Siege of Dong'ou

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Date138 BC
Result Minyue withdrew as Han intervened; Dong’ou submitted to the Han and migrated its entire state to Jianghuai
Siege of Dong'ou
Part of Southward expansion of the Han dynasty

Map of Minyue and Dong'ou
Date138 BC
Location
Result Minyue withdrew as Han intervened; Dong’ou submitted to the Han and migrated its entire state to Jianghuai
Belligerents
The Kingdom of Dong'ou
The Han Empire
The Kingdom of Minyue

The siege of Dong’ou (Chinese: 浮海救东瓯; lit. 'Floating by sea to rescue Dong’ou') was a military campaign in 138 BC, in which Dong’ou, after being invaded by Minyue, appealed to the Han dynasty of China for assistance, and the Han dispatched troops by sea to relieve it.

After the Rebellion of the Seven States in 154 BC, Liu Ju, who had fled to Minyue and harboured resentment over his father’s death, repeatedly urged Minyue to attack Dong’ou. In 138 BC, King Ying of Minyue sent forces to besiege the capital of Dong’ou. With its provisions exhausted, Dong’ou sought help from the Han dynasty. At the Han court, a debate arose over whether troops should be dispatched.

Emperor Wu of Han ultimately adopted the advice of Zhuang Zhu, mobilising forces from Kuaiji Commandery and placing them under Zhuang Zhu’s command to sail by sea. Upon hearing of the approaching Han forces, Minyue withdrew. Shortly thereafter, the entire population of Dong’ou was relocated inland to the Jianghuai region. The King of Dong’ou surrendered and was enfeoffed as the Marquis of Guangwu. The state of Dong’ou thus came to an end, and its former territory was gradually occupied by Minyue.

In 192 BC, to contain the kingdom of Minyue, Emperor Hui of Han posthumously enfeoffed Yao as King of Donghai, establishing Dong’ou as his capital. Yao’s son, Zhaoxiang, succeeded to the throne.[1]

Dong’ou, like Minyue and Nanyue, was treated as an external vassal state rather than being directly administered by the Han dynasty. It remained independent in military affairs, household registration, language, and culture.[2] In 152 BC, Dong’ou accepted a title conferred by the Han court and became a subordinate state of the Han dynasty. However, before the Rebellion of the Seven States, it was in practice under the control of Liu Pi, the Prince of Wu.[1]

In 154 BC, Liu Pi launched the Rebellion of the Seven States. Minyue refused to join his anti-Han campaign, whereas Dong’ou took part. After Liu Pi was defeated, he fled to Dong’ou, prompting the Han court to dispatch a secret envoy to seek Dong’ou’s surrender. Dong’ou’s forces then lured Liu Pi into a trap, and during his inspection of the troops, Yiwū, the king’s younger brother and a general, killed him and presented his head to Emperor Jing. In return, Dong’ou was granted imperial clemency.[1][3]

Siege

Aftermath

References

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