Jiao Province Campaign | |||||||
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The Jiao Province Campaign. Red is Eastern Wu and blue is Cao Wei/Western Jin. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Eastern Wu |
Cao Wei (until 266) Western Jin (from 266) | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Sun Xu † Liu Jun † Xiu Ze † Gu Rong Yu Si Xue Xu Tao Huang Lương Kỳ |
Lã Hưng Huo Yi Cuan Gu Ma Rong Yang Ji Mao Jiong Dong Yuan † Wang Su | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
First counteroffensive: Unknown Second counteroffensive: 100,000+[1] | Unknown |
The Jiao Province Campaign, also known as the Jiaozhi Rebellion (Chinese: 交阯之亂; Vietnamese: Giao Chỉ chi loạn),[2] was a military conflict between the states of Eastern Wu and Cao Wei from 264 to 266 and later between Wu and the Western Jin from 266 to 271 during the Three Kingdoms period of China. The conflict was initially a local rebellion against Wu in Jiaozhi Commandery in 263, but in 264, Wei (replaced by Jin in 266) intervened and took large parts of Wu's territory in Jiao and Guang provinces (廣州; covering present-day Guangdong and Guangxi). Wu went on the counteroffensive in 268, and by 271, they drove out the Jin forces and recovered all their lost territory. The campaign would be one of the last major victories of Wu during the final years of the Three Kingdoms.