Yao Uprising in Datengxia, Central Guangxi (1442-1539) from the Ming Dynasty to Jiajing. Since the eighth year of Hongwu (1375), the Yao people in Datengxia have been resisting the oppression of the Ming Dynasty. In the seventh year of orthodoxy (1442), Shouer led the Yao people's uprising, cracked down on corrupt officials and severely punished powerful landlords. Soon killed. Hou Dagou took over the battle for leadership. It has successively captured prefectures and counties, and its influence has spread to Gao, Lian, Lei, Zhao, Shao and Wu, and the team has grown to more than 10,000 people. In the first year of Chenghua (1465), the Ming Dynasty sent troops160,000 to besiege Dateng Gorge, and Hou Dagou died. The rest, led by Hou Zhengang, invaded Zhou Xun (now Guiping) and once captured Rongteng County. The struggle lasted for decades. Five years later (15 10), the insurgents became active again and wandered along the river for hundreds of miles. In order to completely suppress the uprising of the Yao people in Datengxia, the Ming court sent more than 50 thousand troops to surround Datengxia in eighteen years and slaughtered it. The Yao people retreated from the valley and the uprising failed. After the Ming Dynasty, Garbo, British newspaper and Zhou Zhi were all edited here to strengthen their rule.
Datengxia Uprising, the uprising of Yao and Dong people in Datengxia area of Guangxi against the rule of Ming Dynasty. Dateng Gorge is also known as Duanteng Gorge and Yongtong Gorge. Located between Wuxuan and Guiping in the middle and lower reaches of Qianjiang River, it is about a hundred miles long, with rolling mountains and swift rivers on both sides. Between Bitan Beach and Nutan Beach in Guiping County, there are vines as thick as buckets, which connect the two banks. People cross the river by this, so this gorge is called Dateng Gorge. Taking this as the center, it includes Fiona Fang, about 600 miles southeast of Guangxi, including Zhou Xun, Wuzhou, Pingle and Liuzhou. In Datengxia area, Yao, Dong and other ethnic minorities live together with some Han people, especially Yao. The Ming government implemented the policy of "returning farmland to flow" in this area earlier, seized the land of Yao and Tong residents by force, and exploited the local residents severely by means of salt monopoly and monopoly. Even by preventing salt from entering Guangxi, the Yao and Dong people were forced to submit, thus arousing fierce resistance from people of all ethnic groups in Datengxia area.