Background
Chang was born in Huaiyuan County, Anhui.
Chang was born in Huaiyuan County, Anhui.
He was famous for his bravery and formidable prowess in battle, which earned him the nickname of "Chang Ten Thousand", because he alone was said to be as effective as a force of 10,000 troops. He joined the Red Turban Rebellion in 1355 to overthrow the Mongol-ruled Yuan dynasty in China. In the sixth month of that year, he followed Zhu Yuanzhang on a battle with the Yuan army that took place at Caishi (near present-day southern Ma"anshan, eastern bank of the Yangtze River).
He was subsequently promoted to the rank of yuanshuai (equivalent of marshal).
He was granted the title "Duke of East" (鄂國公) by Zhu in 1366. In 1367, Chang followed Xu Da on a military campaign north and conquered the Yuan capital, Khanbaliq, in the following year, thereby ending Mongol rule in China.
In 1369, Chang died of illness on the return journey to Nanjing in the west of present-day Longguan County, Hebei. When Zhu Yuanzhang heard of Chang"s death, he wrote a poem mourning Chang and posthumously granted Chang the title "Prince of Kaiping" (開平王) and the posthumous name "Zhongwu" (忠武).
Chang Yuchun had two sons, Chang Mao (常茂) and Chang Sheng (常升).
Chang appears as a minor character in Louis Cha"s wuxia novel The Heaven Sword and Dragon Saber. He is wounded in a fight with some Yuan soldiers but is saved by Zhang Sanfeng. He agrees to bring Zhang Wuji (the protagonist) with him to Butterfly Valley to seek treatment from the eccentric physician, Hu Qingniu.
He participates in various battles against Yuan forces and eventually helps Zhu Yuanzhang establish the Ming dynasty.
Chang Yuchun is said to be the creator of the martial art "Kaiping spear method". Chang"s religion and ethnic background is a controversial issue in Chinese historian circles.
According to Bai Shouyi, Fu Tongxian, Jin Jitang, Ma Yiyu and Qiu Shusen (they are all Hui people except Qiu), Chang was from the Hui ethnic group. Wen Yong-ning argued that Chang might not be Hui, based on Chang"s family traditions and offspring and the status of the Semu in the Yuan dynasty.
In a later paper, Li Jianbiao mentioned that Wen"s work was speculative and not convincing.
In the novel, he is a member of the Ming Cult, a rebel movement seeking to overthrow the Yuan dynasty.