Battle of Jinzhou

1948 battle

41°05′45″N 121°07′33″E / 41.0957°N 121.1258°E / 41.0957; 121.1258Result Communist victoryBelligerents Republic of China Army

People's Liberation Army

  • Northeast Field Army
Commanders and leaders Fan Hanjie (POW) Lin Biao
Luo Ronghuan
Liu YalouStrength ~150,000 250,000Casualties and losses 20,000 deaths, 80,000 captured 24,000
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Campaigns of the Chinese Civil War
First Phase (1927–1937)
  • Autumn Harvest Uprising
  • Encirclement campaigns
  • Long March
Resumption of hostilities (1945–1949)
Aftermath

Battle of Chinchow (simplified Chinese: 锦州之战; traditional Chinese: 錦州之戰; pinyin: Jǐnzhou Zhīzhàn) took place between the People's Liberation Army and the National Revolutionary Army during the Liaoshen Campaign in the Chinese Civil War. The battle was a turning point in the campaign, which eventually led to capture of Northeast China by the Communist Party.

Background

Chinchow is a key strategic point where the main route from central China through Shanhai Pass enters Manchuria. The fall of Jinzhou to the Communists would allow the Communist to drive into the North China Plain. Mao Zedong addressed the importance of capturing Jinzhou in a telegram to the Communist commanders in the Northeast, saying that the key to the success of the entire Liaoshen Campaign is "to strive to capture Jinzhou in one week."[1]

Outside the city

To attack Chinchow, it was necessary for the PLA to clear away the Nationalist positions in the outskirts of Jinzhou. Between 8 and 13 October, the Communists captured all the Nationalist strongholds outside Jinzhou, which set up the final assault on 14 October. In the meantime, in the Battle of Tashan nine PLA divisions defeated eleven NRA divisions attempting to reinforce Jinzhou.

Final assault

The PLA massed 900 artillery pieces, and launched the final assault on Chinchow on 14 October 1948. The entire defensive line of Jinzhou was broken through soon after. Nationalist resistance ended the next day on 15 October.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Mao Zedong Military Anthology, Page 480-482

Bibliography

  • Lary, Diana (2015). China's Civil War: A Social History, 1945-1949. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107294417.
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Pre-1945Post-1945