The Mongol Conquest of Southern China
This video
will be about the Mongol conquest of Southern China and the Sòng Dynasty, a
titanic effort that would last from the 1230s to 1279 and involve, directly or indirectly,
all the states of East Asia and many beyond. In particular, this video seeks to
place Mongol and Song actions within a larger strategic and regional context.
Geography
Unlike the
plains of Northern China, the hot, humid and hilly geography of Southern China
is bad for effective cavalry operations. This was not purely to the Mongols’ disadvantage,
however: it also prevented the Song from raising the cavalry necessary to mount
a serious challenge in the North, which meant they were on permanent defense.
Geography
also meant that riverine travel was by far the more efficient means of
transportation in South China. The Song thus had to rely on the Yangtze River
network as both their northern line of defense and a major communications
highway, which deprived them of the advantage of interior lines. Any blockade
of the Yangtze along the 1,650km front would split the Song in two.
The Song’s
Yangtze frontier could be divided into three distinct theaters of operations.
Firstly, there was Sìchuān in the west, isolated from the rest of China through
mountains and distance and mostly acted independently of the central government
in Hángzhou.
In the
center was the Hàn River Valley, whose north-south orientation into the Yangtze
Basin made it a natural highway linking North to South China, and thus a gateway
for the Song moving North, or the Mongols heading South. A series of Song fortresses
guarded the riverbanks, most notably the twin cities of Xiāngyáng and Fánchéng
at its northern end.
In the east,
communications between inland China and Hangzhou inevitably passed through the
lower Yangtze, making this wealthy region a key strategic point in the Song
Dynasty. It was comprehensively defended and fortified, with a network of fortresses,
walled villages and water obstacles from the formal boundary at the Huái all
the way to the Yangtze, whose waters were patrolled by dedicated riverine
fleets.
Taking a
broader regional view, the Mongols by the 1230s possessed an Empire stretching
from European Russia and Persia to the border with Korea, which also meant
having to watch out for enemies as far-flung as Central Europe, Anatolia, Iraq
and Northwestern India.
They also
could not afford to ignore the extensive Song relationships with East,
Southeast and South Asia: not only would the Song draw wealth and resources
from them through trade, but there was also the potential that these countries would
aid the Song in order to protect themselves.
Approaches to War
In
attempting the conquest of Southern China, the Mongols would not just fight in
terrain that they were not accustomed to, but also against a strategy and political
system different to anything else they had fought before.
On a
policy level, the Khans, needing to demonstrate success and secure plunder for
followers, acted on the basis of perpetual war. In order to avoid overstretching
the hundred-thousand men of the ‘core’ army, Mongol grand strategy hinged on
the idea of ‘one war at a time’, exploiting the Empire’s central position to
crush an enemy on one front before the others could react. Dealing such
crushing blows, in turn, meant giving subordinates freedom to conduct wars of
maneuver, with the Khan setting only the overarching objectives and timetable.
The Song,
on the other hand, practiced a policy of ‘coexistence’: rather than getting
into direct, costly and risky conflict with the militarily-superior nomads, the
Song would pay them off and wait as the latent instability of steppe politics tore
their rivals apart. Their grand strategy therefore focused on preparing the
state to withstand long wars and dragging out conflicts beyond what the nomads
could bear. This, in turn, led to a strategy focused not just on forts and the
barrier of the Yangtze, but also on establishing a strong economy and centralized
control as a means of ensuring political stability.
The
question of securing naval control would loom large for both sides. Naval
control not only determined whether the Yangtze could be penetrated in its
middle and lower reaches, it also impacted the security of riverine, coastal
and canal communications, contact with other states, and the viability of overseas
trade.
For the
Mongols in particular, naval questions also tied into the broader internal
debate over their future development. Bureaucracy and settled government were required
to fund and maintain a navy, but such reforms exposed the Khan to the wrath of
the traditionalists.
Internal
divisions also ate at Song strategy, where ‘coexistence’ rested uneasily with ‘nationalism’
and court politics. The humiliation of tribute, the massive defense budget
eating up 80% of state expenses, and the demand to safeguard China’s honor against
the barbarians were things so-called ‘appeasers’ had to navigate carefully lest
they wound up in exile or worse. Lastly, by the 1230s the Song was also in
administrative decay, with the countryside and ports dominated by influential
landowner and merchant clans.
1230s – 1242: Song Attack and Mongol Defense
The Song
policy of ‘coexistence’ had ensured the dynasty’s survival the past two times
it had been tried: both the Khitan Liáo and the Jurchen Jīn, despite their
military superiority, were paid off through tribute and ritual humiliation, and
eventually they were destroyed by a new wave of nomads to their rear. A similar
policy towards the Mongols might have been the easiest way to preserve the dynasty.
Instead,
the Song went in the opposite direction. Contrary to their abilities and
strategic orientation, they attempted to reconquer Northern China: first
allying with the Mongols to eliminate the Jin, then attempting to exploit the
political vacuum by supporting rebels and warlords against the Mongols, and
finally attacking their old capital of Kaifeng in 1234.
Historians
have interpreted these actions through the simple politics of nationalism, but the
Song about-face might have also reflected confidence in their strategic
position. They knew the Mongols had no naval capability – the Horde was unable
to cross even the 500-meter-wide Ganghwa Strait in their war against Korea –
and so the Song did not need to fear retaliation. Given this, there was no
downside in trying to shape the situation in North China to the Song’s benefit
– avenging past defeats, creating semi-independent buffer states, and even
preventing refugees from flooding into the South.
But if
these were the intentions, however, Song strategy could only be described as a
failure. Firstly, the court did not pay attention to the navy, which spent most
of the 1240s refitting and thus deprived the Song of their most effective
asset. Secondly, instead of cementing Song control over the warlords, the Song
army was used in a dash for the ‘prestige’ yet indefensible region of the
Central Plains, with the predictable result of defeat at the hands of Mongol
cavalry. Lastly, the Song attack violated their prior alliance with the
Mongols, gaining a reputation for duplicity and diminishing the chances of a
successful ‘coexistence’ in the future.
By
contrast, the Mongols had a clearer view of things. Despite Song provocation,
they stuck to their strategy of ‘One War at a Time’, focusing their efforts
against Russia, Central Europe, and Anatolia. Recognizing their naval
inferiority, they stuck to raiding the Song instead of conquest. And even these
were not simply quests for plunder, but aimed at capturing siege and naval
assets, as well as disrupting local productivity and stretching Song resources
even further. By 1234, Sichuan had stopped contributing funds to the broader
Song defense, and instead was demanding more and more resources from Hangzhou.
1247 – 1259: Flanking the Song
By 1247,
the Mongols were ready for another crack at East Asia. This phase of the
conquest from 1247 to 1259 can be seen as a grand strategic attempt to knock
out all Song’s immediate neighbors and turn its western flank as a prelude to
general conquest.
Güyük Khan
began the offensive with a renewed campaign against Korea, finally making the country
a vassal in 1258. Korea was a source of timber for the Song navy and also a
potential launchpad for Song naval disruptions, something that had indeed been
planned against the Jin in the 12thC. Vassalizing Korea would allow
the Mongols to do the same in reverse against the Song, but the flip side of
this was that the country would also become a running distraction for the
Mongols, dragging them into disputes within the royal family and with Japan.
Möngke Khan
followed this up with an assault on Tibet and modern Yúnnán, with the former
vassalized in 1253, the Kingdom of Dali conquered in 1256 and Vietnam
vassalized in 1257. These were not minor efforts – 20% of the Mongols’
manpower, for example, was sent to Dali at the same time as the notorious
campaign against Baghdad – and their aim was not just to cut the a source of
horses for the Song, but to turn its entire western and southern flanks. The
Mongols could then breach the Yangtze at its fordable upper reaches and,
following its course, push the Song into the sea – eliminating the need for a
navy, and the internal debates that would result from it.
Mongke’s
flanking approach may have been politically sound but it was strategically
dubious. Launching attacks across the jungles of Yunnan and Vietnam were
non-starters, and fighting the Song along a 1000-km-long flank would have
enmeshed the Mongols in a long war of attrition while compressing the Song into
an ever-tighter, ever-more defensible perimeter. Fatally, Mongke also
underestimated South China’s climate: having invaded the Song in early 1258, he
fell ill and died 18 months later before the gates of Hézhōu in eastern
Sichuan, only the first of the many Yangtze fortresses his strategy would have
had him conquer.
1263 – 1273: The Siege of Xiangyang
The death
of Mongke caused the tension between settled and unsettled Mongols to explode
into open warfare, and as Kublai engaged a 3-year civil war from 1260-1263, the
Song was given time to devise a response to the impending assault.
Song
policy at this point revolved around Chancellor Jiǎ Sìdào, a corrupt and
divisive but strategic leader. Leveraging his unearned prestige as a ‘victor’
over Kublai’s diversionary attack down the Han River in 1259, which in fact
ended because Kublai left to seize his inheritance, Jia mobilized the Song for
war, repairing fortresses and expanding the army and fleet. To fund this, he printed
massive amounts of paper money as a form of public debt, and seized landowners’
and merchants’ assets, earning their hatred in a move that would have long-term
consequences.
Ever since
the 1240s the Mongols had fallen into chronic political instability and
repeated succession crises, which argued in favor of continuing the Song approach
of defense and attrition. Jia Sidao took this strategy to the max, ending Song
engagements in North China in favor of fixed defenses and the riverine navy.
Of the
three theaters of operations, Jia appreciated that the Mongols could not
contest Song control of the Lower Yangtze, and that Mongke’s focus on Sichuan
had proven to be a dead end. He therefore focused Song efforts on bolstering the
fortress network of the Han River Valley, which he correctly judged to be the
main theater in the next war. Whatever his moral failings, Jia Sidao understood
Song’s strategic situation.
On the
Mongol side, Kublai emerged in 1263 as Great Khan, but his authority beyond
East Asia was nominal. But this also meant that he no longer needed to navigate
the settled-unsettled debate within the Mongols, and his great project of
building a strong navy could finally begin.
Kublai’s
approach to the navy was multifaceted and multinational. Firstly, he adopted
Chinese-style bureaucracy to build and maintain his navy. The actual fleets themselves
were cobbled together by state-led programs and requisitions from vassals. Lastly,
Kublai aggressively courted all sources of naval expertise, bidding
aggressively for the services of shipwrights and sailors, all the while
adopting pro-commerce policies to lure overseas merchants disgusted with Jia
Sidao to his side. In 1268 the Mongol fleet numbered 500 ships; in 1270 it had
5000. Similarly, Kublai greatly augmented the Mongol army by further opening
the ranks to conquered peoples, not least Han Chinese.
While
Kublai’s naval policy yielded impressive results, the key element in naval
warfare is not so much quantity but expertise and experience. As such, even
when Kublai ordered the siege of the twin fortresses of Xiangyang and Fancheng
in 1267, the Song would have had little to fear. They attempted diversions in
other theaters, before eventually stopping as Kublai’s full focus on the twin fortresses
became evident. Still, so long as Song retained their naval dominance over the
Mongols, Kublai would make little progress in Southern China.
This did
not make Jia Sidao complacent; on the contrary, he proposed putting Xiangyang
under his direct supervision, which would have allowed Hangzhou to coordinate
closely with generals on the front. Considering that the twin fortresses were
but one part of a broader defense network and that Song strategy was based
around using the network to inflict maximum attrition on Kublai’s army and
state, this proposal ought to have been a no-brainer.
In the
event, court politics led instead to the appointment of a political enemy of
Jia’s, paralyzing the entire military command. This disastrous decision led to
three effects that, in the collective, would eventually lead to catastrophe.
Firstly, the strategic effects of Xiangyang’s resistance was now reduced to
simply wasting the enemy’s time, instead of proactive efforts at overstretching
and perhaps defeating the enemy.
Secondly,
Xiangyang’s defense was not integrated within a broader defense-in-depth of the
Han River Valley, wherein the Song’s extensive network of forts might have
provided mutual support and the fall of one did not result in theater-wide
collapse. It seems that the Song defense plan was based around this, given the
existence of numerous rear-area forts such as Yǐngzhou, Shāyáng and Hànyáng.
But without coordination, everything was staked on the defense of the twin
fortresses, turning them into ‘prestige objectives’ which had to be held at all
costs.
Lastly, as
the siege dragged on, the defense of Xiangyang began imposing costs on the
defenders as well. As the northernmost Song outpost, resupply of the twin
fortresses meant a long and winding journey for relieving convoys, and as the
Mongol fleet grew in size and confidence they began actively contesting the Han
River. Slowly but surely, Song naval losses began to mount, and if the
post-Xiangyang record of the Song navy is any indication, many of these losses
were experienced crew, and their absence would be sorely missed in subsequent
engagements.
At some
point, the benefits of resupplying Xiangyang simply ceased to be worth the
losses in experienced crew and the Song ought to have pulled back to more
defensive positions, shortened their supply lines, and above all held back
experienced crew in anticipation for defense at the Yangtze. But lack of
coordination now meant that there was nothing behind the twin fortresses to
fall back on, and in any case Xiangyang’s defense had become a political rather
than strategic imperative.
The Song
navy therefore wasted away in increasingly desperate attempts at relief, and
one could interpret Jia’s infamous lethargy in the late stages of the siege as
a secret wish to see the twin fortresses fall and relieve the Song of their
strategic burden. Kublai’s importation of the Islamic counterweight trebuchet
from the Ilkhanate may have finally caused Xiangyang’s surrender in March 1273,
but the fortress had long before stopped making a net positive contribution to
Song’s overall defense.
1274 – 1279: Fall of the Song
Xiangyang
ought never to have been that important to the Song, but its long resistance
did hinder Mongol efforts in more ways than one. Kublai had spent 4 years to
gain a toehold in the Han River Valley, with Song armies in the East and West
still posing a threat to his flanks, and these were 4 years in which he could
have been conquering other states and distributing plunder to his supporters.
The path to Southern China now lay open before him, but in order to achieve his
ambition of conquest, Kublai had to ensure that no more Xiangyangs would occur.
In this
Kublai’s new Yuán Dynasty held an unprecedented advantage: thanks to Song’s
losses of experienced crew on the Han River Run, the Mongols now had local
control over sections of the Yangtze River network and could viably contest
Song control elsewhere.
Kublai
wasted no time in exploiting his advantage: as the Yuan resumed its advance in
October 1274, Kublai ordered his coastal fleet to begin contesting control of
the all-important Lower Yangtze, disrupting Song commerce and communications
and forcing the Song navy to stretch itself even thinner than it was already.
Having
gained as favorable a force advantage as he was going to get in the Han River, General
Bayan now waged a war of maneuver based around joint land-river operations,
using the army to bypass forts, the fleet to isolate them, and their combined
mobility to strike deep into Song territory before the defenders could react.
By January 1275 Bayan had crossed the Yangtze, overcoming the last stand of Jia
Sidao and the Huai Army at Dingjiazhou two months later, and as the cities of
the Lower Yangtze surrendered, the road to the Song capital lay open before
them.
Right at
the point of triumph, however, Kublai allowed his strategic focus to wander,
driven by the need to make up the plunder denied to his supporters as they
sieged Xiangyang. Already in 1271 he had invaded Burma, and in 1274 attempted
to coerce the Japanese into submission. Now, he redeployed his forces for a
strike against the invading Chagatai Khanate.
It was a
major strategic mistake. Anti-Mongol revolts erupted throughout the conquered
territories, and despite Bayan’s return, the defeat of yet another Song fleet
at Jiaoshan in July 1275 and the surrender of Hangzhou in 1276, the Song court had
recovered its nerve sufficiently to spirit away two princes further south in a
bid to keep resistance alive. The Mongols had failed to decapitate the Song
leadership in one stroke, and now would spend 3 more years and much goodwill in
suppressing the insurgency.
Still,
having been put on the back foot, the Yuan were quick to regain the strategic
initiative. In contrast to the insurgent armies whose instinctive focus was on
the recovery of their home territories, the Mongols prioritized the political
objective, which was the fugitive Song court. This was done through arms and
diplomacy: brutal suppression and pincer movements down the Chinese coastline,
while persuading merchants and landowners to abandon and isolate the Song
court.
For the
Song, their main strategic question now was on how to maintain relevance and
legitimacy while the territory they controlled shrunk by the day. One option
was to flee to Southeast Asia, particularly friendly Champa, and set up a
Government-in-Exile backed by overseas Chinese. Such a strategy, however, would
have eventually run up against the political and mercantile interests of both
host and overseas Chinese, and in any case, Song assessments of the martial
quality of Southeast Asians were not particularly positive.
Given the
subsequent Yuan record in Southeast Asia, however, such a judgment was far too
hasty. Already, the Mongols were experiencing significant command and control
problems in the Chinese Far South, with Guangzhou rebelling no less than 5
times and the Song court able to travel for months on end without detection. A
Song court that established itself in the mountainous Southwest and used
irregular and mountain warfare to repel the Mongols could have been the basis
for another ‘coexistence’ policy that would outlast the Yuan’s 97-year
lifespan.
Ultimately,
the Song court succumbed to fatalism and decided on a third ‘strategy’, which
was making a last stand on the coast of Guangdong. The final battle at Yáshān
in March 1279 resembled a ritual sacrifice in its waning moments, with the Song
exiles committing mass suicide instead of surrender.
Conclusions
Kublai
Khan may have destroyed the Song, but the latter continued to make trouble for the
Yuan. Refugees from the conquest poisoned Yuan relations with the rest of Asia,
notably the Zen monk Sogen who became spiritual adviser to the Japanese
leadership, and the diaspora in Southeast Asia which fueled Champa and
Vietnam’s successful resistance to invasion.
The
conquest of the Song demonstrated the Mongol Empire’s superior strategy and
operational methods. The Song, despite their resource advantage, were paralyzed
by court politics, distracted by ‘prestige objectives’, and when push came to
shove, did not manage to weave their economy, military and particularly navy
into a coherent strategy.
By
contrast, the Mongols recognized their shortcomings from the beginning and took
pains to craft a strategy that would have them face the Song without the
interference of other powers. Despite having little prior experience with the
sea, they understood the importance of a navy and, once they built one, used it
effectively to fulfill their operational and strategic goals. They understood
the links between strategy, diplomacy, the economy and their internal politics
and while they did not always get things right, they kept their focus on
catching up to Song strengths and exploiting Song weaknesses. In such a way,
the million-or-so Mongols were able to take over an Empire of 60 million.
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