Control of the Tarim Basin
Ban Chao, like his predecessors Huo Qubing and Wei Qing from the earlier-half of the Han Dynasty before him, is said to have been extremely effective at expelling the Xiongnu from the Tarim Basin, and at bringing the various people of the Western Regions under Chinese rule during the time of the Emperor . This helped secure and flourish the trade routes we have come to know nowadays as the Silk Road. He was generally outnumbered, but skillfully played on their divisions. The kingdoms of Loulan, Khotan and Kashgar came under Chinese rule.
Ban Chao was recalled to Luoyang, but then sent again to the Western Region area four years later, during the reign of the new emperor . He obtained the military help of the Kushan Empire in 84 in repelling the Sogdians who were trying to support the rebellion of the king of Kashgar, and the next year in his attack on Turpan, in the eastern Tarim Basin. Ban Chao ultimately brought the whole of the Tarim Basin under Chinese control.
In recognition for their support to the Chinese, the Kushans requested, but were denied, a princess, even after they had sent presents to the Chinese court. In retaliation, they marched on Ban Chao in 90 with a force of 70,000, but, exhausted by the expedition, were finally defeated by the smaller Chinese force. The Yuezhi retreated and paid tribute to the Chinese Empire from then on, until they managed to set their own king in Kashgar in 116.
Expedition to the doorstep of Europe
Ban Chao became in 91, and was based at Kucha. In 97, Ban Chao crossed the Tian Shan and mountains with an army of 70,000 men comprised entirely of light cavalry and mounted infantry in a campaign against the Xiongnu/Huns, who were harassing the trade routes now known as the Silk Road. The Han general made an alliance with the Parthian king and established his base on shores of the Caspian Sea and at Antiochia Margiana , the eastern outpost of the Parthian Kingdom. From here he reportedly sent an envoy named Gan Ying to Daqin . Gan Ying left the first recorded Chinese account of Europe, although he actually only reached the Black Sea, after being convinced to turn back by Parthian traders who had no interest in promoting direct Han and Roman contacts.
The Han Chinese army's forts established under the alliance with the Parthians was a distance of only a few days march to the Parthian capital of Ctesiphon, itself only about 32 miles from present-day Baghdad, and the Han forces held the region for several years. In 116, the Roman Emperor Trajan advanced into Parthia to Ctesiphon and came within one day's march of the Chinese border garrisons, but direct contacts apparently never took place. However, J. Innes Miller speculates that Trajan's Parthian campaigns "should be interpreted to some extent in the light" of these Chinese actions. Some time after this, the first of several Roman embassies to China is recorded in Chinese sources, coming from the sea route in 166, and a second one in 284.
Ban Chao was created the Marquess of Dingyuan for his services to the Empire and returned to the capital Luoyang at the age of 70 years old, and before long died there in 102. Following his death, the power of the Xiongnu in the Western Territories increased again, and subsequent Chinese emperors were never to reach so far to the west.
According to a Chinese saying Ban Chao was one of the most prominent actors in the expansion of China to the west, on a level with Zhang Qian:
:''In the time of the Western Han there was Zhang Qian,''
:''In the Eastern Han there was Ban Chao.''
A family of historians
Ban Chao also belonged to a family of historians. His father was Ban Biao who started the ''History of the Western Han Dynasty'' in 36, which was completed by his son Ban Gu and his daughter Ban Zhao. Ban Chao was probably the key source for the cultural and socio-economic data on the Western Regions contained in the ''Hanshu''.
Ban Chao's son Ban Yong participated in military campaigns with his father and continued to have a central military role in the Tarim Basin into the 120s.
Ban Chao's family:
* Ban Biao
** Ban Gu
** Ban Chao
** Ban Zhao
Famous Quotes
* "If you don't enter the tiger's den, how can you catch the tiger's cub?"
* "Clear water can not harbor big fish, clean politics can not foster harmony among the general public"
Ban Chao in idioms
: ''See'' four-character idiom:
* "Throw away your and join the military!" based on his words "A brave man has no other plan but to follow Fu and Zhang Qian's footsteps and do something and become somebody in a foreign land. How can I waste my life on writing? in ''Hou Hanshu''.
* "Clear water harbors no fish."
Ban Chao of today
is a frigate built in Taiwan based on the -design. It is currently in service for the Republic of China Navy.
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