Search Results
8/11/2025, 4:49:11 PM
>>512779400
>>512779401
>>512779405
B-b-but /pol/tards claimed Manchus invented death by 1,000 cuts.
How could Manchus invented something that was used on them before the Qing dynasty existed?
The Manchus were also already under Ming rule for 200 years
The Ming ruled Manchuria as the Nurgan region military commission in the Yongle emperor's reign, and had their Jurchen eunuch slave Yishiha led expeditions against his fellow Jurchens and set up the Yongning temple stele.
The Ming Chenghua emperor led brutal genocidal expeditions against the Jurchens that slaughtered and raped them.
The Ming executed Jurchen chief Wang Gao in 1575 afte he tried rebelling and taking Fushun city.
Nurhaci grew up in the household of Ming general Li Chengliang and he Nurhaci was bilingual in Manchu and Mandarin Chinese and read Ming novels like Water Margin. Which he credited for teaching military tactics.
Nurhaci went on multiple tribute missions to Beijing and knew what the Ming looked like onthe inside.
The Ming slaughtered Nurhaci's father and grandfather which is when he started planning to revolt.
Nurhaci didn't even achieve his first capture of a Ming city in Liaodong by military force.
Nurhaci offered Ming officer Li Yongfang in Fushun in 1618 to give his own granddaughter to Li, in exchange for defecting and surrendering the city.
That was the same city Wang Gao failed to take decades earlier.
Nurhaci's son Hongtaiji gave more Manchu princesses to Han generals like Shang Kexi in exchange for bringing his entire army over along with hongyipao heavy cannon experts.
>>512779401
>>512779405
B-b-but /pol/tards claimed Manchus invented death by 1,000 cuts.
How could Manchus invented something that was used on them before the Qing dynasty existed?
The Manchus were also already under Ming rule for 200 years
The Ming ruled Manchuria as the Nurgan region military commission in the Yongle emperor's reign, and had their Jurchen eunuch slave Yishiha led expeditions against his fellow Jurchens and set up the Yongning temple stele.
The Ming Chenghua emperor led brutal genocidal expeditions against the Jurchens that slaughtered and raped them.
The Ming executed Jurchen chief Wang Gao in 1575 afte he tried rebelling and taking Fushun city.
Nurhaci grew up in the household of Ming general Li Chengliang and he Nurhaci was bilingual in Manchu and Mandarin Chinese and read Ming novels like Water Margin. Which he credited for teaching military tactics.
Nurhaci went on multiple tribute missions to Beijing and knew what the Ming looked like onthe inside.
The Ming slaughtered Nurhaci's father and grandfather which is when he started planning to revolt.
Nurhaci didn't even achieve his first capture of a Ming city in Liaodong by military force.
Nurhaci offered Ming officer Li Yongfang in Fushun in 1618 to give his own granddaughter to Li, in exchange for defecting and surrendering the city.
That was the same city Wang Gao failed to take decades earlier.
Nurhaci's son Hongtaiji gave more Manchu princesses to Han generals like Shang Kexi in exchange for bringing his entire army over along with hongyipao heavy cannon experts.
8/7/2025, 6:27:54 AM
>>17902958
Tian Shengong
>>17902569
>>17897237
B-b-but /pol/tards claimed Manchus invented death by 1,000 cuts.
How could Manchus invented something that was used on them before the Qing dynasty existed? >>17902653
Jurchen (Manchu) rebel Wang Gao was sliced to death (lingchi aka death by a thousand cuts) by Han Chinese during the Mimg dynasty.
His sons Atai 阿台 and Ahai 阿海were both killed.
>Wang Gao (王杲): a Jianzhou Jurchen awarded a position of command in Jianzhou. He was put to death by lingchi at Beijing in 1575 due to repeated raids into Ming border territories. He is said to be Nurhaci's maternal great-grandfather or maternal grandfather.
Jurchens (Manchus) like Yishiha were castrated as eunuch slaves by Han Chinese.
>Yishiha (Chinese: 亦失哈; Wade–Giles: Ishiha/I-shih-ha; also rendered as Išiqa and Isiha;[1] Jurchen: i ʃï xa[2]) (fl. 1409–1451), sinicized name Yi Xin (易信), was a Jurchen eunuch of the Ming dynasty of China. He served the Ming emperors who commissioned several expeditions down the Songhua and Amur Rivers during the period of Ming rule of Manchuria,[1][3] and is credited with the construction of the only two Ming dynasty Buddhist temples ever built on the territory of present-day Russia.[4]
>It is believed that Yishiha was a Haixi Jurchen by origin,[1][5] and was captured by the Ming forces in the late 14th century.[1] He worked under two important eunuchs, Wang Zhen and Cao Jixiang. It is speculated by modern historians that he rose to prominence by participating in imperial court politics and serving the Yongle Emperor's concubines of Manchu (Jurchen) origin.[6][7]
Tian Shengong
>>17902569
>>17897237
B-b-but /pol/tards claimed Manchus invented death by 1,000 cuts.
How could Manchus invented something that was used on them before the Qing dynasty existed? >>17902653
Jurchen (Manchu) rebel Wang Gao was sliced to death (lingchi aka death by a thousand cuts) by Han Chinese during the Mimg dynasty.
His sons Atai 阿台 and Ahai 阿海were both killed.
>Wang Gao (王杲): a Jianzhou Jurchen awarded a position of command in Jianzhou. He was put to death by lingchi at Beijing in 1575 due to repeated raids into Ming border territories. He is said to be Nurhaci's maternal great-grandfather or maternal grandfather.
Jurchens (Manchus) like Yishiha were castrated as eunuch slaves by Han Chinese.
>Yishiha (Chinese: 亦失哈; Wade–Giles: Ishiha/I-shih-ha; also rendered as Išiqa and Isiha;[1] Jurchen: i ʃï xa[2]) (fl. 1409–1451), sinicized name Yi Xin (易信), was a Jurchen eunuch of the Ming dynasty of China. He served the Ming emperors who commissioned several expeditions down the Songhua and Amur Rivers during the period of Ming rule of Manchuria,[1][3] and is credited with the construction of the only two Ming dynasty Buddhist temples ever built on the territory of present-day Russia.[4]
>It is believed that Yishiha was a Haixi Jurchen by origin,[1][5] and was captured by the Ming forces in the late 14th century.[1] He worked under two important eunuchs, Wang Zhen and Cao Jixiang. It is speculated by modern historians that he rose to prominence by participating in imperial court politics and serving the Yongle Emperor's concubines of Manchu (Jurchen) origin.[6][7]
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