Wang Xiaobo and Li Shun Uprising was a peasant uprising in the early Northern Song Dynasty in China. At the beginning of the Northern Song Dynasty, most of the land in Xia Chuan was occupied by bureaucrats, dignitaries and temples. Many farmers become customers (including border households), pay heavy taxes, and class contradictions are extremely acute. After Song Taizong ascended the throne, natural disasters occurred frequently in the Sichuan Gorge, and people were starving. In the second year of Chunhua (99 1), the rebels led by Ren Yin captured Changzhou (now Rongchang, Chongqing) and Hezhou (now Hechuan, Chongqing). In the third year of Chunhua (992), peasant uprisings broke out in Rongzhou (now Rongxian, Sichuan), Rongzhou (now Yibin, Sichuan), Zizhou (now Zizhong, Sichuan) and Fushun.
In the fourth year of Chunhua (993), the Yongkang Army broke out Wang Xiaobo and Li Shun Uprising in Qingcheng County (now south of Dujiangyan, Sichuan). Wang Xiaobo put forward the idea of "equal wealth", with more than 10,000 followers, accounting for Qingcheng and Pengshan. Soon, Wang Xiaobo died and Li Shunji became the leader. The following year, Chengdu was occupied, and the Dashu regime was established to control most parts of Sichuan. The Song government sent troops to suppress Chengdu, and Li Shun was killed. The rest insisted on fighting and failed in 995. Although this vigorous uprising failed, it dealt a heavy blow to the landlord class. Since then, the name "Bianhu" has rarely appeared in Sichuan, and Mai Bo's business has been cancelled.