyal to the Ming dynasty. == Government ==