Battle of Kaiyuan

Battle of Kaiyuan
Part of the Qing conquest of the Ming
DateJuly 26 1619[1]
LocationKaiyuan, China
Result Decisive Later Jin victory
Belligerents
Later Jin Ming dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Nurhaci Ma Lin 
Zheng Zhifan
Strength
unknown unknown
Casualties and losses
unknown heavy

The Battle of Kaiyuan was a conflict between the Later Jin and Ming dynasty in the summer of 1619. Following the victory at the Battle of Sarhu, Nurhaci continued the attack on Ming by assaulting the city of Kaiyuan.

The Jin attack occurred during a heavy downpour. Ming dispatched a small relief contingent of 100 men, but they were intercepted by a Jin force and suffered 32 casualties. The Jin army besieged Kaiyuan and attacked Ma Lin's outer defenses, which had been heavily strengthened in preference to a safer position on the walls. However the strategy ended badly for Ma Lin, who's forces were defeated. As too many men were already outside, there weren't enough men to man the walls. As imminent defeat became apparent, the Censor Zheng Zhifan fled.[2]

The walls were breached and the fighting continued inside the city for three days before it was pacified. Meanwhile, another relief contingent had been dispatched from Tieling, but was also intercepted by a Jin force and repulsed.[2]

Ma Lin was captured and executed.[2]

References

Bibliography

  • Swope, Kenneth (2014), The Military Collapse of China's Ming Dynasty, Routledge
  • Wakeman, Frederic (1985), The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-Century China, 1, University of California Press
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