An Lushan Rebellion, or Revolt of An Shi
Years: 755 - 763
The An Lushan Rebellion is a devastating rebellion against the Tang Dynasty of China.
The rebellion overtly begins on December 16, 755, when general An Lushan declares himself emperor in Northern China, thus establishing a rival Yan Dynasty, and ends when Yan falls on February 17, 763 (although the effects last past this date).
This event is also known (especially in Chinese historiography) as the An–Shi Rebellion or An–Shi Disturbances, as it continues after An Lushan's death under his son An Qingxu and his deputy and successor Shi Siming, or as the Tianbao Rebellion, as it begins in the 14th year of this era.The rebellion spans the reigns of three Tang emperors before it is quashed, and involves a wide range of regional powers; besides the Tang dynasty loyalists, others involved are anti-Tang families, especially in An Lushan's base area in Hebei, and Arab, Gokturk, and Sogdian forces or influences, among others.
The rebellion and subsequent disorder result in a huge loss of life and large-scale destruction.
It significantly weakens the Tang dynasty, and leads to the loss of the Western Regions.
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China’s Tang Dynasty is largely a period of progress and stability, except during the An Lushan Rebellion and the decline of central authority in the later half of the dynasty.
The An Lushan Rebellion, a devastating rebellion against the Tang Dynasty of China, overtly begins on December 16, 755, when general An Lushan declares himself emperor in Northern China, thus establishing a rival Yan Dynasty.
It is not known when An Lushan's son An Renzhi was born, although he was said to be not yet twenty when Emperor Xuanzong gave him the mostly honorary title of minister of vassal affairs, likely in 751.
He is An Lushan's second son, and his mother is An Lushan's first wife Lady Kang.
At some point, Emperor Xuanzong had given him the name of Qingxu.
The first definitive historical references to him were in 752, when, in a defeat that An Lushan suffered against the Xi, An Lushan was said to have fallen into a hole and was only saved through the effort of An Qingxu and others.
Also that year, when An Lushan's close associate Ji Wen went to meet An Lushan before departing for the Tang capital Chang'an, it was An Qingxu that An Lushan sent to accompany Ji to the borders of his territory.
When An Lushan rebelled at his post at Fanyang Circuit (headquartered in modern Beijing) in 755, An Qingxu was apparently with his father and accompanied his father south.
In response to An Lushan's rebellion, An Qingxu's mother Lady Kang and older brother An Qingzong, then at Chang'an, were executed, and after An Lushan captures Chenliu Prefecture (roughly modern Kaifeng, Henan), it is An Qingxu who realizes that An Qingzong had been executed and who tearfully informs his father, sending his father into a rage in which he executes the Tang soldiers who had surrendered to him at Chenliu.
Tang military commanders have begun to accumulate independent political strength in the latter years of Xuoyang’s reign.
When the emperor's concubine, Yang Guifei, becomes a power at the imperial court, one such general, An Lushan, rebels against the empire rather than lose influence.
A semi-barbarian of Persian and Turkish descent, raised in Mongolia, An Lushan had moved to China as a young man and joined the army, rising rapidly through the ranks to become a court favorite of the emperor and military governor of three northern Chinese provinces.
At the death of the emperor’s powerful chief minister, An Lushan had applied for the vacant post but was denied it; Yang Guifei’s appointment had been the final straw.
An launches his rebellion on December 16, 755, claiming that he has received a secret edict from Emperor Xuanzong to advance on Chang'an to remove Yang.
The imperial officials are all apprehensive, because An has the strongest troops of the realm at the time, except for Yang, who believes that An can be suppressed easily.
Emperor Xuanzong, meanwhile, commissions the general Feng Changqing as the military governor of Fanyang and Pinglu, intending to have him replace An after An's rebellion is defeated.
The Emperor also sends Feng to the eastern capital, Luoyang, to build up the defense there; another general, Gao Xianzhi, is ordered to command a secondary defense at Shan Prefecture (roughly modern Sanmenxia, Henan).
He also executes An Qingzong and An's first wife Lady Kang, and forces An Qingzong's wife Lady Rongyi to commit suicide.
An Lushan crosses the Yellow River on January 8, 756, quickly capturing Chenliu (roughly modern Kaifeng, Henan) and …
…Yingyang (roughly modern Zhengzhou, Henan) Prefectures.
Approaching Luoyang, An Lushan encounters an ill-prepared army commanded by Feng.
Defeating Feng quickly, he forces Feng to flee and concede Luoyang to him.
Feng joins forces with Gao and urges a retreat to Tong Pass; Gao agrees, and they take up defensive positions there.
An does not proceed quickly, but remains at Luoyang, planning to declare himself emperor there.
(Emperor Xuanzong, Soon, due to accusations of the eunuch Bian Lingcheng, soon executes Feng and Gao and replaces Gao with Geshu Han.)
Some Tang officials north of the Yellow River resist An under the leadership of Yan Zhenqing, the governor of Pingyuan Prefecture (roughly modern Dezhou, Shandong).
An Lushan declares himself Emperor at Luoyang on Lunar New Year's day, 756 (February 5), establishing a new state of Yan, making Zhang Tongru and the surrendered Tang official Daxi Xun his chancellors.
He creates An Qingxu the Prince of Jin and another son, An Qinghe, the Prince of Zheng.
Meanwhile, Yan Zhenqing's cousin Yan Gaoqing who initially submits to An, rises against An at Changshan Prefecture (roughly modern Baoding, Hebei) but is quickly defeated and delivered to An in Luoyang; An executes him.
An also sends An Qingxu to make a preliminary assault on …
"He who does not know how to give himself an account of three thousand years may remain in the dark, inexperienced, and live from day to day."
― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, West-Eastern Divan
