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劉武周[查看正文] [修改] [查看歷史]ctext:962066
關係 | 對象 | 文獻依據 |
---|---|---|
type | person | |
name | 劉武周 | |
died-date | 武德五年七月丙申 622/8/28 | 《新唐書·本紀第一 高祖》:丙申,突厥殺劉武周於白道。 |
born | 573 | |
died | 622 | |
authority-wikidata | Q701508 | |
link-wikipedia_zh | 刘武周 | |
link-wikipedia_en | Liu_Wuzhou |
生平
祖籍河間景城(今河北交河東北),遷居馬邑(今山西朔州)。劉武周驍勇善騎射,喜結交豪俠,後前往洛陽,投奔太僕楊義臣。大業八年至十年(612年—614年)間,應募三度北伐高勾麗,以軍功任建節校尉,還馬邑,為鷹揚府校尉(隋朝府兵系統的基層軍官)。
大業十三年(617年),與太守王仁恭的侍女私通,恐事發,集鄉閭豪傑,與張萬歲、楊伏念、苑君璋、尉遲恭等殺王仁恭,據郡起兵,自稱太守,開倉放糧。及後依附突厥,先後攻占雁門、樓煩(今山西靜樂)、定襄(治今內蒙古和樸格爾西北)等郡。隋雁門郡丞陳孝意與虎賁將王智辯合兵征討劉武周,困之於桑乾鎮(今山西山陰南)。劉武周援引突厥騎兵還擊,王智辯兵敗被殺,陳孝意奔還雁門。劉武周趁勢破樓煩郡,進取隋帝行宮汾陽宮,將俘獲的宮女獻給突厥,突厥方面則以戰馬回報。武周氣勢更熾,發軍陷定襄,又回軍馬邑。突厥冊封劉武周為「定楊可汗」。劉武周遂自稱皇帝,國號漢,建元天興。
易州(治所在今河北易縣)宋金剛被竇建德打敗,引殘兵奔劉武周,封為宋王。唐武德二年(619年)三月,劉武周南侵併州(治所晉陽),駐紮黃蛇嶺(今山西榆次北),并州總管李元吉派車騎將軍張達率軍抗擊,全軍覆沒。五月,陷平遙,六月,命宋金剛率兵三萬進攻太原,佔領介州(今山西介休)。李淵遣右僕射裴寂為晉州道(今山西臨汾)行軍總管,督軍抗擊劉武周,雙方戰於索原度(在介休介山下),唐軍潰敗,裴寂逃回晉州,姜寶誼戰死。十月,宋金剛下澮州(今山西翼城),夏縣人呂崇茂,蒲阪(今山西永濟北)的王行本,相繼響應,至此山西除浩州(今山西汾陽)外,大部盡歸劉武周部。關中大震。
李淵以為「賊勢如此,難與爭鋒,宜棄大河以東謹守關西而已」,秦王李世民請纓出戰。十一月,秦王率軍到龍門關,屯柏壁(今山西新絳西南)。秦王知劉武周「軍無蓄積,以虜掠為資」。武德三年(620年)四月,宋軍糧盡而退,秦王率軍追至呂州(今山西霍縣)、高壁嶺(今山西靈石南)、雀鼠谷(今山西介休縣與霍縣之間),一日之內連八戰,每戰皆捷。介休(今山西介休)尉遲恭來降。劉武周棄并州,北奔突厥。不久,被突厥殺死。
劉武周南下時,其內史令苑君璋諫曰:「唐主舉一州之眾,直取長安,所向無敵,此乃天授,非人力也。晉陽以南,道路險隘,縣軍深入,無繼于後,君進戰不利,何以自還!不如北連突厥,南結唐朝,南面稱孤,足為長策。」武周不聽,留君璋守朔州。及敗,泣謂君璋曰:「不用君言,以至于此。」
妻子
• 沮皇后
顯示更多...: Initial establishment of Dingyang Campaign against Tang Defeat and death
Initial establishment of Dingyang
Liu Wuzhou's clan was originally from Hejian Commandery (河間郡, roughly modern Baoding, Hebei). His father Liu Kuang (劉匡) relocated to Mayi (in modern Shuozhou, Shanxi). Liu Wuzhou's mother was Liu Kuang's wife Lady Zhao. Liu Wuzhou was known for his strengths and skills at archery, and he often spent time congregating with people with similar dispositions. His older brother Liu Shanbo (劉山伯) was not pleased with this, and often rebuked him, stating, "You are careless with your friendships, and one day you will destroy our clan." Liu Wuzhou therefore left home and went to Sui Dynasty's eastern capital Luoyang, where he served under the general Yang Yichen. During Yang's participation of the campaigns against Goguryeo, Liu Wuzhou, on account of his accomplishments, was made a Xiaowei (校尉)—an army officer rank just below a general.
At some later point, Liu Wuzhou returned home and continued to be a Xiaowei for the commandery militia. At that time, the commandery governor Wang Rengong (王仁恭), who was corrupt and unable to care for the poor, was impressed with Liu for his fame in the commandery, and he gave Liu the command of his personal guards. Liu carried on an affair with one of Wang's servant girls, and was afraid that he would be punished if news leaked. He therefore told the people of the commandery that Wang was unwilling to aid the poor and the famished—causing there to be general discontent among the people. He then took leave on account of illness, but when the local gentry came visiting him, he invited them to a feast and declared his intent to rebel; they agreed to join him. In spring 617, he took his men to the commandery government and killed Wang. The people of the commandery submitted, and he opened up the food storages to feed the poor. He gathered about 10,000 soldiers and declared himself commandery governor, and he submitted to Eastern Tujue. When officials of the nearby Yanmen Commandery (roughly modern Xinzhou, Shanxi), Chen Xiaoyi (陳孝意) and Wang Zhibian (王智辯) attacked him, he struck back in conjunction with Eastern Tujue, killing Wang and forcing Chen to flee. He then captured Loufan Commandery (樓煩郡, part of modern Xinzhou) and pillaged Fenyang Palace (汾陽宮)—one of the numerous subsidiary palaces that Emperor Yang built around the empire—and took the ladies in waiting and gave them to Eastern Tujue's Shibi Khan Ashina Duojishi as a tribute; in return, Ashina Duojishi sent him horses. Liu then also captured Dingxiang Commandery (定襄郡, roughly modern Hohhot, Inner Mongolia). Ashina Duojishi then created him "Dingyang Khan"—i.e., "the Khan who rules over Yang." (Yang was the name of Sui's imperial clan.) Ashina Duojishi also bestowed on Liu a great banner with a symbol of a wolf's head. Liu then declared himself emperor. He created his wife Lady Ju empress, and he changed his era name to further show independence from Sui. Soon, he captured Yanmen as well. (The Sui general in charge at Taiyuan, Li Yuan, was unable to stop Liu, and it was partly because of this that Li Yuan's son Li Shimin was able to persuade Li Yuan to rebel as well to avoid possible punishment by Emperor Yang, and Li Yuan did so later in 617, capturing the capital Chang'an and declaring Emperor Yang's grandson Yang You emperor (as Emperor Gong); in 618, after hearing of Emperor Yang's death at Yangzhou, had Yang You yield the throne to him, establishing Tang Dynasty as its Emperor Gaozu.) In spring 619, Ashina Duojishi apparently was planning a launch a major incursion into Chinese territory, and he had Liu and another rebel ruler, Liang Shidu the Emperor of Liang, join him, but Ashina Duojishi soon died, and Tujue abandoned the campaign.
Campaign against Tang
Liu Wuzhou, however, launched a campaign against Tang himself in late spring 619, with collateral support by Eastern Tujue forces. In summer 619, he approached Taiyuan, then defended by Emperor Gaozu's son, Li Yuanji the Prince of Qi. Li Yuanji sent the general Zhang Da (張達) against Liu, despite Zhang's reluctance, as Li Yuanji gave Zhang only a small army, and Liu defeated Zhang. Zhang, angry at Li Yuanji, instead surrendered to Liu and led Liu to capture Yuci (榆次, in modern Jinzhong, Shanxi). Soon, Liu put Taiyuan under siege. Li Yuanji initially fought him off, but soon Liu captured Shi (石州, roughly modern Lüliang, Shanxi) and Jie (介州, also part of modern Jinzhong) Prefectures, and soon, Liu's general Huang Ziying (黃子英) defeated and captured the Tang generals Jiang Baoyi (姜寶誼) and Li Zhongwen (李仲文), although Jiang and Li Zhongwen soon fled from Liu's camp.
Around the same time, Liu received additional support, in the form of the agrarian rebel leader Song Jin'gang (宋金剛), who was initially an adherent of Wei Dao'er (魏刀兒), until Wei was defeated and killed by Dou Jiande the Prince of Xia. Song was unable to resist Dou, and fled to Liu, who, believing Song to be a capable general, created him the Prince of Song and greatly honored him, even giving Song half of his possessions as a gift. Song then divorced his wife and married Liu's sister. Song then suggested to Liu that he should first capture Bing Prefecture (并州, i.e., Taiyuan) and then further attack south to try to capture more territory, to seek to unite China.
The mounting defeats concerned Tang's Emperor Gaozu, and he sent one of his senior advisors, Pei Ji, with a sizeable army to face Liu. Pei reached Jie Prefecture in the fall and placed its capital, Jiexiu (介休), under siege, with Song defending. Song soon cut off Pei's water supply, and the Tang army began to weaken in thirst, and it was defeated by Song. After the battle, Liu again approached Taiyuan, and Li Yuanji, in panic, abandoned Taiyuan and fled back to the Tang capital Chang'an. Liu then moved his capital from Mayi to Taiyuan, and soon, Song captured Jin (晉州) and Gui (澮州, together roughly modern Linfen, Shanxi) as well, and Pei was unable to resist. In shock, Tang's Emperor Gaozu considered entirely abandoning the Hedong (河東, i.e., modern Shanxi) region, but his son Li Shimin (the later Emperor Taizong) objected, offering to engage Liu. Emperor Gaozu then commissioned Li Shimin with an army and had him head toward Liu's position.
Defeat and death
Li Shimin crossed the Yellow River, and while he initially had problem with food supplies, he was able to persuade the people in the country to supply his army. He then refused to engage Song, trying to wear Song down. Meanwhile, however, another Tang army, commanded by Emperor Gaozu's cousin Li Xiaoji (李孝基) the Prince of Yong'an, assisted by another cousin, Dugu Huai'en (獨孤懷恩) and two other officials, Yu Yun (于筠) and Tang Jian (唐儉), was attacking Liu's ally Lü Chongmao (呂崇茂), then at Xia (夏縣, in modern Yuncheng, Shanxi). Lü sought aid from Song, and Song sent his subordinates Yuchi Gong and Xun Xiang (尋相) to attack Li Xiaoji, defeating him, and capturing him, Dugu, Yu, Tang, as well as another key general, Liu Shirang (劉世讓). (Liu Xiaoji soon tried to flee and was executed by Liu Wuzhou.) When Yuchi and Xun then sought to aid another ally, Wang Xingben (王行本), a Sui general still holding out against Tang at Pufan (蒲反, in modern Yuncheng as well), but they were defeated by Li Shimin and forced to withdraw; Wang subsequently was forced to surrender in spring 620, and Emperor Gaozu executed him. Later in spring 620, Liu Wuzhou attacked Tang's Lu Prefecture (潞州, roughly modern Changzhi, Shanxi), and while he was initially successful, he was unable to capture its capital.
Later, Huang Ziying, while ordered to protect the roads of supplies, was assaulted and killed by Tang general Zhang Dezheng (張德政). In summer 620, Li Shimin, believing Song's army to be worn out, launched a major counterattack, first defeating Xun Xiang, and then advancing quickly, engaged Song at Queshu Canyon (雀鼠谷, in modern Jinzhong), defeating Song eight times, eventually forcing Song to flee. Yuchi and Xun surrendered. Liu, hearing of Song's defeat, abandoned Taiyuan in panic and fled to Eastern Tujue. Song tried to battle Tang forces again, but could not gather his troops any more, and therefore fled to Eastern Tujue as well.
At a later date—probably 622, as the Old Book of Tang and the New Book of Tang both stated that Liu's campaigns lasted over a span of six calendar years—Liu tried to flee back to Mayi to reestablish himself, against Eastern Tujue orders, and when this was discovered, he was executed.
文獻資料 | 引用次數 |
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新唐書 | 13 |
大唐創業起居注 | 12 |
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