Battle of Wei River
Battle of Wei River | |||||||
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Part of the Chu-Han contention | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Principality of Han |
State of Qi Western Chu | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Han Xin |
Tian Guang † Long Ju † | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
50,000 | 200,000 |
The Battle of Wei River (Chinese: 濰水之戰) was fought in 204 BC between the Han and a combined force of Qi and Western Chu. The famous General Han Xin led the Han force, while the Qi were led by Prince Tian Guang (田廣), and the Chu by Long Ju (龍且). The result ended with Han Xin conquering the Qi kingdom.[1]
Battle[]
In 205 BC, Han Xin had captured most of the modern Hebei and Shanxi provinces, the principalities of Zhao, and Dai, and was starting to march on the principality of Qi. Prince Tian Guang, persuaded by noted diplomat Li Yiji (酈食其), had decided to acknowledge the leadership of Han and its king, Liu Bang. However, Liu Bang did not officially notify Han Xin. Ignorant of Prince Tian Guang's intentions, Han Xin decided to launch a surprise attack against Qi, under the counsel of Kuai Tong. Tian Guang's forces were completely surprised. Tian Guang fled and sought assistance from King Xiang Yu of Western Chu, pledging fealty. Xiang Yu sent a strong expeditionary force, including some elite cavalry, under Long Ju to relieve Qi.
Han Xin knew that Long, noted for his personal bravery and fighting prowess, was too arrogant. The night before the battle, he set a trap for Long by building a makeshift dam with sandbags to lower the water level in the Wei river. Long was counselled to fight a slow battle of attrition since he had forces to spare (the force ratio was about 1:3 in favour of Chu). Long declined, believing he had overwhelming forces and that Han Xin was a coward, as a result of an incident when Han Xin served in the Chu forces. (Han Xin had crawled between the legs of some thugs to avoid a conflict when he was outnumbered.)
The next morning, Han Xin marched across the lowered river and attacked Long's forces. Then, he made a strategic retreat by tricking Long into charging his army across the river. When about one quarter of the Chu army had crossed, Han signalled for his men to open the dam. That succeeded in drowning many of the Chu soldiers and isolating Long Ju, with only a fraction of his force. Cut off by the river, Long Ju had nowhere to go and was cut down in battle. The rest of the Chu army disintegrated, when Han Xin continued to press his attack. Prince Tian Guang fled and was eventually caught and killed.
This battle was strategically significant since it cost Xiang Yu between half and a third of his forces, including many veterans, depleted Chu of important reserves and prevented any future possibility of Xiang Yu fighting successfully on two fronts. Eventually, Xiang Yu lost the war.
It is not known why Xiang Yu did not lead the Chu army into battle himself to fight against the now well regarded Han Xin.
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Rickard, J (25 January 2012), Battle of the Wei River, November 204 BC
- Battles of the Chu–Han Contention
- 204 BC
- History of Shandong