The Fall of Beijing in 1644 was followed by years of costly warfare, as the newly victorious Manchu fought to extend their rule over all of China. The siege of the city of Yangzhou, in the Yangtze River Delta, and subsequent massacre of its residents in May 1645 was among the bloodiest episodes in the large-scale conflicts that preceded the suzerainty of the Qing dynasty.
When the Manchu declared the Qing dynasty rulers in Beijing, officials loyal to the Ming set up an alternative administration in China’s old capital, Nanjing. A member of the Ming family, the prince of Fu, was named Emperor Hongguang. In response, declaring that there could not be “two suns in the firmament,” the Manchu sent a vast army under Prince Dodo—a son of the original Manchu leader Nurhaci—south from Beijing, following the Grand Canal toward Nanjing. In their path stood the prosperous commercial city of Yangzhou, one of the most celebrated cities in the China of its day, and loyalist Ming general Shi Kefa persuaded his soldiers to defend it.
Prince Dodo had brought with him a train of siege guns, but Shi also lined the city walls with cannon. The Manchu made furious assaults on the walls, suffering heavy casualties. It is said that after a week the bodies were piled so high outside the walls that Manchu soldiers were able to climb on top of the dead and from there onto the battlements. Once the Manchu had entered the city, resistance soon ceased. In a terrible act of vengeance for the price his army had to pay in lives to capture Yangzhou, Prince Dodo unleashed his men upon the city’s population for ten days. According to traditional accounts, 800,000 people were reportedly killed in the terrible massacre that followed, although this figure is probably quite exaggerated. Leaving the city, the Manchu soldiers set it afire, though heavy rains extinguished most of the blazes before much damage was done, and Yangzhou recovered quickly.
Shi Kefa was executed after refusing to join the Manchu; Chinese annals record that Dodo personally beheaded his foe. Intimidated by the example of the massacre at Yangzhou, Nanjing surrendered almost without a fight. Emperor Hongguang fled, but was captured and executed in 1646. Many of the young women of Yangzhou were sent into slavery in Manchuria and Mongolia, so numerous that they formed a recognizable ethnic minority.
Losses: Manchu, unknown; Ming, unknown, 800,000 civilians dead.