Conquest of Jiangnan (1645) , who refused to surrender to the
Qing in the defense of
Yangzhou A few weeks after the
Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide in
Beijing in April 1644, descendants of the
Ming imperial house started arriving in
Nanjing, which had been the auxiliary capital of the Ming dynasty. Agreeing that the Ming needed an imperial figure to rally support in the south, the
Nanjing Minister of War
Shi Kefa and the
Fengyang Governor-general
Ma Shiying agreed to form a loyalist Ming government around the
Prince of Fu,
Zhu Yousong, a first cousin of the
Chongzhen Emperor who had been next in line for succession after the dead emperor's sons, whose fates were still unknown. The Prince was
crowned as
emperor on 19 June 1644 under the protection of Ma Shiying and his large war fleet. He would reign under the
era name "Hongguang" (弘光). The Hongguang regime was ridden with factional bickering that facilitated the
Qing conquest of
Jiangnan, which was launched from
Xi'an in April 1645. He set out from Xi'an on that very day. Greatly aided by the surrender of Southern Ming commanders
Li Chengdong and
Liu Liangzuo, the Qing army took the key city of
Xuzhou north of the
Huai River in early May 1645, leaving
Shi Kefa in
Yangzhou as the main defender of the
Southern Ming's northern frontiers. The betrayal of these commanders handed over the entire northwestern zone of the Southern Ming, helping the Qing forces to link up. Ming loyalist Ma Shiying had brought to
Nanjing troops from the western provinces made out of non-
Han Chinese indigenous fierce tribal warriors called
"Sichuan" soldiers to defend the city against the Qing. These Ming loyalist non-Han Chinese "barbarian" fierce tribal warriors were slaughtered by the Han Chinese citizens of Nanjing after the Han Chinese people of Nanjing had peacefully defected and turned the city to Qing rule when the Southern Ming
Hongguang Emperor left the city. The people also yelled "These are the son and daughter-in-law of the traitorous minister Ma Shiying!" when they paraded the daughter-in-law and son of Ma Shiying after storming
Ruan Dacheng and
Ma Shiying's houses and they also did it to
Wang Duo's daughter-in-law and son. The
Dutch East India Company secretary
Johann Nieuhof observed that
Nanjing city and its people were unharmed by the Qing and only the Ming palace suffered destruction. The damage inflicted to the Ming palace was largely done by the Han Chinese locals of Nanjing, and not the Qing army. Qing Prince of Yu,
Dodo, later berated the Southern Ming Prince of Fu,
Zhu Yousong, over his battle strategy in 1645, telling him that the Southern Ming would have defeated the Qing if only the Southern Ming assaulted the Qing military before they forded the
Yellow River instead of tarrying. The Prince of Fu could find no words to respond when he tried to defend himself. In
Jiangnan, the Qing implemented peaceful takeovers for districts and cities who surrendered without any violent resistance, leaving the local Ming officials who defected in charge and the Qing
Han Chinese-
Manchu army would not attack them nor kill or do any violence against peaceful defectors. Several contingents of Qing forces converged on
Yangzhou on 13 May 1645. The majority of the Qing army which marched on the city were Ming defectors and they far outnumbered the
Manchus and
Bannermen.
Shi Kefa's small force refused to surrender, but could not resist
Dodo's artillery: on 20 May Qing cannon wielded by the Han Chinese Bannermen (Ujen Coohai) breached the city wall and Dodo ordered the
"brutal slaughter" of Yangzhou's entire population to terrorize other Jiangnan cities into surrendering to the Qing. On 1 June Qing armies crossed the
Yangzi River and easily took the garrison city of
Zhenjiang, which protected access to
Nanjing. The Qing arrived at the gates of Nanjing a week later, but the
Hongguang Emperor had already fled. The city surrendered without a fight on 16 June 1645 after its last defenders had made Dodo promise he would not hurt the population. Within less than a month, the Qing had captured the fleeing Ming emperor (he died in
Beijing the following year) and seized
Jiangnan's main cities, including
Suzhou and
Hangzhou. By then the frontier between the
Qing and the
Southern Ming had been pushed south to the
Qiantang River.
Nieuhof observed that the city of
Nanjing was unharmed by
Qing soldiers. Qing soldiers ransomed women captured from
Yangzhou back to their original husbands and fathers in
Nanjing after Nanjing peacefully surrendered, corralling the women into the city and whipping them hard with their hair containing a tag showing the price of the ransom, which was cheap at only 3 to 4
taels for the best and 10 taels at most for those wearing good clothing. During the factional struggles, the warlord
Zuo Liangyu had mutinied against
Ma Shiying who was in control at
Nanjing, accusing him of repression. With the arrival of the
Qing forces in
Jiujiang, almost the entire army of Zuo Liangyu defected to the Qing. This provided the Qing with a critical new pool of military leaders and troops. These were also officers from
Liaodong, or had previously served there, who in the 1630s had been withdrawn to fight rebels in the interior provinces. The most important of these was
Jin Shenghuan who was later single-handedly responsible for the conquest of
Jiangxi. Other generals were Zuo Liangyu's son
Zuo Menggeng who later crushed rebels in
Datong,
Lu Guangzu and
Li Guoying who served in the
Sichuan campaign,
Xu Yong and
Hao Xiaozhong who served in the
Hunan campaigns. Many of these became the most capable commanders against the
Southern Ming loyalists. The
Hongguang Emperor fled into
Anhui on the
Yangzi's southern bank at
Tongling, in
Huang Degong's military camp. Huang Degong told him that if he died fighting to the death in
Nanjing then all the ministers would have followed his lead in fighting against the
Qing, but now that he fled without a fight and listened to traitors his small army could not act as a guard for the emperor. Huang Degong then said "I am willing to devote my life to you" after the emperor said he could not rely on him as a minister resentfully. Then a group of Qing Han Chinese and Banner soldiers showed up to Huang Degong's camp in
Wuhu on 15 June 1645, under
Zhang Tianlu, the
Guazhou garrison commander, bannermen from
Dodo and general
Liu Liangzuo. Huang Degong rejected their demand to turn over the Hongguang Emperor but Zhang Tianlu then shot an arrow into Huang's throat and killed him.
Tian Xiong and
Ma Deong, the brigade commanders under Huang Degong then defected to the Qing and gave general Liu Liangzuo the Hongguang Emperor.
Queue order and Jiangnan resistance (1645–1646) around 1900. The Chinese habit of wearing a queue came from
Dorgon's July 1645 edict ordering all men to shave their forehead and tie their hair into a queue like the
Manchus. Resistance in the region was originally muted. As the heartland of the scholarly class, hundreds of
Jiangnan scholars committed suicide by drowning, hanging, self-immolation, or hunger strike on the news of the death of the
Hongguang Emperor, sometimes entire families. Those who did not collaborate or commit suicide would have to join with bandits to resist the new regime. With the news of the fall of the capital back in 1644 and skyrocketing food prices, poor peasants had revolted against the local elite and indentured servitude, calling that "master and servant should address each other as brothers". They ransacked the villas and forced the wealthy to flee to the cities. Although the
Southern Ming regime managed to restore order, the discontent persisted and coalesced as the Black Dragon Society, which immediately resumed their revolt once the Qing crushed the Southern Ming forces. Some of the gentry, associated with the
Donglin movement, resisted compromise, but most gentry and urban elites proceeded to collaborate with the Qing in order to acquire their help to suppress the revolt or other threats such as bandits. However, with the introduction of the queue order, anti-Qing resistance exploded once more. On 21 July 1645, after the
Jiangnan region had been superficially pacified,
Dorgon issued "the most untimely promulgation of his career": he ordered all Chinese men to shave their forehead and to braid the rest of their hair into a
queue just like the
Manchus. The punishment for non-compliance was death. In the queue order edict, Dorgon specifically emphasized the fact that Manchus and the Qing emperor himself all wore the queue and shaved their foreheads so that by following the queue order and shaving,
Han Chinese would look like Manchus and the Qing Emperor, and invoked the
Confucian notion that the people were like the sons of the emperor who was like the father, so the father and sons could not look different and to decrease differences in physical appearance between Manchus and Han Chinese. The queue order was proposed by a number of Han Chinese officials in order to curry favour with
Dorgon. This policy of symbolic submission to the new dynasty helped the Manchus in telling friend from foe. However, for Han Chinese officials and literati, the new hairstyle was "a humiliating act of degradation" (because it breached a common
Confucian directive to preserve one's body intact), whereas for common folk cutting their hair "was tantamount to the loss of their manhood." Because it united Chinese of all social backgrounds into resistance against Qing rule, the hair-cutting command "broke the momentum of the Qing [expansion]." A minor scholar
Wang Zhan, in command of rural militia, besieged
Taicang. In
Xiushui, the local military commander
Chen Wu and the local gentry mobilised militia and revolted, but they failed in an attack on
Jiaxing. In
Kunshan, the resistance forces under magistrate
Yang Yongyan, general
Wang Zuocai and scholar
Zhu Jihuang had been mostly unsuccessful until the queue order was passed, when they experienced a surge in popular support and succeeded in killing the local collaborationist magistrate. However the army of
Prince Dodo turned on the region and with the exception of a few holdouts such as
Jiangyin, the loyalists fell quickly and the population was massacred. Resistance from marsh bandits, fishermen, gentry-led militia and ex-
Ming soldiers coalesced around
Lake Tai. The region's bandits were infamous for kidnapping rich people and threatening to blind or bury them alive unless ransom was paid, while distributing food and money to the poor. Now their river craft were converted into an
ad hoc naval raiding force and joined forces with their former gentry enemies. The gentry united these elements into the "White Headed Army" since they wore white turbans. East of the lake, loyalist gentry in
Songjiang District under
Chen Zilong and the remaining
Ming navy at
Chongming Island under
Wu Zhikui coordinated to rise up and cut off the
Qing forces in
Zhejiang. The loyalists aimed to serve as a linkage between the upstream resistance in
Hunan and the coastal resistance in
Zhejiang and
Fujian. The loyalists splintered over strategy disagreements. The loyalist navy, trying to sail for
Lake Mao, was destroyed at
Chushenpu by general
Li Chengdong's light craft forces. The
Lake Tai resistance stormed
Suzhou but were trapped in the city when Qing forces under
Wang Guocai regrouped and closed the gates.
Songjiang fell after being deceived into opening the gates by Qing forces covering up their shaved heads. A group of loyalists fled to join the resistance in
Fuzhou. The defiant population of
Jiading and
Songjiang was massacred by former Ming northern Chinese general Li Chengdong, respectively on 24 August and 22 September.
Jiangyin also held out against about 10,000 Qing troops for 83 days. When the city wall was finally breached on 9 October 1645, the Qing army led by northern Chinese Ming defector
Liu Liangzuo, who had been ordered to "fill the city with corpses before you sheathe your swords," massacred the entire population, killing between 74,000 and 100,000 people. Hundreds of thousands of people were killed before all of China was brought into compliance. Although
Manchu Bannermen were often associated with the
Jiangyin Massacre which targeted the Ming loyalists, the majority of those who had participated in Jiangyin Massacre were
Han Chinese Bannermen. Ming defector Li Chengdong's Han Chinese soldiers, who were mostly former revolted refugees, peasants and bandits from the north called the Han Chinese anti-queue resisters and Ming loyalists in
Jiading "southern barbarians" (
manzi) threatening them, telling them "southern barbarian, hand over your valuables", raping, torturing and massacring. When the Qing imposed the
Queue Order in China, many Han Chinese defectors were appointed in the massacre of dissidents. Li Chengdong oversaw three massacres in
Jiading that occurred within the same month; together which resulted in tens of thousands of deaths and left cities depopulated. In
Fuzhou, although former-Ming subjects were initially compensated with silver for complying to the Queue Order, the defected southern Chinese general
Hong Chengchou had enforced the policy thoroughly on the residents of
Jiangnan by 1645. The Han Chinese Banners were repeatedly assigned to enforce the Queue Order, often resulting in massacres such as the
Yangzhou Massacre, during which local residents were seen harassed by troops.
Chongming Island in the
Yangtzi estuary continued to harbour pirates and resistance forces, threatening to link up with the resistance in
Anqing and
Hubei-
Hunan. The Qing authorities were only able to maintain control through working with corrupt former Ming officials such as
Qian Qianyi and
Ruan Dacheng. Loyalist marines continued fighting in the
Lake Tai area, under
Wu Yi and
Zhou Rui, mainly local fishermen and smugglers, which posed a problem for Qing forces who lacked competent sailors. These linked up gentry resistance all over the region, dealing severe losses on Qing forces of governor
Tu Guobao. Wu Yi attempted to link up with
Southern Ming resistance in
Zhejiang by entering negotiations with the
Qing official of
Jiashan, but this was a trap; he was captured and executed. Resistance still carried on as the gentry continued near-open protest. In 1645, in
Liyang the poor peasants revolted, around
Tangshan a scholar led a rebellion of local bandits, and from
Mount Yuntai to
Haizhou (Lianyungang) an insurgency was led by the Ming Prince of
Xinchang. Ming Prince of
Rui'an and Prince of
Ruichang mobilised rebels in the
Huai'an-
Yangzhou area and around
Nanjing for an assault on Nanjing in September 1646, but the Qing collaborators discovered the plan and defeated it.
Sichuan campaign (1646–1658) In early 1646
Dorgon sent two expeditions to
Sichuan to try to destroy
Zhang Xianzhong's Great
Xi dynasty regime: the first expedition did not reach Sichuan because it was caught up against remnants; the second one, under the direction of
Hooge (the son of
Hong Taiji who had lost the succession struggle of 1643) reached Sichuan in October 1646. Hearing that a Qing army led by a major general was approaching, Zhang Xianzhong fled toward
Shaanxi, splitting his troops into four divisions that were ordered to act independently if something were to happen to him. Before leaving, he ordered a massacre of the population of his capital
Chengdu. The Qing forces advanced from
Xi'an into
Sichuan. Fearing Zhang's murderous tendencies, and with his Sichuanese troops unwilling to carry out Zhang's massacres on their fellow provincials, Zhang's commander
Liu Jinzhong defected to the Qing and guided them to Zhang. Liu was later granted the title of Baron. En route
Zhang Xianzhong was surprised by a Qing army under
Hooge and
Li Guoying at Mount Fenghuang, after being betrayed by one of his officers. Refusing to believe the scout's report, he rode out to see for himself and was killed by an arrow. This was witnessed by
Jesuit missionary
Gabriel de Magalhães, who reported it. Zhang Xianzhong was killed in a battle against Qing forces near
Xichong in central Sichuan on 1 February 1647. In one account, he was betrayed by one of his officers,
Liu Jinzhong, who pointed him out to be shot by an archer. Hooge then easily took
Chengdu, but found it in a state of desolation he had not expected. Unable to find food in the countryside, his soldiers looted the area, killing resisters, and even resorted to
cannibalism as food shortages grew acute.
Sun Kewang informally took over leadership, and he moved southward. In
Chongqing, the Ming general
Zeng Ying still held out. Xi dynasty boats under
Liu Wenxiu attacked Zeng's command boat on the
Yangtzi River, killed him and took the city, but continued moving southward to
Guizhou. A young son of
Zhang Xianzhong was supposed to be enthroned as the next ruler but he died on the journey. The remnants of the Ming force moved eastward to
Fuling District and
Yunyang County under
Li Zhanchun and
Yu Dahai. The remaining Ming forces under
Yang Zhan, now promoted to Marquis and
Ming commander of Sichuan, moved south towards Guizhou and unsuccessfully attempted to contact the
Southern Ming court for supplies, wandering in desperate search for supplies to
Jiading. Here he began stockpiling resources to prepare for war against the
Qing. Qing forces mainly left the province due to starvation and the remainder garrisoned at
Baoning in the north under
Li Guoying, who moved to crush banditry, called for supplies to be shipped in and recultivated the land to relieve the famine-like conditions. After he was attacked and defeated by Li Zhanchun and Yu Dahai in 1647 in a land-riverine battle at
Zhangzhou, he started building a riverine force of his own. The
Yongli Emperor in
Guangdong sent his alleged distant relative
Zhu Rongfan to organise the Ming forces in Sichuan who instead became yet another warlord, establishing himself as a "Prince of Chu" at
Kuizhou. These groups started fighting among each other, which helped the Qing secure the northern and western parts of the province by 1652, and the rest of the province by 1658. Anti-Qing forces including Great Shun and Zhang Xianzhong loyalists remained active in the mountainous regions between Chongqing and Hubei. Forces led by Li Laiheng, a nephew of Li Zicheng, established a base in the Maolu Mountain of
Xingshan County from 1653. They were known as the
Kuidong Thirteen Families and managed to hold out until suppressed by a large-scale Qing campaign in 1664.
Jiangxi and Fujian campaigns (1646–1650) conquest of
Southern Ming territories The Qing advance into
Zhejiang province was aided by the collaboration of
Tong Guoqi, who was appointed Governor of Zhejiang and
Fujian. Tong was originally from
Liaodong, but lived in Zhejiang where he came into contact with Chinese Catholic scholars who, claiming that Europe was an ideal society and that all nations shared one morality, argued that Chinese culture was too
inward-looking and called for appreciation and imitation of foreign nations, and cooperation with them, whether Europeans or Manchus. This group therefore supported Manchu rule. Meanwhile, the
Southern Ming had not been eliminated. When
Hangzhou fell to the
Qing on 6 July 1645, the Prince of Tang
Zhu Yujian, a ninth-generation descendant of
Ming founder
Zhu Yuanzhang, managed to escape by land to the southeastern province of Fujian. Crowned as the
Longwu Emperor in the coastal city of
Fuzhou on 18 August, he depended on the protection of talented seafarer
Zheng Zhilong (also known as "Nicholas Iquan"). The childless emperor adopted Zheng's eldest son and granted him the imperial surname. "
Koxinga", as his son is known to Westerners; it is a distortion of the title "Lord of the Imperial Surname" (Guoxingye 國姓爺). Upon Zheng Zhilong's request, the
Tokugawa Shogunate in Japan quietly supported the Zheng clan's pro-Ming forces by quietly granting them access to mercenaries, weapons and other strategic materials. Zheng Zhilong drafted a plan entitled "Grand Strategy for ordering the country", in which he argued for the Southern Ming to reconquer territory through regional military commanders rather than a centralized fashion. This brought him at loggerheads with the Longwu Emperor. Famine also struck after drought and crops failed all along the southeastern coastal region, while Qing attacks on the Yangzi river delta had cut access to raw silk. In response, the Longwu emperor wanted to reconquer Huguang and Jiangxi provinces which were major producers of rice to help boost the southern Ming, but Zheng Zhilong refused to expand out of Fujian for fear of losing control of the regime. In the meantime, another
Ming claimant, the Prince of Lu
Zhu Yihai, had named himself regent in
Zhejiang, but the two loyalist regimes failed to cooperate, making their chances of success even lower than they already were. In February 1646,
Qing armies seized land west of the
Qiantang River from the Lu regime and defeated a ragtag force representing the
Longwu Emperor in northeastern
Jiangxi. In May, they besieged
Ganzhou, the last Ming bastion in Jiangxi. In July, a new southern campaign led by
Prince Bolo sent Prince of Lu's
Zhejiang regime into disarray and proceeded to attack the Longwu regime in
Fujian. Hoping to gain rewards from Prince Bolo,
Zheng Zhilong betrayed the loyalists by contacting
Hong Chengchou and left northern Fujian undefended against a Qing army led by
Li Chengdong and
Tong Yangjia. The Qing took control of Fujian in 1645. On the pretext of relieving the siege of
Ganzhou, the Longwu court left their Fujian base in late September 1646, but the Qing army caught up with them. Longwu and his empress were summarily executed in
Tingzhou (western Fujian) on 6 October 1646. After the fall of
Fuzhou on 17 October,
Zheng Zhilong surrendered to the Qing and his son
Koxinga fled to the island of
Taiwan with his fleet. When news arrived of the Longwu emperor's demise, the fortress of Ganzhou in southern Jiangxi under the command of
Yang Tinglin also caved in to Qing general
Jin Shenghuan by November 1646. The Prince-Regent of Lu, with the aid of the sea-lord
Zhang Mingzhen, continued resistance at sea on the island of
Shacheng, between Zhejiang and Fujian. By July 1649 their base of operations shifted northward to Jiantiaosuo. After killing a rival naval commander
Huang Binqing, the base was moved to
Zhoushan in November. From there he attempted to raise a rebellion in
Jiangnan, but Zhoushan fell to the Qing in 1651 after being betrayed by Huang Binqing's former officers. Zhang Mingzhen, with all his family, fled to join
Zheng Chenggong in
Xiamen.
Hunan, Guangdong, and Guangxi campaign (1645–1650) After the fall of
Nanjing, the old
Ming governor of
Huguang (
Hubei and
Hunan)
He Tengjiao, under the
Longwu court, established the Thirteen Defense Commands
(zhen) with
Shun remnants in Hunan, which became famous for holding out against the
Qing. Qing forces under the early defector
Kong Youde subdued Hunan in 1646. After the fall of the Longwu regime, He Tengjiao swore allegiance to the
Yongli Emperor, continuing resistance in
Hunan and
Guizhou provinces, and was finally killed at
Xiangtan in 1649. The
Longwu Emperor's younger brother
Zhu Yuyue, who had fled
Fuzhou by sea, soon founded another
Ming regime in
Guangzhou, the capital of
Guangdong province, taking the reign title Shaowu (紹武) on 11 December 1646. Short of official costumes, the court had to purchase robes from local theater troops. On 24 December,
Prince of Gui Zhu Youlang established the Yongli (永曆) regime in the same vicinity. The Prince of Gui had fled from
Zhang Xianzhong's attack on
Hubei/
Hunan to
Zhaoqing in
Guangdong, but his retreat to
Guangxi led other loyalists to believe that he had abandoned them and they proceeded to enthrone the Shaowu emperor. The situation was complicated by the fact that the Shaowu court mainly consisted of local
Cantonese while the Yongli court consisted of men of other provinces. The two
Ming regimes fought each other until 20 January 1647, when a small
Qing force led by former
Southern Ming commander
Li Chengdong captured
Guangzhou, killing the
Shaowu Emperor and sending the
Yongli Emperor fleeing to
Nanning in
Guangxi. In May 1648, however,
Li Chengdong, disappointed at being made a mere regional commander after taking
Guangdong province, mutinied against the Qing and rejoined the Ming. The reversion of another dissatisfied Ming defector in
Jiangxi,
Jin Shenghuan, who was also discontented at being appointed a regional commander after conquering Jiangxi province, helped the Yongli regime to retake most of southern China. The Yongli emperor was encouraged by these developments and saw hope in a Ming reconquest, likening it to the revival of the
Han and
Tang dynasties after the usurpations of
Wang Mang and
An Lushan. Loyalists hoped to move the emperor to
Wuchang where he would lead a reconquest of
Nanjing and
Kaifeng. However, the Qing commander
Xu Yong (one of those who defected at
Jiangnan) repelled the loyalist counterattack at
Changsha as the populace did not side with the loyalists, and Qing forces advanced again. Xu Yong was later present at the capture of
He Tengjiao in
Xiangtan, and his army absorbed He's remaining troops. This resurgence of loyalist hopes was short-lived. New
Han-
Manchu-
Mongol armies under
Kong Youde,
Jirgalang and
Lekedehun managed to reconquer the central province of
Huguang (present-day
Hubei and
Hunan) in 1649, and the population of
Xiangtan was massacred.
Jiangxi fell to another army led by
Tantai,
Holhoi,
Shang Kexi and
Geng Zhongming.
Guangdong fell to Shang Kexi in November 1650. The
Yongli Emperor fled to
Nanning and from there to
Guizhou. Finally on 24 November 1650, Qing forces led by Shang Kexi captured
Guangzhou with 74 of his own cannons and the aid of
Dutch gunners, and massacred the city's population, killing as many as 70,000 people. In Guangzhou, massacres of Ming loyalists and civilians in 1650 were carried out by Qing forces under the command of northern
Han Chinese Banner generals
Shang Kexi and
Geng Jimao. == Ming loyalist revolts in the north (1647–1654) ==