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The thirteenth volume of the thirteenth volume of the dragon and the tiger in the spring and autumn chapters 1412th chapter migration (2)

This Mongolian tribal civil strife occurred in the sixth year of Chengwu in the Great Qin Dynasty and the year of the yellow sheep on the grassland. In fact, it cannot be called a rebellion.

This is a mass murder...

Most of the Han slaves who were born after years of plunder were left in the southern part of the Northeast grassland due to their inability to accept the land and large population.

This is the grassland where the Tatars lived in those days. The Tatars declined under the pressure of the Mongols and the Jin Kingdom and was eventually annexed by the Mongolian tribes.

The arrival of the Han slave group gradually changed the grassland. In a few years, some villages where Han people lived appeared in this grassland.

During this short period of time, there is no need to say what kind of dire straits the Han slaves under the rule of the Mongols lived in.

Notorious words such as Chu Ye Quan (of course, this is the name of the Han people.) began to appear on the Northeast grassland at this time and were welcomed by many Mongolian nobles.

In the sixth year of Chengwu in the Qin Dynasty, the situation began to deteriorate drastically.

It's simple to say, there's not enough food...

No natural disasters arose for the sake of the death.

The war caused heavy damage to the Tatars. Over the years, and the Mongolian tribes were not at ease with them, they often took the Tatars as pioneers in the war to attack the Jin Dynasty. When the trophy was distributed after the war, the Tatars were always behind.

The Tatar people were seriously injured and wanted to gather Han slaves again, which made the Tatar tribes gradually unable to bear it.

In this year, the resentment of the Tatar people finally erupted. They did not dare to vent their dissatisfaction to the powerful Mongolian tribes. However, they pointed their anger at the Han slaves living here.

So a large-scale massacre happened.

It is impossible to calculate how many casualties were there in this purge. Thousands of Han slaves were cut off their heads. The Han village, which had just become a prototype, was filled with thick smoke and a strong smell of blood floating on this grassland.

But this was just the beginning. At the end of his life, the three brothers of Zheng Keer, a native of Liaodong, gathered dozens of Han slaves. They killed the hundreds of households sent by the Tatars, rose up, headed south, destroyed the three Tatar tribes one after another, and rescued thousands of Han slaves.

Most of them were women and children, who were rushing all the way and fled into the Great Wall.

They did not go far before they were caught up by the Tatar cavalry. The Han slaves, who were already extremely desperate, burst out with extremely strong combat power. They fought fiercely with more than 2,000 Tatar cavalry on the empty grassland for two days.

In this battle, no one bent his knees to the Hu people who were eating raw meat and drinking blood, and no one could live to see the hometown of Liaodong.

This escape team was eventually wiped out on the grassland.

But after this battle, the Han slave's resistance suddenly became fierce. Soon, a voice full of despair appeared among the Han slaves.

From time to time, the news that Tatar nobles were killed by Han slaves spread on the grassland, and finally made the Tatar people feel that things are developing in an uncontrollable direction.

People from Mongolian tribes asked what happened. The Tatar nobles were just perfunctory at first, but later they became panic. Under the questioning of people from Mongolian tribes, it eventually turned into a rebellion that had been widely affected.

When Genghis Khan Temujin returned to the Mongolian tribes, the rebellion was actually coming to an end.

The Mongolian cavalry appeared on the grasslands of the Tatars, and their iron hooves shattered everything.

Whether it was the Tatars or the Hannu, they fell down one after another in front of the fierce and bloodthirsty Mongolian cavalry. Under the stimulation of blood, the Mongolians lost control again, which also turned the rebellion into a real purge.

The blood of the Tatars continued to flow, and the Mongols also suffered casualties, including Han slaves... After this battle, there were only a handful of Han slaves in the northeast grasslands and south.

The Mongols once again proved that they were not much different from the Jurchens when the Khitans just rose. They were even more crazy and bloodthirsty.

During years of war, the Mongols had begun to abandon many of the conventional rules on the grasslands, and more and more began to raise butcher knives, aiming their scimitars and bows at the crowds without resistance to vent their bloodthirsty nature.

After Genghis Khan Temujin returned to the Mongolian tribes, he quickly ended the almost meaningless massacre and symbolically punished some Mongolian generals led by Shu Chi.

But the impact of this killing was actually irreversible. The relationship between the Han and Mongols in his tent began to go bad.

This also prompted Genghis Khan Temujin to decide to establish the Khanate, use absolute authority to exercise the power of the Khan, and in this process, find a way to make the Mongols and Han people get along as friendly as possible. At least, like the Jurchens, they can drive a large number of Han people to serve themselves.

Undoubtedly, although Temujin was gradually approaching his twilight years, he became more mature in his rule. He was not influenced by the clamor of the Mongolian generals under his tent. He knew clearly that a stable Khanate could not have the Mongols alone, but must be recognized by the Han people to a certain extent.

At this point, his vision has surpassed the many prairie Khan nobles...

Then there was the Alliance. On the Alliance, he described a beautiful picture to the Mongolian nobles, allowing the Han people to farm, obtain enough food, allow the Mongolians to fight, reap more wealth and slaves, and established a powerful Mongolian Khanate on the fertile land of Liaodong.

Most of the noble leaders of various tribes who were deeply troubled by Han slaves agreed with the Khan's proposal, and of course, more so to get rid of the increasingly heavy burden of Han slaves.

Therefore, in the spring of the seventh year of Chengwu in the Great Qin Dynasty, a rare great migration occurred in the vast area of ​​the northeast.

If this migration only made the Mongols feel a little uncomfortable, then the long journey brought blood and tears to the Han slaves.

If it is just a nightmare to be captured on the grassland, then this migration is the real Avici Hell.

The dead bodies of countless Han people paved the way for migration, and countless unjust souls wandered on the road. Under the Mongols' horse whip, the Han people were trekking like cattle and sheep.

If you don’t cover your body and eat, you won’t fill your stomach. After a long journey, you will be able to return to your hometown in Liaodong.

For the Mongolians, this journey was not comfortable. They needed to go to that almost completely unfamiliar place to rest. Their flock gradually became thinner and horses were running wildly.

The future was bleak and soon turned into uneasy, and the Mongolians turned this uneasy skillfully into cruelty. Han slaves fell down in blood under whipping, and Han slaves were dragged behind the horse's tail, and wails rang out in groups among the Han slaves.

But as the perpetrator, he laughed loudly next to him and was enjoying it.

The seeds of hatred take root and sprout between the two races and grow rapidly under the watering of blood and life.

The Han slaves walked almost numbly on the road, as if they no longer cared about anything, and even their own lives.

But what they see, hear, and even the salty and bloody smell in their mouths will always remind them of everything they have experienced during this journey.

In fact, what caused all this was just a sentence from Genghis Khan Temujin at the Alliance. He told the leaders and nobles of the tribes that when they went to Liaodong, they would also obtain a large number of Han slaves in the subsequent battles, and soon enough there would be enough slaves to farm for them.

As a result, the value of Han slaves further decreased, which indirectly caused the tragic phenomenon in this migration.

In May of the seventh year of Chengwu in the Great Qin Dynasty, the first group of Mongolians finally set foot on the land of Liaodong.

In June, the Mongolians came to the capital of the Jurchens and went to Beijing.

This place was already a ruined ruin. After the Jurchens left, they set a fire here, leaving nothing for the Mongols.

This year, the land in Liaodong was very chaotic.

The shortcomings of the Mongolians' lack of political talents have been magnified to the greatest extent.

How to let Han slaves farm, how to resettle the migrant Mongolian tribes, etc., all made this nomadic people at a loss.

They finally found out that they had grazing and fighting, and for the rest, they had almost no advantages.

Fortunately, they also had a long-term wise Khan who had thought of a future path for them.

So, the Han slaves were roughly counted and distributed the land. The grasslands in Liaodong were quickly divided amid the noisy noises of the nobles.

Moreover, in order to spend this year, Genghis Khan Temujin once again summoned various soldiers to advance to Hebei in the autumn of this year, and was not right. It should be that the troops of Li Renquan, who was in charge of Hebei, had a few battles and won with an overwhelming advantage.

The harvest is extremely rich, which is enough to allow the Mongolian tribes who have just arrived in Liaodong to spend this winter.

Genghis Khan Temujin's promise was also fulfilled, and a large number of slaves were taken from Hebei to Liaodong to replenish the most lacking population for this bloody Mongolian Khanate.

In the autumn of this year, beacons everywhere at the junction of Liaodong and Hebei.

King Li Renquan of Hebei frequently asked Houzhou for help, demanded food, grass and weapons, and quickly withdrew the troops entering Shandong.

At this time, Li Renquan had not realized his sinister situation. With tens of thousands of soldiers, he still had the confidence to block the Mongols from Hebei.

But the facts soon told him that the Mongols' fighting style could not be stopped by Hebei alone.

Almost all the Mongols were cavalry, coming and going like the wind, and they did not fight decisively with the army at all. Tens of thousands of troops gathered together and became more and more bulky, and they could only eat dust behind the Mongolian cavalry.

Therefore, the best strategy is to stick to the main road from Liaodong to Hebei. In this way, the huge army was in vain, making Li Renquan almost breathless. (To be continued, please search for astronomy, novels are better, updated and faster!
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