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However, Liu Xian continued the war against Ran Min. In 352, Xian attacked
Changshan (常山). Ran Min led 8,000 cavalry troops to break the siege and decisively defeated him. General Cao Fuju (曹伏駒) opened Xiangguo's gates to Ran Min. Liu Xian and many other Zhao officials and generals were executed and
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Meanwhile, Ran Min's army met the main Zhao forces under Shi Zhi and defeated them at the Battle of
Yecheng. In the spring of 351, Ran Min besieged Shi Zhi's capital, Xiāngguó. Shi Zhi sought aid from Former Yan's prince Murong Jun and was able to deal Ran a major defeat. At this time, the Xiongnu
308:
to besiege
Yecheng, but Ran Min defeated Liu in the siege, awing the latter so much that Liu agreed that upon his return to Xiāngguó he would kill Shi Zhi and surrender. He did so and sent Shi Zhi's head to Ran Min, who had the head burned on a busy street in Yecheng.
285:). When he heard that Ran Min had massacred the Shi family and declared himself emperor, Shi Zhi rebelled against Ran Min. He was quickly joined by several other Later Zhao border armies, mostly of Jie soldiers who despised Ran Min's rule.
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soldiers in
Yecheng also rebelled, captured Ran Min's son Ran Yin, and surrendered to Shi Zhi, who executed Ran Yin. Ran Min was thought to be dead, but when he appeared in Yecheng, the city was calmed.
861:
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237:, who founded the Later Zhao, did not accept Ran Min's rule and rose against him; they were joined by many other dynasties established by the
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By 350, struggles within the Later Zhao dynasty benefited Ran Min, who took over the regime and massacred the entire Shi family and the
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in the capital, who ruled Later Zhao. However, Ran Min failed to control the city of
Xiangguo (襄國, in modern
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Li, Bo; Zheng Yin (Chinese) (2001) 5000 years of
Chinese history, Inner Mongolian People's publishing corp,
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that also opposed Ran Min. The resulting war ended with a decisive victory for Ran Min.
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Hundreds of thousands of Jie and other Five
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In the eighth month, four Zhao generals converged to attack
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Xiangguo's population was forcibly relocated to
Yecheng.
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862:Spring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms
46:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks
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281:had been a Later Zhao general at Xiāngguó (
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450:Northern Wei's unification of North China
77:Learn how and when to remove this message
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229:amid the succession struggles of the
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16:Conflict in northern China (350-351)
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405:Upheaval of the Five Barbarians
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32:This article includes a
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61:more precise citations.
714:Northern Wei (386–535)
615:Northern Yan (407–436)
605:Former Liang (318–376)
569:Southern Yan (398–410)
430:Huan Wen's Expeditions
425:Conquest of Wei by Yan
211:Ran Wei–Later Zhao War
161:Commanders and leaders
92:Ran Wei–Later Zhao War
901:Jin dynasty (266–420)
652:Western Yan (384–394)
559:Western Qin (385–431)
513:Later Liang (386–403)
195:Casualties and losses
854:Histories of the Era
549:Former Yan (337–370)
531:Later Zhao (319–351)
508:Former Qin (351–394)
445:Liu Yu's Expeditions
331:Li and Zheng, pg 402
587:Later Qin (384–417)
554:Later Yan (384–409)
503:Cheng-Han (304–347)
440:Battle of Fei River
410:Disaster of Yongjia
274:Outbreak of the war
667:Qiao Shu (405–413)
662:Huan Chu (403–404)
657:Zhai Wei (388–392)
475:Han-Zhao (304–329)
296:Battle of Xiangguo
34:list of references
906:Genocides in Asia
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628:Other states
420:Wei–Zhao War
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355:Book of Jin.
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215:Wei–Zhao War
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144:Belligerents
135:were killed.
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53:Please help
45:
869:Book of Jin
825:Murong Chui
734:Jin dynasty
635:Short-lived
59:introducing
891:Later Zhao
885:Categories
317:References
251:Jie people
245:Background
235:Jie people
231:Later Zhao
155:Later Zhao
131:and other
104:350–352 CE
840:Tuoba Tao
835:Tuoba Gui
820:Wang Meng
261:), where
830:Yao Xing
810:Huan Wen
790:Liu Cong
785:Liu Yuan
769:Goguryeo
764:Dingling
727:Involved
306:Liu Xian
190:100,000+
187:100,000+
182:Strength
176:Liu Xian
109:Location
815:Fu Jian
805:Ran Min
754:Xianbei
744:Xiongnu
541:Xianbei
467:Xiongnu
398:History
338:Sources
290:Yecheng
279:Shi Zhi
263:Shi Zhi
255:Xingtai
223:Ran Min
172:Shi Zhi
167:Ran Min
150:Ran Wei
125:Ran Wei
55:improve
845:Liu Yu
800:Shi Hu
795:Shi Le
697:States
676:Tribes
348:
121:Result
749:Qiang
683:Yuwen
579:Qiang
259:Hebei
213:, or
200:light
40:, or
688:Duan
346:ISBN
209:The
101:Date
739:Jie
597:Han
523:Jie
227:Wei
129:Jie
887::
759:Di
495:Di
324:^
283:㐮國
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36:,
383:e
376:t
369:v
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