Fukang’an (died June 1796, China) was a famous military commander of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12).
A member of the Manchu forces of Manchuria (now Northeast China) who had established the Qing dynasty, Fukang’an inherited a minor post in the government. After distinguishing himself in battle, he was made military governor of Manchuria (1777). Between 1780 and 1795 he served several terms as governor-general in different Chinese provinces. A corrupt official, he is said to have greatly enriched himself in his various positions.
In combat, however, he was undefeated. He suppressed rebellions in the western Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Gansu, pacified the recently occupied island of Taiwan, and finally led a Chinese expedition into Tibet. There, on unfamiliar territory, 3,000 miles (4,800 km) from his source of supplies in the Chinese capital at Beijing, he defeated an army of Gurkha warriors and drove them 1,000 miles (1,600 km) across one of the highest plateaus of the world, back into their homeland in Nepal, which became a Chinese tributary state. For his services, Fukang’an was made a prince of the fourth degree, the first Manchu outside the imperial family to receive that rank.