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Seven Grievances
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The Seven Grievances (: nadan koro; ) was a announced by , khan of the Later Jin, on the thirteenth day of the fourth lunar month in the third year of the Tianming () era of his reign; 7 May 1618. It effectively declared war against the .

There were several accounts of the Seven Grievances, one from the "Veritable Records of the Manchus", another from the "Qing Veritable Records", and the one from Nurhaci's successor . According to the last account, the seven grievances are:

  1. The Ming killed Nurhaci's and without reason;
  2. The Ming suppressed Jianzhou and favored and Hada clans;
  3. The Ming violated agreement of territories with ;
  4. The Ming sent troops to protect Yehe against Jianzhou;
  5. The Ming supported Yehe to break its promise to Nurhaci;
  6. The Ming forced Nurhaci to give up the lands in Chaihe, Sancha, and Fuan;
  7. The Ming's official Shang Bozhi abused his power and rode roughshod over the people.

Shortly after the announcement of the Seven Grievances, the attack against the Ming on Fushun started. Han defectors played a very important role in the Qing conquest of Ming China. Han Chinese generals who defected to the Manchu were often given women from the Imperial Aisin Gioro family in marriage while the ordinary soldiers who defected were often given non-royal Manchu women as wives. The Manchu leader married one of his granddaughters to the Ming General () after he surrendered in to the Manchu in 1618.

(2025). 9780520254442, University of California Press. .
(1977). 9780029336809, Simon and Schuster. .
(2014). 9781134462094, Routledge. .
(1985). 9780520048041, University of California Press. .
(2025). 9780804746847, Stanford University Press. .
The offspring of Li received the "Third Class Viscount" () title.
(1998). 9780520926790, University of California Press. .
In retaliation, a year later, a Ming punitive force of about 100,000 men, which included and troops, approached Nurhaci's Manchus along four different routes. The Manchus scored successive victories, the most decisive being the battle of in which Nurhaci defeated Ming dynasty and Korean troops that were far superior in numbers and armaments.

The Ming dynasty was wearied by a combination of internal strife and constant harassment by the Manchu. On May 26, 1644, Beijing fell to a peasant rebel army led by . During the turmoil, the last Ming emperor Zhu Youjian hanged himself on a tree in the imperial garden outside the . The Manchus then allied with Ming general and seized control of Beijing and overthrew Li Zicheng's short-lived , establishing the rule in China.


See also
  • Manchuria under Ming rule
  • Jurchen unification
  • Transition from Ming to Qing


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