The Tuyuhun and Tanguts regularly raid Chinese…
623 CE
The Tuyuhun and Tanguts regularly raid Chinese settlements along the western Tang frontier.
In 623, the Tuyuhun depart from their homeland in the pastures surrounding Qinghai Lake, known in Mongolian as Kokonur, and invade Gansu.
The Tang general Chai Shao is dispatched to defeat the nomads and prevent further incursions.
The Tuyuhun hold the higher ground and shoot arrows against the encroaching Tang forces.
Chai Shao devises a decoy by sending two dancing girls and a group of musicians to a small hill near the Tuyuhun camp.
The musicians play the pipa, a stringed instrument of foreign origin, while the girls position themselves on top of a hill.
On the hill, the dancing girls perform an erotic dance in front of the nomads.
The attention of the nomads is diverted entirely towards the girls.
The Tuyuhun soldiers break out of their military formation and rush to the hill for a clearer view of the dance.
Seizing the opportunity, Chai Shao surprises the soldiers who are distracted by the performance, and attacks them in the rear with his cavalry.
Over five hundred Tuyuhun soldiers are killed in the ensuing battle, forcing the Tuyuhun's retreat from Gansu.
Hostilities between the Tuyuhun and Tang continued after the battle.