home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
History of the World
/
History of the World (Bureau Development, Inc.)(1992).BIN
/
dp
/
0142
/
01425.txt
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-10-11
|
17KB
|
291 lines
$Unique_ID{how01425}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Genghis Khan
Chapter XV: The Story Of Hujaku}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{Abbott, Jacob}
$Affiliation{}
$Subject{genghis
khan
hujaku
emperor
chinese
time
put
wall
himself
army}
$Date{}
$Log{}
Title: Genghis Khan
Author: Abbott, Jacob
Chapter XV: The Story Of Hujaku
The accounts given us of the events and transactions of Genghis Khan's
reign after he acquired the supreme power over the Mongul and Tartar nations
are imperfect, and, in many respects, confused. It appears, however, from
them that in the year 1211, that is, about five years after his election as
grand khan, he became involved in a war with the Chinese, which led, in the
end, to very important consequences. The kingdom of China lay to the
southward of the Mongul territories, and the frontier was defended by the
famous Chinese wall, which extended from east to west, over hills and valleys,
from the great desert to the sea, for many hundred miles. The wall was
defended by towers, built here and there in commanding positions along the
whole extent of it, and at certain distances there were fortified towns where
powerful garrisons were stationed, and reserves of troops were held ready to
be marched to different points along the wall, wherever there might be
occasion for their services.
The wall was not strictly the Chinese frontier, for the territory on the
outside of it to a considerable distance was held by the Chinese government,
and there were many large towns and some very strong fortresses in this
outlying region, all of which wege held and garrisoned by Chinese troops.
The inhabitants, however, of the countries outside the wall were
generally of the Tartar or Mongul race. They were of a nation or tribe called
the Kitan, and were somewhat inclined to rebel against the Chinese rule. In
order to assist in keeping them in subjection, one of the Chinese emperors
issued a decree which ordained that the governors of those provinces should
place in all the large towns, and other strongholds outside the wall, twice as
many families of the Chinese as there were of the Kitan. This regulation
greatly increased the discontent of the Kitan, and made them more inclined to
rebellion than they were before.
Besides this, there had been for some time a growing difficulty between
the Chinese government and Genghis Khan. It seems that the Monguls had been
for a long time accustomed to pay some sort of tribute to the Emperor of
China, and many years before, while Genghis Khan, under the name of Temujin,
was living at Karakorom, a subject of Vang Khan, the emperor sent a certain
royal prince, named Yong-tsi, to receive what was due. While Yong-tsi was in
the Mongul territory he and Temujin met, but they did not agree together at
all. The Chinese prince put some slight upon Temujin, which Temujin resented.
Very likely Temujin, whose character at that time, as well as afterward, was
marked with a great deal of pride and spirit, opposed the payment of the
tribute. At any rate, Yong-tsi became very much incensed against him, and, on
his return, made serious charges against him to the emperor, and urged that he
should be seized and put to death. But the emperor declined engaging in so
dangerous an undertaking. Yong-tsi's proposal, however, became known to
Temujin, and he secretly resolved that he would one day have his revenge.
At length, about three or four years after Temujin was raised to the
throne, the emperor of the Chinese died, and Yong-tsi succeeded him. The very
next year he sent an officer to Genghis Khan to demand the usual tribute.
When the officer came into the presence of Genghis Khan in his camp, and made
his demand, Genghis Khan asked him who was the emperor that had sent him with
such a message.
The officer replied that Yong-tsi was at that time emperor of the
Chinese.
"Yong-tsi!" repeated Genghis Khan, in a tone of great contempt. "The
Chinese have a proverb," he added, "that such a people as they ought to have a
god for their emperor; but it seems they do not know how to choose even a
decent man."
It was true that they had such a proverb. They were as remarkable, it
seems, in those days as they are now for their national self-importance and
vanity.
"Go and tell your emperor," added Genghis Khan, "that I am a sovereign
ruler, and that I will never acknowledge him as my master."
When the messenger returned with this defiant answer, Yong-tsi was very
much enraged, and immediately began to prepare for war. Genghis Khan also at
once commenced his preparations. He sent envoys to the leading khans who
occupied the territories outside the wall inviting them to join him. He
raised a great army, and put the several divisions of it under the charge of
his ablest generals. Yong-tsi raised a great army too. The historians say
that it amounted to three hundred thousand men. He put this army under the
command of a great general named Hujaku, and ordered him to advance with it to
the northward, so as to intercept the army of Genghis Khan on its way, and to
defend the wall and the fortresses on the outside of it from his attacks.
In the campaign which ensued Genghis Khan was most successful. The
Monguls took possession of a great many towns and fortresses beyond the wall,
and every victory that they gained made the tribes and nations that inhabited
those provinces more and more disposed to join them. Many of them revolted
against the Chinese authority, and turned to their side. One of these was a
chieftain so powerful that he commanded an army of one hundred thousand men.
In order to bind himself solemnly to the covenant which he was to make with
Genghis Khan, he ascended a mountain in company with the envoy and with others
who were to witness the proceedings, and there performed the ceremony
customary on such occasions. The ceremony consisted of sacrificing a white
horse and a black ox, and then breaking an arrow, at the same time pronouncing
an oath by which he bound himself under the most solemn sanctions to be
faithful to Genghis Khan.
To reward the prince for this act of adhesion to his cause, Genghis Khan
made him king over all that portion of the country, and caused him to be every
where so proclaimed. This encouraged a great many other khans and chieftains
to come over to his side; and at length one who had the command of one of the
gates of the great wall, and of the fortress which defended it, joined him.
By this means Genghis Khan obtained access to the interior of the Chinese
dominions, and Yong-tsi and his great general Hujaku became seriously alarmed.
At length, after various marchings and countermarchings, Genghis Khan
learned that Hujaku was encamped with the whole of his army in a very strong
position at the foot of a mountain, and he determined to proceed thither and
attack him. He did so; and the result of the battle was that Hujaku was
beaten and was forced to retreat. He retired to a great fortified town, and
Genghis Khan followed him and laid siege to the town. Hujaku, finding himself
in imminent danger, fled; and Genghis Khan was on the point of taking the
town, when he was suddenly stopped in his career by being one day wounded
severely by an arrow which was shot at him from the wall.
The wound was so severe that, while suffering under it, Genghis Khan
found that he could not successfully direct the operations of his army, and so
he withdrew his troops and retired into his own country, to wait there until
his wound should be healed. In a few months he was entirely recovered, and
the next year he fitted out a new expedition, and advanced again into China.
In the mean time, Hujaku, who had been repeatedly defeated and driven
back the year before by Genghis Khan, had fallen into disgrace. His rivals
and enemies among the other generals of the army, and among the officers of
the court, conspired against him, and represented to the emperor that he was
unfit to command, and that his having failed to defend the towns and the
country that had been committed to him was owing to his cowardice and
incapacity. In consequence of these representations Hujaku was cashiered,
that is, dismissed from his command in disgrace.
This made him very angry, and he determined that he would have his
revenge. There was a large party in his favor at court, as well as a party
against him; and after a long and bitter contention, the former once more
prevailed, and induced the emperor to restore Hujaku to his command again.
The quarrel, however, was not ended, and so, when Genghis Khan came the
next year to renew the invasion, the councils of the Chinese were so
distracted, and their operations so paralyzed by this feud, that he gained
very easy victories over them. The Chinese generals, instead of acting
together in a harmonious manner against the common enemy, were intent only on
the quarrel which they were waging against each other.
At length the animosity proceeded to such an extreme that Hujaku resolved
to depose the emperor, who seemed inclined rather to take part against him,
assassinate all the chiefs of the opposite party, and then finally to put the
emperor to death, and cause himself to be proclaimed in his stead.
In order to prepare the way for the execution of this scheme, he forbore
to act vigorously against Genghis Khan and the Monguls, but allowed them to
advance farther and farther into the country. This, of course, increased the
general discontent and excitement, and prepared the way for the revolt which
Hujaku was plotting.
At length the time for action arrived. Hujaku suddenly appeared at the
head of a large force at the gates of the capital, and gave the alarm that the
Monguls were coming. He pressed forward into the city to the palace, and gave
the alarm there. At the same time, files of soldiers, whom he had ordered to
this service, went to all parts of the city, arresting and putting to death
all the leaders of the party opposed to him, under pretense that he had
discovered a plot or conspiracy in which they were engaged to betray the city
to the enemy. The excitement and confusion which was produced by this charge,
and by the alarm occasioned by the supposed coming of the Monguls, so
paralyzed the authorities of the town that nobody resisted Hujaku, or
attempted to save the persons whom he arrested. Some of them he caused to be
killed on the spot. Others he shut up in prison. Finding himself thus
undisputed master of the city, he next took possession of the palace, seized
the emperor, deposed him from his office, and shut him up in a dungeon. Soon
afterward he put him to death.
This was the end of Yong-tsi; but Hujaku did not succeed, after all, in
his design of causing himself to be proclaimed emperor in his stead. He found
that there would be very great opposition to this, and so he gave up this part
of his plan, and finally raised a certain prince of the royal family to the
throne, while he retained his office of commander-in-chief of the forces.
Having thus, as he thought, effectually destroyed the influence and power of
his enemies at the capital, he put himself once more at the head of his
troops, and went forth to meet Genghis Khan.
Some accident happened to him about this time by which his foot was hurt,
so that he was, in some degree, disabled, but still he went on. At length he
met the vanguard of Genghis Khan's army at a place where they were attempting
to cross a river by a bridge. Hujaku determined immediately to attack them.
The state of his foot was such that he could not walk nor even mount a horse,
but he caused himself to be put upon a sort of car, and was by this means
carried into the battle.
The Monguls were completely defeated and driven back. Perhaps this was
because Genghis Khan was not there to command them. He was at some distance
in the rear with the main body of the army.
Hujaku was very desirous of following up his victory by pursuing and
attacking the Mongul vanguard the next day. He could not, however, do this
personally, for, on account of the excitement and exposure which he had
endured in the battle, and the rough movements and joltings which,
notwithstanding all his care, he had to bear in being conveyed to and fro
about the field, his foot grew much worse. Inflammation set in during the
night, and the next day the wound opened afresh; so he was obliged to give up
the idea of going out himself against the enemy, and to send one of his
generals instead. The general to whom he gave the command was named Kan- ki.
Kan-ki went out against the enemy, but, after a time, returned
unsuccessful. Hujaku was very angry with him when he came to hear his report.
Perhaps the wound in his foot made him impatient and unreasonable. At any
rate, he declared that the cause of Kan-ki's failure was his dilatoriness in
pursuing the enemy, which was cowardice or treachery, and, in either case, he
deserved to suffer death for it. He immediately sent to the emperor a report
of the case, asking that the sentence of death which he had pronounced against
Kan-ki might be confirmed, and that he might be authorized to put it into
execution.
But the emperor, knowing that Kan-ki was a courageous and faithful
officer, would not consent.
In the mean while, before the emperor's answer came back, the wrath of
Hujaku had had time to cool a little. Accordingly, when he received the
answer, he said to Kan-ki that he would, after all, try him once more.
"Take the command of the troops again," said he, "and go out against the
enemy. If you beat them, I will overlook your first offense and spare your
life; but if you are beaten yourself a second time, you shall die."
So Kan-ki placed himself at the head of his detachment, and went out
again to attack the Monguls. They were to the northward, and were posted, it
seems, upon or near a sandy plain. At any rate, a strong north wind began to
blow at the time when the attack commenced, and blew the sand and dust into
the eyes of his soldiers so that they could not see, while their enemies the
Monguls, having their backs to the wind, were very little incommoded. The
result was that Kan-ki was repulsed with considerable loss, and was obliged to
make the best of his way back to Hujaku's quarters to save the remainder of
his men.
He was now desperate. Hujaku had declared that if he came back without
having gained a victory he should die, and he had no doubt that the man was
violent and reckless enough to keep his word. He determined not to submit. He
might as well die fighting, he thought, at the head of his troops, as to be
ignobly put to death by Hujaku's executioner. So he arranged it with his
troops, who probably hated Hujaku as much as he did, that, on returning to the
town, they should march in under arms, take possession of the place, surround
the palace, and seize the general and make him prisoner, or kill him if he
should attempt any resistance.
The troops accordingly, when they arrived at the gates of the town,
seized and disarmed the guards, and then marched in, brandishing their
weapons, and uttering loud shouts and outcries, which excited first a feeling
of astonishment and then of terror among the inhabitants. The alarm soon
spread to the palace. Indeed, the troops themselves soon reached and
surrounded the palace, and began thundering at the gates to gain admission.
They soon forced their way in. Hujaku, in the mean time, terrified and
panic-stricken, had fled from the palace into the gardens, in hopes to make
his escape by the garden walls. The soldiers pursued him. In his excitement
and agitation he leaped down from a wall too high for such a descent, and, in
his fall, broke his leg. He lay writhing helplessly on the ground when the
soldiers came up. They were wild and furious with the excitement of pursuit,
and they killed him with their spears where he lay.
Kan-ki took the head of his old enemy and carried it to the capital, with
the intention of offering it to the emperor, and also of surrendering himself
to the officers of justice, in order, as he said, that he might be put to
death for the crime of which he had been guilty in heading a military revolt
and killing his superior officer. By all the laws of war this was a most
heinous and a wholly unpardonable offense.
But the emperor was heartily glad that the turbulent and unmanageable old
general was put out of the way, for a man so unprincipled, so ambitious, and
so reckless as Hujaku was is always an object of aversion and terror to all
who have any thing to do with him. The emperor accordingly issued a
proclamation, in which he declared that Hujaku had been justly put to death in
punishment for many crimes which he had committed, and soon afterward he
appointed Kan-ki commander-in-chief of the forces in his stead.