#夏日生活打卡季 #
Ou Xin was a general in the middle of the Ming Dynasty, and by inheriting his father's position in the army, he was able to succeed in becoming the commander of the Jingo Right Guard.
In the third year of Jingtai, Ouxin successfully defeated a thief army in the Guangdong area, and after the war, he was promoted to the commander of the capital Tongzhi. After that, he was transferred to garrison Baiyangkou, and was further promoted to commander of Daningdu.
In the early days of Tianshun, Ouxin was transferred to Guangzhou to garrison the Lei and Lian provinces. At that time, his performance was recognized by Ye Sheng, the governor of Guangdong, and under his recommendation to the imperial court, Ouxin was promoted to the position of governor Tongzhi.
Soon after, a large-scale rebellion of the Yao and Shu ethnic groups broke out in the area of Liangguang, and they attacked the county town everywhere and killed officers and soldiers. Zhu Qizhen issued an edict asking Ou Xin to quickly take the soldiers over to suppress the rebellion.
After some battles, Ou Xin successfully broke the enemy army in the area of Mali Village in Huazhou.
At that time, there were often bandits in the area where Osin rebelled, and many local officials could not calm them. Even if it is pacified once, it will not be long before these thieves will return.
This was mainly due to the fact that Fan Xin, the general of Guangxi garrisoned in Xunzhou, Wuzhou, and other places, had the behavior of accepting bribes from thieves, and many thieves hid in Fan Xin's jurisdiction when they encountered the encirclement and suppression of officers and soldiers.
Under such a circumstance, no matter how hard Ouxin tried to encircle and suppress the thieves, the places under its jurisdiction such as Lei, Lian, Gao, and Zhao were still frequently plundered by thieves.
Zhu Qizhen had appointed Chen Jing, the commander-in-chief of Guangxi, and Ou Xin to jointly encircle and suppress the thieves, and won many victories during this period, but these thieves still did not weaken.
For Guangxi general Fan Xin, the imperial court still trusted him very much.
Soon after, Chen Jing, the commander-in-chief of Guangxi, was held accountable for his failure to recruit thieves, but Fan Xin was promoted to the post of governor of the capital and served as deputy commander-in-chief of Guangdong, while Ou Xin was transferred to replace Chen Jing to defend Guangxi.
When the time came to Chenghua, thieves in the Liangguang area were still very rampant.
Soon after Zhu Jianshen ascended the throne, he made up his mind to pacify the thieves in the two broad areas. Therefore, he appointed generals such as Zhao Fu and Zuo Youdu Yushi Hanyong to lead the imperial army to the south.
Han Yong doubled the journey, straight to the whole prefecture of Guangxi, the 160,000 army led by him was divided into five routes, Ou Xin followed Han Yong's side, led a large army all the way by land and water, fought a mortal battle with the enemy, and successfully attacked the old nest of these thieves, the Dateng Gap.
In this battle, the Ming army destroyed 324 enemy villages and beheaded more than 3,200 people.
Although these thieves were dealt a heavy blow, the rest of the party soon gathered together and plundered Xunzhou and other places under Ouxin's jurisdiction. The imperial court blamed Ou Xin for this, but was eventually forgiven by Zhu Jianshen.
Later, Ou Xin was ordered to enter the dynasty and was in charge of the affairs of the former military capital.
In the spring of the seventh year of Chenghua, Ouxin was stationed in Liaodong as a commander-in-chief. During his tenure, Osin defeated the invasion of the three guards on many occasions.
At that time, many officials had already said that Ou Xin was too old to be the commander-in-chief of Liaodong, and this important job should be recalled. Fortunately, Peng Yi, the governor of Liaodong, came out and said that although Ouxin was over sixty years old, he still beat many brave men in riding and shooting, and he had already made many battle achievements in the Liaodong region, and he should not be recalled.
In this way, the imperial court issued an edict allowing Ou Xin to continue to hold in Liaodong.
Later, the imperial court sent a new Liaodong governor, Chen Yu, to replace Peng Yi. This Chen Yu was a great villain, and Ou Xin refused to give in to his orders, so a lot of friction broke out with him.
In the fourteenth year of Chenghua, Ouxin was impeached and returned to Beijing from Liaodong that winter. Zhu Jianshen sent the eunuch Wang Zhi to deal with the matter, and Wang Zhi chose to shelter Chen Yu and blame Ou Xin for all the faults.
As a result, Ouxin was brutally imprisoned, and then dismissed from his post and lived idle. Ou Xin suffered this drastic change, and his mentality could not stand it, and he finally died of hatred.