Battle of Beijing (1644)

This article is about the 1644 battle. For a list of other battles also called "Battle of Beijing", see Battle of Beijing.
Battle of Beijing
DateFebruary 1644--25 April 1644
LocationBeijing, China
Result Ming Dynasty overthrown;
Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide;
Rebels occupied Beijing
Belligerents
Ming Dynasty Rebel forces
Commanders and leaders
Chongzhen Emperor Li Zicheng
Strength
250,000 (excluding 100,000 reinforcements) 1,300,000
Casualties and losses
40,000 killed (included 25,000 Jinyiwei agents);

The Battle of Beijing took place between February and April 1644 in the areas surrounding Beijing, and was fought between forces of the Ming Dynasty and rebel forces led by Li Zicheng.

Li Zicheng led his rebel army to attack the Ming capital Beijing from two directions (north and south). The eunuch official Du Zhizhi (杜之秩) ordered the Ming forces defending Beijing to open the city gates and let Li Zicheng's army in. After the fall of Beijing, the last Ming ruler, the Chongzhen Emperor, committed suicide by hanging himself from a tree near the Forbidden City. No actual battle was fought in Beijing itself because the rebels marched on the capital unopposed, and even after occupying Beijing, the rebels did not face any resistance. Li Zicheng then proceeded to establish the short-lived Shun Dynasty, which was subsequently defeated by forces of the Manchu-led Qing Dynasty. The Qing dynasty would go on to rule China, a reign that lasted 268 years.

See also

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