Ming dynasty Sichuan and Guizhou aboriginals, including: Li HualongXing JieGuo ZizhangLiu TingChen Lin The Bozhou rebellion (Chinese: 播州之役) was a Miao uprising that occurred in Guizhou and spread to Sichuan and Huguang between 1589 and 1600 during the Ming dynasty.
The war coalesced into a full-scale rebellion with one of the tusi chieftains, Yang Yinglong, at its head, and spread to Sichuan and Huguang where they engaged in widespread looting and destruction.
[4] In 1593 the Wanli Emperor offered Yang Yinglong amnesty if he led his army in the war effort against the Japanese invasion of Joseon.
Yang returned to Guizhou where Sichuan's grand coordinator Wang Jiguang called for him to stand trial in court.
Li Hualong, Liu Ting, Ma Liying, Wu Guang, Cao Xibin, Tong Yuanzhen, Zhu Heling, Li Yingxiang, and Chen Lin converged on Yang Yinglong's stronghold on Lou Mountain (Bozhou District) and quickly captured it, forcing the rebels to flee northwest.