Born in a military family, Yang Qilang practiced martial arts from an early age after his parents Yang Ye and She Saihua, as well as his 6 elder brothers. The novel Records of the Two Songs, South and North portrayed him as young, impulsive and reckless, and mentioned a time in battle where he without notifying anyone decided to lead 3000 men for a night raid of the enemy's camp. He was ambushed and returned with only half the men, and was ordered to be executed by his father. He eventually received a severe beating of 40 blows which left him bloodied.
Killing Pan Bao in competition
One day a martial arts competition was held in the Tianqi Temple in the Song Dynasty capitalKaifeng, featuring Pan Bao from the powerful Pan family. With no sense of sportsmanship, Pan had made the rules "to the death", confident that nobody dared to kill him considering his background: his sister had married Emperor Taizong, while his father Pan Renmei was a high-ranking minister and military commander. Yang Qilang who had sneaked out of the house was angered by Pan's arrogance and joined the competition, defeating and eventually killing Pan when the latter continued to dare him and insult his family. Realizing what he had done, Yang Qilang voluntarily submitted to the local police. A grief-stricken Pan Renmei pleaded to Emperor Taizong to have the entire Yang family executed, for "murdering the emperor's relative should be treated as treason". However, realizing the competition rules set by Pan Bao, Emperor Taizong merely sentenced Yang Qilang to 3 years in prison. Later, when Yang Qilang was pardoned by the emperor in face of an imminent war with the Liao Dynasty and reinstated to the military to "expiate crimes by good deeds", Pan Renmei decided to carry out "justice" himself.
Death by hundreds of arrows
Facing an invading Liao Dynasty army, commander-in-chief Pan Renmei still focused on revenge against the Yangs, and sent Yang Ye and his 7 sons to a trap without aid or food. During the battle of Golden Beach, only Yang Qilang, his 6th brother Yang Yanzhao, their father and a few soldiers were left, as the enemy forces closed in. Yang Liulang asked his younger brother to fight a way out to the headquarters for aid. When a badly injured and tired Yang Qilang finally arrived, Pan Renmei had him arrested, tied up on a pole, and ordered his soldiers to shoot arrows at him. For whatever reason, the first round of arrows all missed, so Pan Renmei picked up a bow and did the job himself. With dozens of arrows piercing his chest, Yang Qilang kept cursing at Pan Renmei until his death. Pan Renmei had the corpse thrown into the Yellow River which was later discovered by Yang Yanzhao's remaining men downstream.
According to History of Song, Yang Ye's 7th eldest son Yang Yanbin, along with a couple brothers, was made a palace guard after his father's death in 986. Since he was the only son whose appointment was delayed, historians believe he was less than 15 years old that year. Nothing is known about him otherwise. The name Yang Yansi probably came from general Yang Si, a military general who fought the Liao Dynasty alongside Yang Ye's most distinguished son Yang Yanzhao for much of Emperor Zhenzong of Song's reign. Despite sharing the surname, he came from a different hometown than Yang Yanzhao, but some commoners probably thought they were brothers, explaining the mix-up. Yang Qilang's tomb was built in 1755 in today's Dai County, Shanxi along with the Yang family ancestral hall, and the name on the headstone is Yang Yanxing.