Siege of Songping

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DateSpring 863
(14 January – 1 March, 1 month 15 days)
Location21°01′42″N 105°51′15″E / 21.02833°N 105.85417°E / 21.02833; 105.85417
Result

Nanzhao victory

  • Temporary Nanzhao occupation of the Red River Delta
  • Weakening of the Tang dynasty
Siege of Songping (863)
Part of Tang-Nanzhao war in Annan
DateSpring 863
(14 January – 1 March, 1 month 15 days)
Location21°01′42″N 105°51′15″E / 21.02833°N 105.85417°E / 21.02833; 105.85417
Result

Nanzhao victory

  • Temporary Nanzhao occupation of the Red River Delta
  • Weakening of the Tang dynasty
Belligerents
Nanzhao Tang dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Duan Qiuqian
Yang Sijin
Chu Đạo Cổ
Cai Xi 
Strength
50,000 Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown
Siege of Songping is located in Vietnam
Siege of Songping
Location of the battle

The siege of Songping was one of the great victories of Nanzhao during its invasion of the Tang dynasty in 863. Nanzhao took advantage of turmoil in the Tang Protectorate General to Pacify the South (Annan) and allied with local tribes to invade the Tang dynasty, which ruled the Red River Delta in modern-day northern Vietnam. The siege took place at Songping (modern-day Hanoi), capital of the Annan Protectorate, in early 863 during the reign of Emperor Yizong. The siege ended in victory for Nanzhao although their forces were later driven back by a Tang counterattack by 866.

Nanzhao was a powerful kingdom to the southwest of the Tang dynasty. Due to the mismanagement of the Tang governor Li Zhuo in Annan in 854, the native chieftains in the region defected to Nanzhao and attacked Tang forces. The chieftain Lý Do Độc submitted to the Nanzhao king Shilong, who sent military forces to attack Songping, the capital of Annan, in 858. The attack was repelled by Tang forces. However due to further mismanagement and the killing of a Viet leader, local clans in Annan continued to defect to Nanzhao.[1][2]

Another Nanzhao invasion in 860 briefly took Songping before being driven back by a Tang army. Songping was taken again in early 861 when the Đỗ family, who were one of the primary factions that were wronged by the Tang administration, led 30,000 men and Nanzhao contingents to seize Annan. Songping fell on 17 January 861 and the Tang administration, Li Hu, fled to Yongzhou. Li Hu retook Songping on 21 July but Nanzhao's forces maneuvered around the Tang army and seized Yongzhou. Li Hu was banished to Hainan island and was replaced by Wang Kuan, who sought to appease local sentiment by bestowing titles on the Đỗ family and apologizing for killing their leaders.[3][4][5]

A relief army of 30,000 men was sent to Songping but soon left the city when rivalry broke out between Cai Xi, the military governor, and Cai Jing, an administrative and military official of Lingnan.[3] Cai Xi was then left responsible for holding Songping against an imminent Nanzhao offensive.[6] The city was surrounded by 4 miles (6,344 meters) of moated rampart–some parts seven to eight meters high. East of the city was the Red River.[7] Much of the information about the battle was written by Fan Chuo, a Tang official who wrote an eyewitness account about the southern barbarians (people of Annan and Yunnan) during the siege.[8]

Siege

Aftermath

References

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