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- Q15692881 subject Q17159855.
- Q15692881 subject Q22808450.
- Q15692881 subject Q8409608.
- Q15692881 abstract "The siege of Caizhou between 1233 and 1234 was fought between the Jurchen Jin dynasty and the Mongol Empire, allied with the Song Dynasty. It was the last major battle in the war between the Mongols and the Jin. They had fought for decades beginning in 1211, when the Mongols first invaded under the command of Genghis Khan. The Jin capital of Zhongdu had been besieged in 1213, then captured by the Mongols in 1215. In the intervening years, the Jin moved their capital to Kaifeng. Ögedei Khan, the successor of Genghis, rose to power after his predecessor died in 1227. In 1230, the war effort against the Jin recommenced. Emperor Aizong, the Jurchen emperor, fled when the Mongols besieged the Jin capital of Kaifeng. On February 26, 1233, he reached the town of Guide, and then moved on to the town of Caizhou, now Ru'nan in Henan, on August 3. The Mongols arrived at Caizhou in December, 1233. The Song Dynasty had rebuffed Aizong's plea for assistance, and joined forces with the Mongols. Warnings that the Song would be invaded next were ignored.Aizong tried to retreat, and committed suicide when the likelihood of escaping from Caizhou was no longer plausible. He was succeeded by Emperor Modi, a member of the royal family living in the town, on February 9, 1234. Caizhou was breached by the Mongols on on the same day, and Modi died in the ensuing melee, ending a reign that spanned less than a day. The Jin dynasty came to a close with the fall of Caizhou. The Song were eager to exploit the destruction of the Jin by annexing Henan. They did not succeed and were repelled by the Mongols.".
- Q15692881 combatant "Jin dynasty".
- Q15692881 combatant "Mongol Empire".
- Q15692881 combatant "Song Dynasty".
- Q15692881 commander Q5069.
- Q15692881 commander Q5081.
- Q15692881 commander Q7519.
- Q15692881 date "1234-02-09".
- Q15692881 isPartOfMilitaryConflict Q1014253.
- Q15692881 isPartOfMilitaryConflict Q4446152.
- Q15692881 place Q2138179.
- Q15692881 place Q925681.
- Q15692881 result "*Decisive Mongol victory".
- Q15692881 result "*Emperor Aizong commits suicide, Emperor Modi killed in battle".
- Q15692881 result "*Jin dynasty ends".
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q1014253.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q12557.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q15473934.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q16944638.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q17159855.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q208471.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q2138179.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q22808450.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q404817.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q43684.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q4446152.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q5066.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q5069.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q5081.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q720.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q7462.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q7519.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q753880.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409608.
- Q15692881 wikiPageWikiLink Q925681.
- Q15692881 combatant Q12557.
- Q15692881 combatant Q5066.
- Q15692881 combatant Q7462.
- Q15692881 commander Q5069.
- Q15692881 commander Q5081.
- Q15692881 commander Q7519.
- Q15692881 conflict "Siege of Caizhou".
- Q15692881 date "--02-09".
- Q15692881 partof "Mongol–Jin War and Jin–Song Wars".
- Q15692881 place "Caizhou, modern Runan, Northern China".
- Q15692881 result "*Decisive Mongol victory *Emperor Aizong commits suicide, Emperor Modi killed in battle *Jin dynasty ends".
- Q15692881 type Event.
- Q15692881 type Event.
- Q15692881 type MilitaryConflict.
- Q15692881 type SocietalEvent.
- Q15692881 type Event.
- Q15692881 type Thing.
- Q15692881 type Q1656682.
- Q15692881 comment "The siege of Caizhou between 1233 and 1234 was fought between the Jurchen Jin dynasty and the Mongol Empire, allied with the Song Dynasty. It was the last major battle in the war between the Mongols and the Jin. They had fought for decades beginning in 1211, when the Mongols first invaded under the command of Genghis Khan. The Jin capital of Zhongdu had been besieged in 1213, then captured by the Mongols in 1215. In the intervening years, the Jin moved their capital to Kaifeng.".
- Q15692881 label "Siege of Caizhou".
- Q15692881 name "Siege of Caizhou".