If the Ming Dynasty had no Northwest Civil Rebellion, would it have been able to destroy the Houjin?

Updated on history 2024-04-19
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The third floor said so much at once, I feel that the landlord definitely doesn't want to see it. These are the conclusions I got from looking at those things in the Ming Dynasty, I hope the landlord. If history has ifs, then according to the combat effectiveness of the famous generals and the three strongest teams at the end of the Ming Dynasty, there is no problem with post-pacification.

    After all, there are only more than 100,000 people in the Houjin army, and there are hundreds of thousands of people in Daming, so it is okay to continue to run the Daming company. However, internal worries are not only internal and external troubles are continuous, and in the northwest, Li Zicheng and Zhang Xianzhong fought guerrillas everywhere, allowing Hong Chengchou, Zuo Liangyu, Cao Wenzhao, and Lu Xiangsheng to run around, but due to various objective reasons, such as Wang Pu and Chen Qiyu, these fools obviously have the strength to completely exterminate the people's army, but they have lost opportunities many times. Alas, the fall of the Ming Dynasty was a pity.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    I strongly agree with the upstairs, and I just wanted to come in and say the same thing, but I didn't expect to be said by the upstairs first. The corruption of the Ming Dynasty is in the bones, all kinds of ills emerge in endlessly, and it is only a matter of time before it perishes.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    History has no ifs.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    If there was no peasant uprising at the end of the Ming Dynasty, the Later Jin would have been able to replace the Ming Dynasty and enter the Central Plains.

    The Ming Dynasty was the last feudal dynasty established by the Han nation in the history of the Chinese nation. Under the dark rule of the late Yuan Dynasty, it was Zhu Yuanzhang who led the peasant rebel army that finally overthrew the brutal rule of the Yuan Dynasty and brought the Chinese nation back to the normal track. But only 276 years later, a large-scale peasant uprising broke out, and the Ming Dynasty was destroyed.

    I can't help but wonder why the Ming Dynasty, which arose in the peasant uprising, ended up in the peasant uprising? <

    On this issue, my understanding is that the peasant uprising at the end of the Ming Dynasty was an inevitable event. Even if Li Zicheng does not attack Beijing, Zhang Zicheng, Wang Zicheng and others will appear on the stage of history.

    Why is the peasant uprising at the end of the year an inevitable event? The reasons are manifold. Today, I will take the floor only by extracting what I consider to be the most important point. I welcome your discussions and criticisms.

    In the last years of the Ming Dynasty, Emperor Chongzhen faced an impasse. As soon as the rebel army was suppressed in the rear, the Eight Banners Army on the front line came again. Therefore, we had to transfer the bandit suppression troops inside the pass to resist the Eight Banners Army outside the pass.

    The bandit forces here have just left, and the peasants there have grown in size again. In order to cope with these two frontal battles, Emperor Chongzhen had to levy Liao's military salary to deal with the Eight Banners Army, suppress and train military salaries to suppress the rebel army.

    The implementation of the three-rate system marked the collapse of the tax system at the end of the Ming Dynasty. After the collapse of the tax system, all measures were the last dying throes of the empire. The collapse of the tax system is a source of trouble.

    First, salt and mineral taxes dried up. As soon as Emperor Chongzhen came to power, he won the eunuch party and abolished the mine chief. <>

    Secondly, with the collapse of industrial and commercial taxes, the industry and commerce in the Jiangnan region were highly developed at the end of the Ming Dynasty, but they could not obtain reasonable taxes and fees. Of course, we should be grateful to the majestic Donglin people. <>

    Thirdly, the large landowners who controlled large amounts of land were protected by the scholars. They occupy land and evade agricultural taxes. Faced with heavy agricultural taxes, self-employed peasants had to flee their land, peasants became refugees, and refugees became robbers.

    Finally, to sum it up in one sentence, it should not be taxed, leading to bankruptcy. Improper tax collection exacerbates social contradictions. In the end, the situation was that the Eighth Banner Army could not fight, but the peasant army fought more and more. From this point of view, there was no reason why the Ming Dynasty should not go.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    If there was no peasant uprising at the end of the Ming Dynasty, the Later Jin Dynasty might also replace the Ming Dynasty, but it may be a little later, after all, the change of history is a natural law and basically will not change.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    No, even if there was no peasant uprising, there was no way for the Later Jin to replace the Ming Dynasty, after all, the Later Jin was a small country, and there was no way to compete with the entire Ming Dynasty, and the territory of the Ming Dynasty was quite vast.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    No, Hou Jin is relatively unaware of the geographical situation of the Central Plains, I think it is impossible for him to enter the Central Plains, and we have always been very united in fighting against foreign enemies.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Later Jin became independent after Li Chengliang's death. At the beginning, Nurhachi kept pretending to be a grandson and helped Li Chengliang beat his compatriots, Haixi Jurchen and Savage Jurchen, pretending to be very realistic, because he knew that strength and weakness would be transformed. After Li Chengliang was old, the pillar of the Liaodong Iron Cavalry was Li Rusong, and later Li Rusong went to participate in the Korean War to fight the Japanese invaders, and Nurhachi also asked to go with him.

    On the Korean battlefield, the Liaodong Iron Cavalry was wounded, and many elites died in battle. A few years later, Li Rusong was ambushed by the Mongols during a military operation and died in battle. Who betrayed Li Rusong?

    I don't know, some people speculate that it's Nurhachi.

    In short, the power of the Ming Dynasty gradually weakened in Liaodong, and after Li Chengliang died in his 90s, Nurhachi felt that the time was ripe and officially rebelled, sneaking into the Ming Dynasty, attacking the city and plundering the pond.

    The seven hatreds mentioned downstairs are actually not a sign of the official separation of the Later Jin, but just an excuse for the Manchu rebellion. You must know that Li Chengliang was very guilty after killing Nurhachi's grandfather by mistake, and he has always cultivated Nurhachi as a cronie, it can be said that Nurhachi was cultivated by Li Chengliang, they are a gang! And there was only one reason for his rebellion, that is, the deaths of Li Chengliang and Li Rusong made him feel that Liaodong had lost its opponent ......As for how much he hates?

    Hehe, I'm afraid it's.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Year 1618(In the forty-sixth year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty and the third year of the Mandate of Heaven in the Qing Dynasty), because the Great Khan of the Later Jin Dynasty Nurhachi thought that the Ming Dynasty court favored the Jurchen Yehebu and was angry, he angrily promulgated the "Seven Hatreds" and raised troops against the Ming.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Year 1618

    At the end of the Ming Dynasty, there were worries about external troubles, and the border defense became more and more relaxed. In 1603, Nurhachi moved his capital to Hetuala. In 1616 (the forty-fourth year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty and the first year of the Mandate of Heaven in the Qing Dynasty), Nurhachi was called "the wise Khan of the overlying countries" in Hetuala, and the country was called "Dajin" (known as Houjin in history), becoming the Great Khan of Houjin.

    At this time, Nurhachi had already unified most of the Jurchen tribes.

    In 1618 (the forty-sixth year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty and the third year of the Mandate of Heaven in the Qing Dynasty), because Nurhachi thought that the Ming Dynasty court favored the Jurchen Yehebu and was resentful, he angrily promulgated the "Seven Great Hatreds" and raised troops against the Ming.

Related questions
21 answers2024-04-19

I think it will develop into a capitalist country. Because capitalism is germinating, if it were by 1840, it will definitely become a capitalist country.

12 answers2024-04-19

The main enemies of the Ming Dynasty were the Mongols in the north and the Jurchens who rose in the later period, as well as the Japanese in the East, so the Ming Dynasty's defense focus was in the north (against the Mongols and Jurchens) and the east (against the Japanese and pirates). >>>More

6 answers2024-04-19

It's rare for the sun to show the way.

At most, they used a compass, and originally humans used azimuth circles. >>>More

11 answers2024-04-19

It's better to change it directly to the apocalypse.

6 answers2024-04-19

There is no way back. If he doesn't die, the two forces will hunt him down to the ends of the earth, and the ancestral mausoleum in Beijing will not be guaranteed, so repeating the humiliation of the Zhao family, Zhu Taizu will not agree, to the end. >>>More