Upon Hou Yi's arrival at Kaifeng, he expended his wealth to bribe the major officials and generals that Liu Zhiyuan had left to be in charge of Liu Chengyou's administration, and therefore was made the mayor of Kaifeng. He then used his new influence in the Later Han imperial administration to repeatedly defame Wang Jingchong. Wang, hearing this, became disappointed and fearful. At that time, it happened that the imperial government sent the imperial attendant Wang Yi () to summon Zhao Kuangzan's personal guards to Kaifeng. These guard soldiers became fearful, and Wang Jingchong encouraged them into mutinying. They therefore did, under Zhao Siwan's leadership, and seized control of Chang'an. Meanwhile, Wang Jingchong himself enticed the people and officials at Fengxiang to petition the imperial government to have him (Wang) made military governor of Fengxiang. The imperial government, apprehensive about Wang Jingchong's intentions, refused, and issued orders transferring Wang Shou'en () the military governor of Jingnan Circuit (靜難, headquartered in modern
Xianyang,
Shaanxi) to Jinchang (which was renamed Yongxing () and Zhao Hui () the military governor of Baoyi Circuit (保義, headquartered in modern
Sanmenxia,
Henan) to Fengxiang. The same orders also commissioned Wang Jingchong as the acting military governor of Jingnan. Wang Jingchong found excuses to delay his departure from Fengxiang, and for some time tried to order the Jingnan troops to join him. He also made overtures to Later Shu, testing out Later Shu's willingness to aid him. Meanwhile, around the same time,
Li Shouzhen the military governor of Huguo Circuit (護國, headquartered in modern
Yuncheng,
Shanxi) rebelled and claimed the title of Prince of Qin. Wang thereafter accepted both commissions from Li Shouzhen and Later Shu, with Later Shu renaming Fengxiang to Qiyang () and making him its military governor. The Later Han imperial government sent the major general
Guo Wei against the three rebels. Guo, under the advice of Hu Yanke () and seeing Li as the main threat, decided to act against Li first, believing that once he destroyed Li, Zhao Siwan and Wang would be more easily defeated. He therefore marched directly to Huguo's capital Hezhong Municipality () and put it under siege. Meanwhile, Zhao Hui advanced to Fengxiang and put it under siege. He defeated the Later Shu army that Meng Chang sent to aid Wang, and then had a corps of his army pretend to be the Later Shu army. When Wang exited Fengxiang to try to join his army with the "Later Shu" army, he was caught in a trap and defeated. He fled back inside the city and continued to defend it. Another subsequent attempt by the Later Shu general An Siqian () to aid Wang was also repelled by Zhao. By late 949, Wang's potential allies were all destroyed or repelled – with Zhao Siwan's having first surrendered to Later Han but then reconsidering a rebellion, and then was killed; Li's city of Hezhong having fallen to Guo and Li's having committed suicide; and Later Shu forces making no inroads into aiding him. Wang's strategist Zhou Can () suggested to him that he surrender to Later Han. Wang hesitated. Several days later, with the city close to falling to Zhao Hui, Wang ordered his officers Gongsun Nian () and Zhang Silian () to pretend to surrender to Zhao by heading out the east gate and setting fire to it, while he and Zhou would attack Zhao's forces at the north gate. When Gongsun and Zhang were carrying out their part of the orders, they received news that Wang had set his own headquarters on fire, and his family had died in the fire. They, and Zhou, all surrendered to Zhao Hui. == Notes and references ==