Battle of Wuchang
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| Battle of Wuchang | |||||||
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| Part of Taiping Rebellion | |||||||
Wuchang is on the left (Southern) bank of the Yangtze River, seen in a 1915 map | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
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| Taiping Heavenly Kingdom | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| ? | Hong Xiuquan | ||||||
The Battle of Wuchang occurred in 1852 during the Taiping Rebellion in Wuchang, part of the modern-day city of Wuhan.
In November 1852, Hong Xiuquan called off the siege of Changsha. The Taiping armies advanced northward down the Xiang River toward Wuchang, the capital of Hubei.[1][2]
The Taiping advance towards Wuchang took very deceptive maneuvers so as to ward off pursuit from Qing forces. Taiping forces would embark onto land and abandon their boats at one spot. Then, they would unexpectedly seize new fleets when descending upon some unsuspecting river town. They also destroyed bridges as they passed them to delay pursuit, recruiting the boatmen along with their boats to check the advance of the Qing forces. In other cases, they would deploy pontoon bridges to allow crossing of the river, then float them downstream to use again. Taiping forces advanced forward around three hundred miles in twenty-five days.