Everything about Feng Yuxiang totally explained
Feng Yuxiang (
1882–
1948) was a
warlord during
Republican China.
As the son of an officer in the
Qing Imperial Army, Feng spent his youth immersed in the military life. He joined the army at age 16 and proved himself to be hard working and motivated.
Feng, like many young officers, was involved in revolutionary activity and was nearly executed for treason. He later joined
Yuan Shikai's
Beiyang Army and converted to
Christianity in 1914. Feng's career as a warlord began soon after the collapse of the Yuan Shikai government in 1916. Feng, however, distinguished himself from other regional militarists by governing his domains with a mixture of paternalistic
Christian socialism and military discipline (he was reputed to have liked
baptizing his troops with water from a
fire hose), thus earning the nickname the 'Christian General'. In the early 1920s, Feng rose to prominence in the
Zhili clique of warlords, named so because their base of power was centred around
Zhili. This Zhili Clique defeated the
Fengtian clique, headed by
Zhang Zuolin, father of
Zhang Xueliang, in the
First Zhili-Fengtian War. It was at this time that Feng also began to move closer to the
Soviet Union.
In the
Second Zhili-Fengtian War of 1924, organizing the
Guominjun, Feng Yuxiang along with
Hu Jingyi and
Sun Yue betrayed his fellow warlords, an act that contributed to the weakening of the Zhili Clique and would later open the door for the
Northern Expedition. It also gave Zhang Zuolin control of
Beijing. During the Northern Expedition, Feng shifted loyalties again, this time supporting
Chiang Kai-shek to the detriment of Zhang Zuolin, who was forced to evacuate
North China. By 1929 Feng's
Guominjun clique controlled most of north-central China, but because he was under increasing pressure from the expanding power of the
Nanjing government, he and
Yan Xishan launched the
Central Plains War against Chiang Kai-shek but were defeated by forces loyal to Nanjing.
Stripped of his military power, Feng spent the early 1930s criticizing Chiang's failure to resist Japanese aggression. On
May 26,
1933, Feng Yuxiang became commander-in-chief of the "
Chahar People's Anti-Japanese Army Alliance", with
Ji Hongchang as frontline commander
(External Link
). With a strength claimed by Feng to be over 100,000 men, Ji Hongchang's army pushed against
Duolun, and by July 1933, drove the Japanese and
Manchukuoan troops out of
Chahar Province.
By late July, Feng Yuxiang and Ji Hongchang established, at
Kalgan, the "Committee for Recovering the four provinces of the Northeast". Chiang Kai-shek, fearing that communists had taken control of the Anti-Japanese Allied Army, launched a concerted siege of the army with 60,000 men. Surrounded by Chiang Kai-shek and the Japanese, Feng Yuxiang resigned his post, while Ji Hongchang fought on for a while before seeking asylum in
Tianjin in January 1934.
Between 1935 and 1945, however, Feng Yuxiang supported the KMT and held various positions in the Nationalist army and government. From 1935 to 1938 he was the Vice-President of the National Military Council and a member until 1945. After the
Second Sino-Japanese War began in 1937 he was Commander in Chief of the 6th War Area.
After
World War II, he traveled to the
United States where he was an outspoken critic of the
Truman administration’s support for the Chiang regime. He died in a shipboard fire on the
Black Sea en route to the Soviet Union in 1948 and his remains were buried with honors in
China in 1953.
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