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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nie_ShichengNie Shicheng - Wikipedia

    Nie Shicheng (Chinese: 聂士成; pinyin: Niè Shìchéng; Wade–Giles: Nieh Shih-ch'eng; 1836 – July 1900) was a Chinese general of the Qing dynasty who served the imperial government during the Boxer Rebellion.

  2. On June 6, 1900, the Boxers lost 480 dead in a battle after trying to block the passage of Chinese Imperial troops under General Nie Shicheng at a railway near Langfang. At Langfang the Alliance forces arrived on June 11. However, their retreat routes had previously been damaged by Boxers' sabotage.

  3. Nie Shicheng † Dong Fuxiang Ronglu Cao Futian Lin Hei'er (POW) Strength; 6,900 Allied soldiers 20 field guns 4,933 cavalry: 12,000 soldiers 10,000 Tenacious Army; 2,000 Kansu Braves; 17,000 number of Boxers, including many Red Lanterns; Casualties and losses; 250 killed, 500 wounded 320 killed and wounded; 25 killed, 98 wounded; 17 ...

  4. El levantamiento de los bóxers (義和團之亂 o 義和團匪亂), conocido en China como el levantamiento Yihétuán ( chino tradicional: 義和團起義, chino simplificado: 义和团起义, pinyin: Yìhétuán Qǐyì, ‘los puños enhiestos’ o, literalmente: ‘los puños rectos y armoniosos’), fue un movimiento, iniciado en el año de 1898, coincidiendo con la Reforma de los Cien Días, y fina...

  5. Nie Shicheng (Chinese: 聂士成; pinyin: Niè Shìchéng; Wade–Giles: Nieh Shih-ch'eng) (1836 – July 1900) was a Chinese general who served the Imperial government during the Boxer Rebellion. Rising from obscure origins from Hefei, Anhui Province, in the early 1850s, Nie Shicheng he managed to pass the...

  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › Nie_ShichengNie Shicheng - Wikiwand

    Nie Shicheng ( Chinese: 聂士成; pinyin: Niè Shìchéng; Wade–Giles: Nieh Shih-ch'eng; 1836 – July 1900) 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, Nie Shicheng managed to pass the county examinations ...

  7. Title: [China] Victory at Lianshanguan by the soldiers of Generals Song Qing and Nie Shicheng. From its stronghold at Fenghuangcheng, captured at the end of October, the Japanese army advanced towards Fengtian Prefecture. En route they attacked and captured Lianshanguan on 11 November 1894.