The Reign Of Taitsong The Great


The history of China differs remarkably from that of Japan in one

particular. In the latter a single dynasty of emperors has, from the

beginning, held the throne. In the former there have been numerous

dynasties, most of them brief, some long extended. In Japan the emperors

lived in retirement, and it was the dynasties of shoguns or generals

that suffered change. In China the emperors kept at the head of affairs,

and w
re exposed to all the perils due to error or weakness in the ruler

and ambition in powerful subjects.



The fall of the great dynasty of the Hans left the way clear for several

brief dynasties, of whose emperors Yangti, the last, was a man of great

public spirit and magnificent ideas. His public spirit was expressed in

a series of great canals, which extended throughout the empire, their

total length being, it is said, more than sixteen hundred leagues,

Several of these great works still remain. His magnificence of idea was

shown in the grand adornments of Loyang, his capital, where two million

of men were employed upon his palace and the public buildings.



Yangti's son was deposed by Liyuen, Prince of Tang, and a new dynasty,

that of the Tang emperors, was formed, which continued for several

centuries at the head of affairs. The new emperor assumed the name of

Kaotsou, made famous by the first emperor of the Hans. But the glory of

his reign belongs to his son, not to himself, and it is with this son,

Lichimin by name, that we have now to do.



It had been the custom of the founders of dynasties to begin their reign

by the destruction of the families of their deposed rivals. The new

emperor showed himself more merciful, by pensioning instead of

destroying his unfortunate foes. His only vengeance was upon inanimate

objects. Lichimin, on capturing Loyang, ordered the great palace of

Yangti, the most magnificent building in the empire, to be set on fire

and destroyed. "So much pomp and pride," he said, "could not be

sustained, and ought to lead to the ruin of those who considered their

own love of luxury rather than the needs of the people."



While his father occupied the throne the valiant Lichimin went forth

"conquering and to conquer." Wherever he went victory went with him. The

foes of the Tangs were put down in quick succession. A great Tartar

confederacy was overthrown by the vigorous young general. Four years

sufficed for the work. At the end of that time Lichimin was able to

announce that he had vanquished all the enemies of the empire, both at

home and abroad.



His victories were followed by a triumph which resembled those given to

the great generals of ancient Rome. The city of Singan was the capital

of the new dynasty, and into it Lichimin rode at the head of his

victorious legions, dressed in costly armor and wearing a breastplate of

gold. His personal escort consisted of ten thousand picked horsemen,

among them a regiment of cuirassiers dressed in black tiger-skins, who

were particularly attached to his person and the most distinguished for

valor of all his troops. Thirty thousand cuirassiers followed, with a

captive king of the Tartars in their midst. Other captives testified to

the glory of the conqueror, being the vanquished defenders of conquered

cities, whose abundant spoils were displayed in the train.



Into the city wound the long array, through multitudes of applauding

spectators, Lichimin proceeding in state to the Hall of his Ancestors,

where he paid obeisance to the shades of his progenitors and detailed to

them the story of his victorious career. Unlike the more cruel Romans,

who massacred the captives they had shown in their triumphs, Lichimin

pardoned his. The principal officers of the army were richly rewarded,

and the affair ended in a great banquet, at which the emperor gave his

valiant son the highest praise for his services to the country. The

rejoicings ended in a proclamation of general amnesty and a reduction of

the taxes, so that all might benefit by the imperial triumph.



Yet there was poison in the victor's cup of joy. His brothers envied

him, intrigued against him, and succeeded in instilling such doubts in

the emperor's mind that Lichimin fell into disgrace and was strongly

tempted to leave the court. The intrigues, which had first dealt with

his good name, were next directed against his life, a plot to murder

him being devised. Fortunately it was discovered in time, and the death

they had planned for their brother fell upon themselves, leaving him the

emperor's unquestioned heir. The same year (626 A.D.) the emperor

retired to private life and raised his great son to the throne.



Lichimin, as emperor, assumed the name of Taitsong, a title which he

made so famous that he fully earned the designation of Taitsong the

Great. The empire was surrounded with enemies, the nomads of the north,

extending from Corea to Kokonor, and the warlike people of the south,

from Thibet to Tonquin. During the remainder of his life he was engaged

in incessant conflict with these stinging wasps, whose onslaughts left

him no peace.



Scarcely was he settled on the throne when the Tartar invasions began.

Their raids were repelled, but they instigated Taitsong to an important

measure. It had always been evident that the Chinese troops, hitherto

little more than a raw militia, were unable to cope with the sons of the

desert, and the shrewd emperor set himself to organize an army that

should be a match in discipline and effectiveness for any of its foes.

The new army embraced three ranks, each corps of the superior rank

consisting of twelve hundred, and those of the others respectively of

one thousand and eight hundred men. The total force thus organized

approached nine hundred thousand men, of whom a large portion were used

for frontier duty. These troops were carefully trained in the use of the

bow and the pike, Taitsong himself inspecting a portion of them daily.

This innovation roused bitter opposition from the literati, whose books

told them that former emperors did not engage in such work. But

Taitsong, on the theory that in time of peace we should prepare for war,

went on with his reforms regardless of their cited precedents.



Taitsong's new army was soon put to the proof. The Tartars were in arms

again, a powerful confederacy had been formed, and China was in danger.

Marching into the desert with his disciplined forces, he soon had his

enemies in flight, forced several of the leading khans to submit, and

spread the dread of his arms widely among the tribes. To his title of

Emperor of China he now added that of Khan of the Tartars, and claimed

as subjects all the nomads of the desert.



The next great war was with Thibet, whose tribes had become subdued

under one chief, called the Sanpou, or "brave lord." This potentate, who

deemed himself the peer of his powerful neighbor, demanded a Chinese

princess in marriage, and when this favor was refused he invaded a

province of the empire. Taitsong at once put his army in motion,

defeated the forces of Thibet, and made the Sanpou acknowledge himself a

vassal of China and pay a fine of five thousand ounces of gold. Then the

princess he had sought to win by force was granted to him as a favor.

The Sanpou gave up his barbarian ways, adopted Chinese customs, and

built a walled city for his princess wife.



The next act of the great emperor was to bring Eastern Turkestan,

conquered by Panchow more than five centuries before, under Chinese

rule. This country had admitted the supremacy of the emperor, but not

until now did it become part of the empire, which it has since remained.



The last warlike act of Taitsong's life was the invasion of Corea. Here

he won various great battles, but was at length baffled in the siege of

a Corean town, and lost all he had gained, the gallant commandant of the

town wishing the troops "a pleasant journey" as they began their

retreat.



Taitsong did not confine himself to deeds of war. Under the advice of

his wife Changsungchi, a woman as great in her way as he was in his, and

celebrated for her domestic virtues, talent, and good sense, he founded

the Imperial Library and the great College, decreased the taxes, and

regulated the finances of the realm. The death of this good woman was to

him a severe blow, and he ordered that she should receive the funeral

honors due to an emperor.



His last days were spent in drawing up for the instruction of his son a

great work on the art of government, known as the Golden Mirror. He died

in 649 A.D., having proved himself one of the ablest monarchs, alike in

war and in peace, that ever sat on the Chinese throne.



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