Yang Xiuqing

Chinese rebel leader
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Also known as: Yang Hsiu-ch’ing
Quick Facts
Wade-Giles romanization:
Yang Hsiu-ch’ing
Original name:
Yang Silong
Born:
1821, Guiping, Guangxi province, China
Died:
Sept. 2, 1856, Nanjing (aged 35)
Also Known As:
Yang Hsiu-ch’ing

Yang Xiuqing (born 1821, Guiping, Guangxi province, China—died Sept. 2, 1856, Nanjing) was an organizer and commander in chief of the Taiping Rebellion, the political-religious uprising that occupied most of South China between 1850 and 1864.

A dealer in firewood, Yang joined the Taiping band shortly before the rebellion broke out and quickly rose to a high position. In 1851, when the supreme Taiping leader, Hong Xiuquan (1814–64), proclaimed his own dynasty and gave himself the title of Tianwang, or “Heavenly King,” he made Yang commander in chief of the armed forces with the title of Dongwang, or “Eastern King.” Yang organized the Taiping army and also developed a massive system to spy on the Taiping followers. Hong Xiuquan had formed the Taipings after a series of visions in which it was revealed to him that he was the younger son of God, sent down to earth to save China. Yang proceeded to buttress his own position by imitating Hong. He went into a series of trances, in which he claimed to speak as the mouthpiece of the Lord, an accomplishment confirmed by his seeming ability to reveal traitors to the Taiping cause and confront them with the details of their treason.

Under Yang’s direction, the Taipings advanced northward until in 1853 they took the large east-central city of Nanjing and made it their capital. Taiping armies continued north in an effort to take the imperial capital at Beijing. Meanwhile, Hong turned his attention increasingly to his harem and to religious affairs. He made Yang his prime minister, with authority to organize the Taiping administration.

Gradually, Yang also usurped Hong’s prerogatives as Heavenly King, and the resentful Hong ordered Yang’s execution. Not only was Yang put to death, but his entire family and thousands of his adherents were killed. After this attempted coup, Taiping leaders grew increasingly suspicious of one another, and the Taiping cause began to collapse.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.