Twice had a Tartar empire been established
in China, that of the Kin dynasty in the north, and
that of their successors, the Mongols, over the
whole country. A third and more permanent Tartar
dynasty, that of the Manchus, was yet to come.
With the striking story of the rise and progress of
these new conquerors we are now concerned.
In the northeast of China, beyond
the Great Wall and bordering on Corea, lies the province
of Liautung. Northward from this to the Amur River
extends the eastern section of the steppes, known on
modern maps as Manchuria. From these broad wilds
the Kins had advanced to their conquest of Northern
China. To them they fled for safety from the Mongol
arms, and here lost their proud name of Kin and resumed
their older and humbler one of Niuche. For some
five centuries they remained here unnoticed and undisturbed,
broken up into numerous small clans, none of much
strength and importance. Of these clans, which
were frequently in a state of hostility to one another,
there is only one of interest, that of the Manchus.
The original seat of this small Tartar
clan lay not far north of the Chinese border, being
on the Soodsu River, about thirty miles east of the
Chinese city of Moukden. Between the Soodsu and
Jiaho streams, and south of the Long White Mountains,
lies the valley of Hootooala, a location of rugged
and picturesque scenery. This valley, protected
on three sides by water and on the fourth by a lofty
range of mountains, the whole not more than twelve
miles long, formed the cradle of the Manchu race,
the narrow realm from which they were to emerge to
victory and empire. In a certain respect it resembled
the native home of the Mongols, but was far smaller
and much nearer the Chinese frontier.
In this small and secluded valley
appeared, about the middle of the fourteenth century,
when the emperor Hongwou was fighting with the Mongols,
a man named Aisin Gioro. Tradition attributes
to him a miraculous birth, while calumny asserts that
he was a runaway Mongol; but at any rate he became
lord of Hootooala and ancestor of its race of conquerors.
Five generations from him came a chief named Huen,
who ruled over the same small state, and whose grandson,
Noorhachu by name, born in 1559, was the man upon
whom the wonderful fortunes of the Manchus were to
depend. Like many other great conquerors, his
appearance predicted his career. “He had
the dragon face and the phoenix eye; his chest was
enormous, his ears were large, and his voice had the
tone of the largest bell.”
He began life like many of the heroes
of folk-lore, his step-mother, when he was nineteen
years of age, giving him a small sum of money and
turning him out into the world to seek his fortune.
She repented afterwards, and bade him come home again
or accept further aid, but the proud youth refused
to receive from her any assistance, and determined
to make his own way in the world.
Noorhachu first came into notice in
1583. In that year Haida, chief of a small district
south of Hootooala, made an attack, assisted by the
Chinese, on some neighboring clans. One of these
was governed by a relative of the old Manchu chief
Huen, who, with his son and a small force, hurried
to his aid and helped him to defend his town.
Haida and his allies, finding the place too strong
for them, enticed a part of the garrison outside the
walls, and then fell upon and treacherously massacred
them. Among the slain were Huen and his son.
This brutal murder left Noorhachu
chief of his clan, and at the same time filled him
with a fierce desire for revenge, both upon Haida and
upon the Chinese. He was forced to bide his time,
Haida gaining such influence with his allies that
he was appointed by them chief of all the Niuche districts.
This act only deepened the hatred of Noorhachu, who
found himself made one of the vassals of the murderer,
while many of his own people left him and attached
themselves to the fortunes of Haida.
Fortunately for the youthful chief,
the Chinese did not strongly support their nominee,
and Noorhachu pursued his rival so persistently that
the assassin did not feel safe even within his stockaded
camp, but several times retreated for safety into
Liautung. The Chinese at length, tired of supporting
a man without the courage to defend himself, seized
him and handed him over to Noorhachu, who immediately
put him to death.
The energy and success of Noorhachu
in this scheme of vengeance gave him a high reputation
among the Niuche. He was still but twenty-seven
years of age, but had probably laid out his life-work,
that of making himself chief of a Niuche confederacy,
and employing his subjects in an invasion of Chinese
soil. It is said that he had sworn to revenge
his father’s death by the slaughter of two hundred
thousand Chinese.
He began by building himself a stronghold.
Selecting a site in the plain where water was abundant,
he built a town and surrounded it with a triple wall.
This done, he began the work of uniting the southern
clans under his sway, a task which proved easy, they
being much impressed by his victory over Haida.
This peaceful progress was succeeded by a warlike
movement. In 1591 he suddenly invaded the district
of Yalookiang, which, taken by surprise, was forced
to submit to his arms.
This act of spoliation roused general
apprehension among the chiefs. Here was a man
who was not satisfied with petty feuds, but evidently
had higher objects in view. Roused by apprehension
of danger, seven of the neighboring chiefs gathered
their forces, and with an army of thirty thousand
Niuche and Mongols invaded the territory of the
daring young leader. The odds against him seemed
irresistible. He had but four thousand men to
oppose to this large force. But his men had been
well chosen and well trained, and they so vigorously
resisted the onset of the enemy that the principal
Niuche chief was killed and the Mongol leader forced
to flee. At this juncture Noorhachu charged his
foes with such vigor that they were broken and put
to flight, four thousand of them being slain in the
pursuit. A number of chiefs were taken prisoners,
while the spoils included several thousand horses and
plaited suits of armor, material of great value to
the ambitious young victor.
Eight years passed before Noorhachu
was ready for another move. Then he conquered
and annexed the fertile district of Hada, on the north.
In 1607 he added to this the state of Hwifa, and in
the following year that of Woola. These conquests
were preliminary to an invasion of Yeho, the most
powerful of the Niuche states. His first attack
upon this important district failed, and before repeating
it he deemed it necessary to show his strength by
invading the Chinese province of Liautung. He
had long been preparing for this great enterprise.
He had begun his military career with a force of one
hundred men, but had now an army forty thousand strong,
well drilled and disciplined men, provided with engines
of war, and of a race famed for courage and intrepidity.
Their chief weapon consisted of the formidable Manchu
bow, while the horsemen wore an armor of cotton-plaited
mail which was proof against arrow or spear.
The invasion was preceded by a list of grievances drawn
up against the Chinese, which, instead of forwarding
it to the Chinese court, Noorhachu burnt in presence
of his army, as an appeal to Heaven for the justice
of his cause.
The Chinese had supinely permitted
this dangerous power to grow up among their tributaries
on the north. In truth, the Ming dynasty, which
had begun with the great Hongwou, had shared the fate
of Chinese dynasties in general, having fallen into
decadence and decay. With a strong hand at the
imperial helm the Manchu invasion, with only a thinly
settled region to draw on for recruits, would have
been hopeless. With a weak hand no one could
predict the result.
In 1618 the Manchus crossed their
southern frontier and boldly set foot on the soil
of China, their movement being so sudden and unexpected
that the border town of Fooshun was taken almost without
a blow. The army sent to retake it was hurled
back in defeat, and the strong town of Tsingho was
next besieged and captured. The progress of Noorhachu
was checked at this point by the clamor of his men,
who were unwilling to march farther while leaving
the hostile state of Yeho in their rear. He therefore
led them back to their homes.
The Chinese were now thoroughly aroused.
An army of more than one hundred thousand men was
raised and sent to attack Noorhachu in his native
realm. But it was weakly commanded and unwisely
divided into three unsupported sections, which the
Manchus attacked and routed in detail. The year’s
work was completed by the conquest and annexation of
Yeho, an event which added thirty thousand men to Noorhachu’s
resources and completed the confederation of the Niuche
clans, which had been his original plan.
The old Chinese emperor was now near
his life’s end. But his last act was one
of his wisest ones, it being the appointment of Tingbi,
a leader of skill and resolution, to the command in
Liautung. In a brief time this energetic commander
had placed the capital and the border towns of the
province in a state of defence and collected an army
of one hundred and eighty thousand men on the frontier.
Two years sufficed to make the province impregnable
to Manchu attack. During this period of energy
Noorhachu wisely remained quiet. But the Chinese
emperor died, and was succeeded by his son, who quickly
followed him to the grave. His grandson, a boy
of sixteen, succeeded, and the court enemies of Tingbi
now had him recalled and replaced by a man who had
never seen a battle.
The result was what might have been
expected. Noorhachu, who had been waiting his
opportunity, at once led his army across the borders
(1621), marching upon the strong town of Moukden,
whose commandant, more brave than wise, left the shelter
of his walls to meet him in the field. The result
was a severe repulse, the Manchus entering the gates
with the fugitives and slaughtering the garrison in
the streets. Three armies were sent to retake
Moukden, but were so vigorously dealt with that in
a few weeks less than half Tingbi’s strong army
remained. Liauyang, the capital of the province,
was next besieged and taken by storm, the garrison
falling almost to a man, among them Tingbi’s
incapable successor meeting his death. No further
resistance was made, the other towns, with one exception,
opened their gates, and in a brief time Noorhachu
completed the conquest of the province of Liautung.
Only one thing kept the Manchus from
crossing the Great Wall and invading the provinces
beyond. This was the stronghold of Ningyuen,
which a Chinese officer named Chungwan had reinforced
with a small party, and which resolutely resisted
all assaults. Noorhachu, not daring to leave
this fortified place in his rear, besieged it with
a strong army, making two desperate assaults upon
its walls. But Chungwan, assisted by some European
cannon, whose noise proved more terrible to the Manchus
than their balls, held out so vigorously that for the
first time in his career the Manchu chief met with
defeat. Disappointed and sick at heart, he retraced
his steps to Moukden, then his capital, there to end
his career, his death taking place in September, 1626.
Such was the adventurous life of the
man who, while not conquering China himself, made
its conquest possible to his immediate successors,
who acknowledged his great deeds by giving him the
posthumous title of Emperor of China, the Manchu dynasty
dating its origin back to 1616. His son, Taitsong,
who succeeded him, renewed the attack on Ningyuen,
but found the heroic Chungwan more than his match.
A brilliant idea brought him final success. Leaving
the impregnable stronghold in his rear, he suddenly
marched to the Great Wall, which he crossed, and was
far on the road to Peking before Chungwan knew of
his purpose. At once abandoning the town, the
Chinese general hurried southward, and, having the
best road, succeeded in reaching the capital in advance
of the Manchus. But he came only to his death.
Tingbi, the one man feared by Noorhachu, had been
executed through the machinations of his enemies, and
now Chungwan suffered the same fate, Taitsong, not
being able to defeat him in the field, having succeeded
in forming a plot against him in the palace.
But Peking, though in serious peril,
was not taken. A truce was arranged, and Taitsong
drew off his troops for reasons best known
to himself. He was soon back in China, but did
not again attack Peking, devoting himself to raids
through the border provinces. In 1635 he assumed
the title of Emperor of China, in consequence of the
seal of the Mongol dynasty, which had been lost in
Mongolia two centuries before, being found and sent
to him. But Ningyuen still held out, under an
able successor to Chungwan, and in September, 1643,
this second of the Manchu leaders came to his death.
The conquest of China was reserved for a later leader.