Nieh Shih-ch'eng (Wade-Giles version of name; see, I've been researching!) was a Chinese general of the Qing dynasty who served the imperial government during the Boxer Rebellion. Rising from obscure origins from Hefei, Anhui Province, in the early 1850s, Nieh Shih-ch'eng managed to pass the county examinations for bureaucratic positions, but due to the Taiping rebellion he was forced to abandon a bureaucratic career and become a soldier. Oh no! Forced to abandon bureaucratic misery (and graft) and be an honorable man and soldier!
Throughout his career, Nieh Shih-ch'eng attempted to reform Chinese military forces to be more effective and along Western lines. Following China's loss in the First Sino-Japanese War, Nieh Shih-ch'eng was able to restructure his army and it renamed as the Wuwei Front Division. Trained by Russian military advisers and equipped with German and Russian weaponry, it was considered the most modern of the Qing armies of the time.
Nieh was not an active participant in the political intrigues of the Qing court, but was considered politically conservative and supported Empress Dowager Cixi against the Hundred Days' Reform. In his suppression of the Boxer Rebellion, Nie was in an ambiguous position. On one hand, as a general in the Qing army, he pursued a vigorous offensive against rebel guerilla forces in early 1900. Condemned by the pro-Boxer faction of the imperial court, Nie achieved impressive success inflicting large numbers of casualties during the year.
On the other hand, he could not accept the invasion of China by the Eight-Nation Alliance so he fought against the Alliance forces. Because Nie's forces killed so many Boxers, it was Dong Fuxiang's Kansu Braves who instead allied with the Boxers to oppose the Seymour Expedition, a multinational force of over 2,000 men, in its march to Beijing.
On 9 July 1900, while personally leading a counterattack against Russian forces under the command of General Anatoly Stessel in the Battle of Tientsin, Nie was fatally wounded when an artillery shell exploded nearby.
In the Nankai District of Tianjin in present-day China, a "Nie Shicheng Martyrs Monument" is located in the area, to General Nie Shichen who died in battle in the Boxer Rebellion at the Battle of Tientsin.
Here is the artilleryman who is now a standard bearer. Don't look toooooo closely at his hands! Before I mounted the figure on the base I touched up the flag and a few places on his uniform. The flag is from North Star Military Figures on the Crusader Miniatures site under the Boxer Rebellion.
The base is from Litko and I used a hobby knife to line out the cobblestones and various greys and shades on the cobblestones. Add some hobby sand, figures, static grass and lichen and it doesn't look to bad.
No comments:
Post a Comment