Conflict: | Cao Cao's invasion of Xu Province |
Partof: | the wars at the end of the Han dynasty |
Date: | 193–194 CE |
Place: | Jiangsu, China |
Result: | Inconclusive, Cao Cao retreat |
Combatant1: | Cao Cao |
Combatant2: | Tao Qian Tian Kai |
Commander1: | Cao Cao Cao Ren |
Commander2: | Tao Qian Liu Bei Cao Bao |
Strength2: | More than 5,000 |
Casualties2: | Over 100,000 civilians |
Cao Cao's invasion of Xu Province was a punitive invasion launched by the warlord Cao Cao against Tao Qian, the Governor of Xu Province, in the late Eastern Han dynasty. The casus belli for the invasion was the murder of Cao Cao's father, Cao Song, in Xu Province. Although Tao Qian's culpability was questionable, Cao Cao nonetheless held him responsible. The invasion took place in two separate waves in 193 and 194, during each of which Cao Cao captured a number of towns and engaged in collective punishment of the civilian populace.
Cao Cao's father Cao Song was living in his hometown Qiao (Chinese: 譙; present-day Bozhou, Anhui) after retirement until it became a battlefield during the Campaign against Dong Zhuo. So Cao Song along with the rest of his family moved to Langya (Chinese: 琅邪; present-day Linyi, Shandong) in Xu Province. By 193, Cao Cao had established a base in Yan Province (covering present-day southwestern Shandong and eastern Henan), and invited his father over to his territory. Cao Song was very wealthy, and had brought with him a baggage train consisting of more than 100 covered carts full of his effects. In or near Hua County (near Mount Tai), on the border of Xu Province and Yan Province, Cao Song and his son Cao De (曹德) were ambushed and killed. There were two accounts of how they were murdered. According to the Book of the Later Han and Zizhi Tongjian, Tao Qian had garrisoned men nearby at Yinping, who were tempted by greed for Cao Song's riches and murdered him for his wealth en route to his destination.[1] [2] According to Wei Zhao's Book of Wu – the official history of Eastern Wu – Tao Qian despatched 200 bodyguards led by Commandant of the Capital Zhang Kai (張闓) to escort Cao Song, but Zhang instead murdered Cao and made off with his riches.[3] Regardless of Tao Qian's culpability, Cao Cao intended to hold him responsible for the murder of his father.[4]
In the summer or autumn of 193, Cao Cao invaded Xu Province with an unspecified number of troops and easily captured over ten cities.[5] [6] [7] After conquering Pengcheng (Chinese: 彭城; present-day Xuzhou, Jiangsu), Cao Cao killed possibly more than 10,000 defenders. Tao Qian fled to Tan (Chinese: 剡; present-day Tancheng County, Linyi, Shandong), he was joined by Tian Kai, with the reinforcements Tao Qian was able to resist Cao Cao. Cao Cao's forces eventually ran out of supplies and had to withdraw back to Yan Province.[8]
Thwarted and low on rations[9] Cao Cao turned his army around, in the process sacking the counties of Qulü (Chinese: 取慮), Suiling (Chinese: 睢陵), and Xiaqiu (Chinese: 夏丘).[10] The local population was swollen with refugees from the violence of the capital regions. Cao Cao's army killed over 100,000 civilians, including both men and women, such that the Si River was stoppered up with their corpses. His army took the chickens and dogs for food and tore down the villages into ruins.[11] [12]
In the spring of 194, Cao Cao's army returned to Xu Province, and Tao Qian begged aid from Tian Kai in the nearby Qing Province (Chinese: 青州). Tian Kai sent Tao Qian a force of some thousand men commanded by Liu Bei. Tao Qian, seeking to open a southern front against Cao Cao,[13] appointed Liu Bei as the Inspector of Yu Province, and transferred 4,000 soldiers into his service.[14] [15] Along with Tao Qian's officer Cao Bao, Liu Bei encamped east of Tan (Chinese: 郯).[16] [17]
Cao Cao's army plundered Langya and Donghai (Chinese: 東海; near present-day Tancheng, Shandong), destroying all in its path. Returning west, Cao Cao engaged and defeated Tao Qian's forces led by Liu Bei. According to one source, Cao Cao conquered the nearby city of Xiangben (Chinese: 襄賁) after this.[18]
Xu Province was only granted reprieve when Zhang Miao betrayed Cao Cao and invited Lü Bu to take over Cao Cao's home base in Yan Province (Chinese: 兗州). Cao Cao broke off his vengeance against Tao Qian and turned his army back to attack Lü Bu.[19]
Liu Bei characterisctically shifted his alliance from Tian Kai towards Tao Qian and he remained in Xu Province after Cao Cao left. When Tao Qian died of illness later in 194, his sons Tao Shang (Chinese: 陶商) and Tao Ying (Chinese: 陶應)[20] were passed over for governorship by the local elite in favour of Liu Bei. Thus Liu Bei gained his first territory as a result of Cao Cao's campaign.[21]
Cao Cao's invasion of Xu Province is featured as playable stages in the seventh and eighth instalments of Koei's Dynasty Warriors video game series.