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Battle of Tangdao

Coordinates: 37°N 121°E / 37°N 121°E / 37; 121
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Battle of Tangdao
Part of the Jin–Song Wars
Song rivership with a xuanfeng traction catapult
Date16 November 1161
Location
Tangdao, an island near Shandong Peninsula at the East China Sea
Result Song victory
Belligerents
Jurchen Jin Southern Song
Commanders and leaders
Su Baoheng
Wanyan Zhengjianu 
Li Bao
Strength
600 warships
20,000 Jurchen and Balhae troops
10,000 Northern Chinese
40,000 sailors[1]
120 warships and 3,000 troops
Casualties and losses
10,000[2]
300 warships[3]

The Battle of Tangdao (唐岛之战) was a naval engagement that took place in 1161 between the Jurchen Jin and the Southern Song dynasty of China on the East China Sea. The conflict was part of the Jin-Song wars, and was fought near Tangdao Island. It was an attempt by the Jin to invade and conquer the Southern Song dynasty, yet resulted in failure and defeat for the Jurchens. The Jin dynasty navy was set on fire by huopao (a type of gunpowder weapon, possibly cannons) and fire arrows, suffering heavy losses.[4] For this battle, the commander of the Song dynasty squadron, Li Bao, faced the opposing commander Zheng Jia, the admiral of the Jin dynasty. On the fate of Zheng Jia, the historical text of the Jin Shi states:

Zheng Jia did not know the sea routes (among the islands) well, nor much about the management of ships, and he did not believe (that the enemy, the Song, was near). But all of a sudden they appeared, and finding us quite unready they hurled incendiary gunpowder projectiles on to our ships. So seeing all his ships going up in flames, and having no means of escape, Zheng Jia jumped into the sea and drowned.[5]

This battle was followed by another naval confrontation, the Battle of Caishi (采石之战) taking place in 1161. The battle is significant in the technological history of the Song navy. The 20th-century historian Joseph Needham has called the era "one of continual innovation" when the size of the Song fleet grew "from a total of 11 squadrons and 3,000 men [the Song navy] rose in one century to 20 squadrons totalling 52,000 men, with its main base near Shanghai." They were further reinforced by the aid of seafaring Chinese merchants. The technological gains of the Song navy ensured its access and dominance of the East China Sea for centuries in competition with the military forces of Jurchen and Mongol rivals. By 1129, the Song navy had invented gunpowder bombs for warship trebuchets. The weapon was made mandatory for all ships in the Song fleet. The construction of paddle-wheel ships, operated with treadmills, went on for several decades between 1132 and 1183. The engineer Gao Xuan devised a paddle-wheel ship outfitted with up to eleven paddle-wheels on each side. Iron plating for armoring the ships was designed in 1203 by the engineer Qin Shifu.[6]

Li Bao ordered his men to hurl their huopao (rudimentary grenades) and to concentrate the fire of their incendiary arrows and rockets at the rigging of the enemy ships. The Jin officers were taken by surprise by the impetuosity of the Chinese attack. The crimson sails of their ships made of oiled silk caught fire, and as the ships began to burn, the panic-stricken crew and soldiers leaped into the sea. While many Jin ships surrendered when the Chinese vessels closed in on them, others which were moored farther away hurriedly raised anchor and hoisted sail to flee.[2]

— Jung-pang Lo

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Lo 2012, p. 162.
  2. ^ a b Lo 2012, p. 161.
  3. ^ Lo 2012, p. 163.
  4. ^ Needham 1987, p. 60.
  5. ^ Needham 1987, p. 157.
  6. ^ Needham 1971, p. 476.

References

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  • Lo, Jung-pang (2012), China as a Sea Power 1127-1368
  • Needham, Joseph (1971). Science and Civilisation in China: Civil Engineering and Nautics, Volume 4 Part 3. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07060-7.
  • Needham, Joseph (1987). Science and Civilisation in China: Military technology: The Gunpowder Epic, Volume 5, Part 7. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-30358-3.
  • Turnbull, Stephen (2002). Fighting Ships of the Far East: China and Southeast Asia 202 BC - AD 1419 14194. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78200-017-4.

37°N 121°E / 37°N 121°E / 37; 121