In 963, Pan Mei was named the imperial defense commissioner of
Tanzhou (today's
Changsha) and sent to
Hunan to help control the newly conquered province, which borders the
Southern Han kingdom to the south. During the next 7 years, Pan pacified rebellious tribes in the southern half of the province and fought off
Southern Han incursions in
Guiyang and
Jianghua. In 970, Pan was named the commander of the expeditionary force to invade Southern Han. In
Fuchuan, he defeated the 10,000-men strong Southern Han army and subsequently took
Hezhou. Quickly the Song army conquered Zhaozhou (昭州, in today's
Pingle County), Guizhou (桂州, today's
Guilin) and
Lianzhou, resulting in the surrender of other
prefecture leaders along the
Xi River. Pan Mei's forces killed more than 10,000 enemy soldiers in Shaozhou (韶州, today's
Shaoguan) to advance to 120
li north of
Guangzhou, Southern Han's
capital. Around 150,000 Southern Han soldiers were stationed on a hill for a last battle. Pan Mei rested his soldiers and mentioned to his subordinate generals that the enemy's bamboo fences could best be attacked by fire. On a windy night, he dispatched a few thousand brave men to the enemy's gate, each with 2
torches in hands. Soon great flames engulfed the camps, and as the Song forces attacked from both sides, tens of thousands of Southern Han soldiers perished. The
Southern Han ruler
Liu Chang was captured in
Guangzhou, and the invasion ended 5 months after it began. Pan would remain to pacify the
Lingnan territory for three years as the joint
prefect of
Guangzhou and commissioner of foreign trade. ==Conquest of Southern Tang==