Battle of Taiyuan

Battle of Taiyuan
Part of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the interwar period

Chinese troops departing Taiyuan for the frontline, October 1937
Date (1937-09-01) (1937-11-09)September 1 – November 9, 1937
(2 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result Japanese victory
Belligerents

China

Japan

Commanders and leaders
Yan Xishan
Yang Aiyuan
Wei Lihuang
Zhu De
Fu Zuoyi
Isogai Rensuke
Itagaki Seishiro
Demchugdongrub
Units involved
  • 5th division
  • 20th division
  • Provisional air division
  • 1st independent mixed brigade
  • 11th independent mixed brigade
  • 12th independent mixed brigade
  • 15th independent mixed brigade
  • 9th Mongolian cavalry division
  • Strength
    6 Army Groups, 288,801 men 5 divisions, ~140,000 men
    Casualties and losses
    Western Claim : 50,000+ killed and wounded

    Chinese Claim :
    2,812 officers and 47,770 soldiers killed
    5,457 officers and 71,930 soldiers wounded
    52 officers and 1,716 soldiers missing
    Western Claim : Thousands of casualties

    Chinese Claim : 27,472 casualties

    Japanese Claim :
    5th division : 5,712 casualties
    20th division : about 2,300 casualties
    109th division : 93 casualties
    15th mixed brigade and other units from the Kwantung Army : 1,917 casualties

    The Battle of Taiyuan (Japanese: 太原作戦; Chinese: 太原會戰) was a major battle fought in 1937 between China and Japan named for Taiyuan (the capital of Shanxi province), which lay in the 2nd Military Region. The battle concluded in a victory for Japan over the National Revolutionary Army (NRA), including part of Suiyuan, most of Shanxi and the NRA arsenal at Taiyuan, and effectively ended large-scale organized resistance in the North China area.

    Japanese forces included the Japanese Northern China Area Army under Hisaichi Terauchi, elements of the Kwantung Army, and elements of the Inner Mongolian Army led by Demchugdongrub. Chinese forces were commanded by Yan Xishan (warlord of Shanxi), Wei Lihuang (14th Army Group), and Fu Zuoyi (7th Army Group), as well as Zhu De who led the Eighth Route Army of the Chinese Communist Party (under the Second United Front alliance). Occupation of the territories gave the Japanese access to coal from Datong in northern Shanxi, but also exposed them to attacks by the guerrilla forces of the Nationalist army including the Eighth Route Army, tying down many Japanese troops which could have been diverted to other campaigns.