Page:Tseng Kuo Fan and the Taiping Rebellion.djvu/235

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TSENG KUO-FAN

alike fled into Hupeh. The defence of T'ungch'en was only perfunctory. The débâcle at Sanho and the consequent loss of morale greatly perturbed the Hupeh-Anhui borders.[1]

The Taipings followed up their victory by pouring into Kiangsi, appearing in such numbers before Kingtechen that the provincial authorities were wholly unable to cope with them.[2] Detachments of them also appeared in the south of that province. The governor of Hunan, Lo Ping-chang, fearing a revival of rebel activities in Hupeh from the direction of Anhui and possibly later in his own province, asked the imperial authorities to concentrate on the province of Anhui by sending Tsêng Kuo-fan there. Thus the effects of the disaster at Sanho might, to some extent, be neutralised.

Tsêng replied to the mandate that reached him by pointing out the strategic value of Wuyuan and Kingtechen, possession of which enabled the rebels freely to make raids on the four prefectures of Jaochow and Kwanghsin in Kiangsi, Huichow in southern Anhui, and Ch'üchow in Chekiang. Three regions offered difficulties unless steps were taken to guard them. One of these was Kingtechen, possession of which was essential to keep the Poyang region and Huk'ow under control. Another, most important of all, was north of Lake Ch'iao, in the region of Lüchow and Fêngyang and the Hwai River, where the Taipings and Nien-fei might come together. A third strategic region was south of Lake Ch'iao, where the rebels held several important points. Since Tsêng could not divide his forces it appeared to him best to have thirty

  1. Chungwang, Autobiography, pp. 22 ff.; Nienp'u, V, 20; Hatsuzoku Ran Shi, pp. 55 f. The latter gives the number of rebels as 180,000. P'ing-ting Yueh-fei Chi-lueh says that the imperialists numbered about one-twentieth the total of the Taipings.
  2. Nienp'u, V, 21b; Dispatches, X, 32 ff.