in Xiangyin County, Hunan.
Early life Zuo was born in 1812 in a land-holding family in
Xiangyin County,
Hunan Province. His family paid for him to attend a local private school starting from the age of five, where he mastered the
Confucian classics. At the age of 20, he qualified to attend the
Imperial Academy. Zuo's career got an inauspicious start when, in his youth, he failed the
imperial examination seven times (ca. 1822–1835). He decided to abandon his plans to become an official and returned to his home by the
Xiang River to farm
silkworms, read, and drink tea. It was during this period that he first directed his attention to the study of Western sciences, in the early days of the
eastward spread of Western learning.
Taiping Rebellion When the
Taiping Rebellion broke out in 1850, Zuo, then 38 years old, was hired as an advisor to
Zeng Guofan, the governor of Hunan. In 1856, he was formally offered a position in the provincial government of Hunan. In 1860, Zuo was given command of a force of 5,000 volunteers, the
Xiang Army (later known as "Chu Army"), and by September of that year, he drove the Taiping rebels out of Hunan and
Guangxi provinces, into coastal
Zhejiang Province. Zuo captured the city of
Shaoxing and, from there, pushed south into
Fujian and
Guangdong provinces, where the revolt had first begun. In 1863, Zuo was appointed
Provincial Governor of Zhejiang and an Undersecretary of War. In August 1864, Zuo, together with Zeng Guofan, dethroned the
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom's teenage ruler,
Hong Tianguifu, and brought an end to the rebellion. He was created "First Class Count Kejing" for his part in suppressing the rebellion. He, Zeng Guofan and
Li Hongzhang were called
Zeng, Zuo, Li, the leaders in suppressing the rebellion. In 1865, Zuo was appointed
Viceroy and Governor-General of Fujian and Zhejiang. As Commissioner of Naval Industries, Zuo founded China's
first modern shipyard and naval academy in
Fuzhou the following year.
Success and appointments Zuo's successes continued. In 1867, he became
Viceroy of
Shaanxi and
Gansu provinces and
Imperial Commissioner of the armed forces in Shaanxi. In 1884, his fellow Xiang Army officer,
Liu Jintang, was appointed as the first governor of
Xinjiang Province. The Governor of Xinjiang was the subordinate to the Viceroy of Shaanxi and Gansu. In these capacities, Zuo succeeded in putting down another uprising, the
Nian Rebellion, in 1868. After this military success, Zuo marched west with his army of 120,000, winning many victories with advanced Western weapons in the
Dungan Revolt in northwestern China (Shaanxi,
Ningxia, Gansu,
Qinghai and Xinjiang provinces) in the 1870s. Several
Hui Muslim generals, such as
Ma Zhan'ao,
Ma Anliang,
Ma Qianling,
Dong Fuxiang, and
Ma Haiyan from
Hezhou, who had defected to Zuo's army, helped him crush the "Muslim rebels". Zuo rewarded them by relocating the
Han Chinese from the suburbs of Hezhou to another place and allowing their troops to stay in the Hezhou suburbs as long as they did not live in the city itself. In 1878, Zuo successfully suppressed
Yakub Beg's uprising and helped to negotiate an end to Russian occupation of the border city of
Ili. He was vocal in the debate at the Qing imperial court over what to do with the Xinjiang situation, advocating for Xinjiang to become a province, in opposition to
Li Hongzhang, who wanted to abandon what he called "useless Xinjiang" and concentrate on defending China's coastal areas. However, Zuo won the debate, Xinjiang was made a province, and many administrative functions were staffed by his Hunan officers. Zuo was outspoken in calling for war against the Russian Empire, hoping to settle the matter by attacking Russian forces in Xinjiang with his Xiang Army. In 1878, when tension increased in Xinjiang, Zuo massed Qing forces toward the Russian-occupied Kuldja. The
Canadian Spectator stated in 1878, "News from
Turkestan says the Chinese are concentrating against Kuldja, a post in Kashgar occupied by the Russians... It is reported that a Russian expedition from Yart Vernaic has been fired upon by Chinese troops and forced to return." The Russians were afraid of the Qing forces, thousands of whom were armed with modern weapons and trained by European officers. Because the Russian forces near the Qing Empire's border were under-manned and under-equipped, they agreed to negotiate. Zuo's troops were armed with modern German
Dreyse needle rifles and
Krupp artillery as well as experimental weapons. For his contributions to his nation and monarch, Zuo was appointed a Grand Secretary to the
Grand Secretariat in 1874 and elevated to "Second Class Marquis Kejing" in 1878.
Later life and death Zuo was appointed to the
Grand Council, the cabinet of the Qing Empire, in 1880. Uneasy with bureaucratic politics, Zuo asked to be relieved of his duties and was appointed
Viceroy of Liangjiang in 1881. In 1884, upon the outbreak of the
Sino-French War, Zuo received his fourth and last commission as commander-in-chief and
Imperial Commissioner of the military and Inspector-General overseeing coastal defences in Fujian Province. He died in 1885 in Fuzhou, Fujian Province, and was given the posthumous name Wenxiang. ==Legacy==