Battle of Mount Li
The Battle of Mount Li was a decisive clash that occurred in Ancient China in 771 BC near the twin cities of Haojing and Fengjing, at the foot of Mount Li. The battle was fought between the royal army of King You of Zhou and the combined armies of the states of Shen and Zeng, supported by the Quanrong. The outcome was a crushing victory for the insurgents that caused the collapse of the Western Zhou, and ushered in the beginning of the Eastern Zhou and Spring and Autumn period.
Background
According to the Shiji, King You of Zhou assumed the throne at a very young age. He was married to the daughter of the Marquess of Shen, a Zhou vassal, and they had a son named Yijiu. King You was given a new concubine named Bao Si by one of his officers' son in return for his father's release from prison. Bao Si was extremely beautiful and King You favoured her over the queen, which caused major grievances within the court. Later, Bao Si gave birth to a boy called Bofu. King You ultimately deposed his wife and Yijiu in favor of Bao Si and Bofu.King You was concerned that Bao Si rarely smiled. She showed little interest in music, drink, or anything else. He was in such a state of despair that he summoned all of the court officials and offered a reward of one thousand pieces of gold to anyone who could make the queen laugh. A corrupt officer suggested using the beacon towers of Mount Li to call the armies of the eastern vassal states. King You liked the idea and brought Bao Si in his chariot to the top of the mountain. The beacons were lit and the vassal states sent their armies in a hurry to the capital, where they met in great numbers. Messengers were sent to inform them there was in fact no danger. Bao Si was seen laughing as the armies left the mountain foothills in confusion. The king liked it so much that he repeated the ruse many times. One day, however, the Marquess of Shen launched an attack on Zhou, and none of the eastern vassals sent troops to assist the king, culminating in the defeat at Mount Li.
Later historians argued whether the fall of the Western Zhou was caused primarily by Bao Si's machinations, or King You's inability to listen to sound advice and his murder of loyal officials. Recent analysis conducted by Taniguchi Yoshisuke and Jae-hoon Shim look instead at factional divisions within the Zhou court as the reason for its collapse. Continuing this, Li Feng has argued that the origin of the conflict lay in King You's desire to centralize his own power. After forcing senior ministers from his father's reign into retirement, King You further sought to assert his authority by installing a new wife and heir, forcing Yijiu and his mother back to Shen. Later, The king sent an army to Shen to demand that the marquess hand over his daughter and grandson. He refused, called upon his allies of Zeng and the Quanrong, defeated the royal army, and marched on Haojing.
Battle
King You ordered his men to light the beacon tower, and put his minister Guo Shifu in charge of his infantry and Guogong in charge of his chariots and sent them ahead to hold on the enemy. Seeing his numerical disadvantage, Guo Shifu ordered Guogong to tease the enemies and ordered his own regiment to run back to the capital. Guogong was left alone and desperately led his 200 chariots to try to stop the attack, but failed and was killed.Upon seeing that not a single ally would come to his aid, Duke Huan of Zheng, King You's uncle, summoned his own guard and merged it with the remnants of the royal army, called along all the court ministers and their families and fled the capital with the King through the east gate. Shortly after, the city was taken by the Quanrong, who sacked its riches, enslaved its people and burned down all of its buildings. The Marquess of Shen's men tried to stop the fire to no avail, and went into a desperate search for their lord's daughter. They found her at last in the burning palace and took her out. The forces of Shen refused to persecute the king, so the Quanrong did it alone.
King You's refugees were fleeing hastily eastwards, but the mounted units of the Quanrong began to approach them quickly and surround them from the sides. King You could already see the fort of Mount Li in the horizon when his fellows' wives and children tired out and could follow no longer. Standing already on the foothills of Mount Li, the Zhou people stopped and fell under heavy attack. Duke Huan was slain and King You tried to form up his men, but they were soon annihilated. Bao Si was taken as trophy for the Quanrong leader.
Aftermath
The battle ended in a decisive victory for Shen. The twin cities were sacked and left in ruins, Bao Si was captured, and Bofu, still a child, was killed in front of her. King You was slain at Mount Li alongside Duke Huan of Zheng. Much of Guanzhong, the heartland of Zhou, was conquered and occupied by the Quanrong. The Marquess of Shen forced Bao Si to become his wife but later freed her. Yijiu was proclaimed king, and the capital was eventually moved to Luoyang.The death of King You at Mount Li marked the end of the Western Zhou period, thus resulting in the decimation of royal authority and the de facto independence of the various eastern vassal states. The state of Qin would soon after come to occupy the entirety of the Zhou's former heartland in Guanzhong, before uniting all of China and establishing a new dynasty.