- Basalawarmi
Basalawarmi (died
January 6 1382 ), commonly known by hishereditary title , thePrince of Liang , was a descendant ofKublai Khan and aYuan Dynasty loyalist who fought against the ascendantMing Dynasty inChina .Before the fall of the Yuan
Before the
Yuan Dynasty 's fall in 1368, Basalawarmi had been the YuanViceroy ofYunnan , a province in southwesternChina ; his governorship also extended over some parts of modern-dayGuizhou . He held the title ofPrince of Liang , ahereditary title passed down from one of his forebears, a son ofKublai Khan .cite journal | last=Parker | first=E. H. | title=The Old Thai or Shan Empire of Western Yunnan | journal=The China Review | volume = 20.6 | year=1893 | pages=p. 345 | url=http://sunzi1.lib.hku.hk/hkjo/view/26/2600224.pdf] Following theMing Dynasty 's overthrow of the Yuan, from hiscapital city ofKunming , Basalawarmi began leading one of the last pockets of Mongol resistance to Ming rule in China.Defeat and death
The
Hongwu Emperor initially sent a diplomat, Wang Wei, to attempt to negotiate with Basalawarmi in 1372, but Basalawarmi executed Wang Wei in 1374 after negotiations broke down. The Hongwu Emperor then dispatched the generals Fu Youde and Ma Hua to deal with Basalawarmi. In 1381, Ma Hua attacked Basalawarmi fromGuiyang while Fu Youde's deputies, Mu Ying and Lan Yu, attacked from another direction. The combined Ming forces, which numbered 300,000 men, met Basalawarmi's 100,000 units. Basalawarmi's forces were decisively defeated. Following his defeat, Basalawarmi drowned his wife, ordered his ministers to commitsuicide , and committed suicide himself on January 6, 1382. [cite book | author=Twitchett, Denis, and John K. Fairbank | title=The Cambridge History of China | publisher=Cambridge University Press | date=2004 | pages=vol. 7, p. 25, 143-146] cite book | last=Crossley | first=Pamela | authorlink=Pamela Crossley | coauthors=Helen F. Siu, and Donald S. Sutton | title=Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity, and Frontier in Early Modern China | publisher=University of California Press | date=2006 | pages=p. 143] cite book | author=Dillon, Michael | title=China's Muslim Hui Community: Migration, Settlement, and Sects | publisher=Curzon Press | date=1999 | pages=p. 34]Zheng He
Zheng He , the renowned Mingeunuch admiral and head of the Ming "treasure fleet ", would rise to his position indirectly because of Basalawarmi's resistance to the Ming. Zheng He was born in Yunnan in 1371 while Basalawarmi ruled the province. The Ming army that had been sent to deal with Basalawarmi captured and castrated Zheng He at the age of 11 and brought him to the Ming imperial court. [cite web | title=Chronology of Zheng He: His Life and Voyages and Related Events | url=http://www.chengho.org/aboutus.htm | publisher=International Zheng He Society | date=2006-09-25 | accessdate=2007-06-13 | quote=1382 15th yr Hongwu: Ma He’s father, Ma Haji, passed away. Ming army occupied Yunnan and defeated the remnants of Yuan forces led by prince of Liang. Ma He aged 11 was captured and castrated.]Mythical account
In "
The Deer and the Cauldron ", a novel written byJin Yong , the main character retells a humorous mythical account of Basalawarmi's defeat. In this legend, Basalawarmi is said to have hundreds ofwar elephant s, obtained from what is now modern-dayMyanmar , in his army. The Ming general Ma Hua defeats Basalawarmi by unleashing ten thousand mice which drive Basalawarmi's war elephants to terror, alluding to the widespreadmyth that elephants are afraid of mice. Basalawarmi himself is not presented favorably; he is described as a drunken, fat, and cowardly old man.References
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