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Ran Wei–Later Zhao War

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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
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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.
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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.
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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 Barbarians were killed
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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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The 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 213: 210: 209: 204: 200: 197: 196: 191: 188: 184: 181: 179: 176: 175: 170: 167: 164: 162: 159: 158: 153: 145: 141: 137: 134: 131: 130: 126: 122: 119: 118: 114: 111: 110: 106: 101: 92: 89: 81: 78:December 2018 71: 67: 61: 60: 54: 50: 46: 41: 32: 31: 19: 878: 871: 639:Other states 431:Wei–Zhao War 430: 366:Book of Jin. 322: 314: 310: 298: 288: 259: 226:Wei–Zhao War 225: 221: 219: 155:Belligerents 146:were killed. 84: 75: 64:Please help 56: 880:Book of Jin 836:Murong Chui 745:Jin dynasty 646:Short-lived 70:introducing 18:Wei–Jie war 902:Later Zhao 896:Categories 328:References 262:Jie people 256:Background 246:Jie people 242:Later Zhao 166:Later Zhao 142:and other 115:350–352 CE 851:Tuoba Tao 846:Tuoba Gui 831:Wang Meng 272:), where 841:Yao Xing 821:Huan Wen 801:Liu Cong 796:Liu Yuan 780:Goguryeo 775:Dingling 738:Involved 317:Liu Xian 201:100,000+ 198:100,000+ 193:Strength 187:Liu Xian 120:Location 826:Fu Jian 816:Ran Min 765:Xianbei 755:Xiongnu 552:Xianbei 478:Xiongnu 409:History 349:Sources 301:Yecheng 290:Shi Zhi 274:Shi Zhi 266:Xingtai 234:Ran Min 183:Shi Zhi 178:Ran Min 161:Ran Wei 136:Ran Wei 66:improve 856:Liu Yu 811:Shi Hu 806:Shi Le 708:States 687:Tribes 359:  132:Result 760:Qiang 694:Yuwen 590:Qiang 270:Hebei 224:, or 211:light 51:, or 699:Duan 357:ISBN 220:The 112:Date 750:Jie 608:Han 534:Jie 238:Wei 140:Jie 898:: 770:Di 506:Di 335:^ 294:㐮國 268:, 55:, 47:, 394:e 387:t 380:v 363:, 91:) 85:( 80:) 76:( 62:. 20:)

Index

Wei–Jie war
list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
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Northern China
Ran Wei
Jie
Five Barbarians
Ran Wei
Later Zhao
Ran Min
Shi Zhi
Liu Xian
Sixteen Kingdoms
Ran Min
Wei
Later Zhao
Jie people
Five Barbarians
Jie people
Xingtai
Hebei
Shi Zhi
Shi Zhi
Yecheng
Liu Xian

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