He Long

Marshal of the People's Republic of China (1896–1969)
贺龙
Marshal He Long in 1955
Member of Central Committee of the Chinese Communist PartyIn office
October 1954 – 9 June 1969ChairmanMao ZedongVice Premier of the People's Republic of ChinaIn office
October 1954 – 9 June 1969PremierZhou Enlai Personal detailsBorn
賀龍

(1896-03-22)22 March 1896
Sangzhi, Hunan, Qing EmpireDied9 June 1969(1969-06-09) (aged 73)
Beijing, ChinaPolitical partyChinese Communist Party (1926–1969)OccupationGeneral, politician, writerNickname(s)贺老总 (Hè lǎozǒng, "Old Chief He")
贺胡子 (Hè húzi, "mustachio He")Military serviceAllegiance People's Republic of ChinaBranch/service People's Liberation Army Ground ForceYears of service Republic of China (1914-1920)
National Revolutionary Army (1920-1927)
Chinese Communist Party (1927–1969)RankMarshal of People's Republic of ChinaCommands Battles/wars Awards Order of August the First (1st Class Medal) (1955)
Order of Independence and Freedom (1st Class Medal) (1955)
Order of Liberation (China) (1st Class Medal) (1955)

He Long (simplified Chinese: 贺龙; traditional Chinese: 賀龍; pinyin: Hè Lóng; March 22, 1896 – June 9, 1969) was a Chinese Communist revolutionary and a Marshal of the People's Republic of China. He was from a poor rural family in Hunan, and his family was not able to provide him with any formal education. He began his revolutionary career after avenging the death of his uncle, when he fled to become an outlaw and attracted a small personal army around him. Later his forces joined the Kuomintang, and he participated in the Northern Expedition.

He rebelled against the Kuomintang after Chiang Kai-shek began violently suppressing Communists, when he planned and led the unsuccessful Nanchang Uprising. After escaping, he organized a soviet in rural Hunan (and later Guizhou), but was forced to abandon his bases when pressured by Chiang's Encirclement Campaigns. He joined the Long March in 1935, over a year after forces associated with Mao Zedong and Zhu De were forced to do so. He met with forces led by Zhang Guotao, but he disagreed with Zhang about the strategy of the Red Army and led his forces to join and support Mao.

After settling and establishing a headquarters in Shaanxi, He led guerrilla forces in Northwest China in both the Chinese Civil War and the Second Sino-Japanese War, and was generally successful in expanding areas of Communist control. He commanded a force of 170,000 troops forces by the end of 1945, when his force was placed under the command of Peng Dehuai and He became Peng's second-in-command. He was placed in control of Southwest China in the late 1940s, and spent most of the 1950s in the Southwest administering the region in both civilian and military roles.

He held a number of civilian and military positions after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949. In 1955, his contributions to the victory of the Chinese Communist Party were recognized when he was named one of the Ten Marshals, and he served as China's vice premier. He did not support Mao Zedong's attempts to purge Peng Dehuai in 1959 and attempted to rehabilitate Peng. After the Cultural Revolution was declared in 1966, he was one of the first leaders of the PLA to be purged. He died in 1969 when a glucose injection provided by his jailers complicated his untreated diabetes.

Biography

Early life

He Long in his youth
He in 1925.

He Long was a member of the Tujia ethnic group.[1] Born in the Sangzhi, Hunan, he and his siblings, including He Ying, grew up in a poor peasant household, despite his father being a minor Qing military officer.[2] His father was a member of the Gelaohui (Elder Brother Society), a secret society dating back to the early Qing dynasty. A cowherd during his youth, he received no formal education.[3] When He was 20 he killed a local government tax assessor who had killed his uncle for defaulting on his taxes.[4] He then fled and became an outlaw, giving rise to the legend that he began his revolutionary career with just two kitchen knives.[3] After beginning his life as an outlaw he gained a reputation as a "Robin Hood-like figure". His signature weapon was a butcher knife.[2]

Around 1918 He raised a volunteer revolutionary army that was aligned with a local Hunan warlord,[4] and in 1920, his personal army joined the National Revolutionary Army.[5] In 1923 He was promoted to command the Nationalist Twentieth Army. In 1925 He ran a school for training Kuomintang soldiers. While running this school, He became close with some of his students who were also Chinese Communist Party (CCP) members.[4] During the 1926 Northern Expedition, He commanded the 1st Division, 9th Corps of the National Revolutionary Army.[6] He served under Zhang Fakui during the Northern Expedition.[4]

In late 1926 He joined the CCP.[5] In 1927, after the collapse of Wang Jingwei's leftist Kuomintang government in Wuhan and Chiang Kai-shek's suppression of communists, He left the Kuomintang and joined the Communists, commanding the 20th Corps, 1st Column of the Red Army.[4] He and Zhu De planned and led the main force of the Nanchang Uprising in 1927. In the Nanchang Uprising He and Zhu led a combined force of 24,000 men and attempted to seize the city of Nanchang, but they were not able to secure it against the inevitable Kuomintang attempt to retake the city. The campaign suffered from logistical difficulties, and the communists suffered 50% casualties in the two months of fighting. Most of He's soldiers who survived surrendered, deserted, and/or rejoined the KMT. Only 2,000 survivors eventually returned to fight for the Communists in 1928, when Zhu reformed his forces in Hunan.[7]

After his forces were defeated, He fled to Lufeng, Guangdong. He spent some time in Hong Kong, but was later sent by the CCP to Shanghai, then to Wuhan.[4] Chiang Kai-shek continuously tried to persuade him rejoin the Kuomintang, but failed.[citation needed]

Communist guerrilla

He Long in the National Revolutionary Army (1939)

After the failure of the Nanchang Uprising, He turned down an offer by the CCP Central Committee to study in Russia and returned to Hunan, where he raised a new force in 1930.[6] His force controlled a broad area of the countryside in the Hunan-Hubei border region, around the area of Lake Hong, and organized this area into a rural soviet. In mid-1932 Kuomintang forces targeted He's soviet as part of the Fourth Encirclement Campaign. He's forces abandoned their bases, moved southwest, and established a new base in northeast Guizhou in mid-1933.[8]

In 1934 Ren Bishi joined He in Guizhou with his own surviving forces after also being forced to abandon his soviet in another Encirclement Campaign. Ren and He merged forces, with He becoming the military commander and Ren becoming the commissar.[9] He joined the Long March in November 1935, over a year after forces led by Zhu De and Mao Zedong were forced to evacuate their own soviet in Jiangxi.[5] He's ability to resist the Kuomintang was partially due to his position on the periphery of Communist-controlled territory.[2] While on the Long March He's forces met Communist forces led by Zhang Guotao in June 1936, but both He and Ren disagreed with Zhang about the direction of the Long March, and He eventually led his forces into Shaanxi to join Mao Zedong by the end of 1936. In 1937 He settled his troops in northwestern Shaanxi and established a new headquarters there.[9] Because the Second Army of the Chinese Red Army under He Long's command was one of the few Communist forces to arrive in Yan'an mostly intact, his force was able to assume the responsibility of protecting the new capital after their arrival.[2]

When the Red Army was reorganized into the Eighth Route Army in 1937, He was placed in command of the 120th Division.[5] From late 1938 to 1940 He fought both the Japanese army and Kuomintang-affiliated guerrillas in Hubei.[9] He's responsibilities increased during the Second Sino-Japanese War, and in 1943 he was promoted to be the overall commander of Communist forces in Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu, Ningxia, and Inner Mongolia.[5] By the end of World War II He commanded a force of approximately 175,000 troops across northwestern China. He's most notable subordinates included Zhang Zongxun, Xu Guangda, and Peng Shaohui.[10]

He was successful in expanding Communist base areas throughout the period of World War II. Part of He's success was due to the social confusion caused by Japan's Ichi-Go offensive in the areas of China that Japanese operations effected. He was frequently able to expand Communist areas of operation by allying with local, independent guerrilla forces who were also fighting the Japanese. He's experience fighting the Kuomintang and the Japanese led him to question Mao's unconditional emphasis on the importance of ideological guerrilla warfare at the expense of conventional tactics and military organization.[11]

In October 1945, one month after the Japanese surrender, the command of He's forces was transferred to Peng Dehuai, which operated as the "Northwest Field Army". He became Peng's second-in-command, but spent most of the rest of the Chinese Civil War in central CCP headquarters, in and around Yan'an.[10] After the Japanese surrender, in 1945, He was elected to the CCP Central Committee, and his influence rose within both the military and the communist political system. Near the end of the Chinese Civil War He was promoted to command the First Field Army, which was active in Southwest China.[11] After the Communists won the civil war in 1949, He spent most of the 1950s in both civilian and military roles in the southwest.[9]

He Long with Deng Xiaoping (left) and Zhu De (right) (1949)

In the People's Republic

He Long (center) with Marshals Nie Rongzhen (left) and Luo Ronghuan at Tiananmen (1959)

He's military accomplishments were recognized when he was promoted to being one of the Ten Marshals in 1955,[11] and he served in a number of civilian positions. He was made Vice Premier. He headed the National Sports Commission, and in that role facilitated sports exchanges with the Soviet Union and the eastern European countries.[12]: 139  He was one of the most well-traveled members of the CCP elite, and led numerous delegations abroad, meeting with leaders of other Asian countries, the Soviet Union, and East Germany.[8]

After Mao Zedong purged Peng Dehuai in 1959, Mao appointed He to the head of an office to investigate Peng's past and find reasons to criticize Peng. He accepted the position but was sympathetic to Peng, and stalled for over a year before submitting his report. Mao's prestige weakened when it became widely known that Mao's Great Leap Forward had been a disaster, and He eventually presented a report that was positive, and which attempted to vindicate Peng.[13] Peng was partially rehabilitated in 1965, but then purged again at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution 1966.[14]

Jiang Qing denounced He in December 1966 of being a "rightist" and of intra-CCP factionalism. Following Jiang's accusations He and his supporters were branded an anti-CCP element and quickly purged.[15] He's persecutors singled him out by labeling him the "biggest bandit".[11] He was the second highest-ranking member of the Military Affairs Commission at the time that he was purged, and the method in which he and those close to him were purged set the pattern for multiple later purges of the PLA leadership throughout the Cultural Revolution.[15]

After being purged, He was placed under indefinite house arrest for the last two and a half years of his life. He described the conditions of his imprisonment as a period of slow torture, in which his captors "intended to destroy my health so that they can murder me without spilling my blood". During the years that he was imprisoned, his captors restricted his access to water, cut off his house's heat during the winter, and refused him access to medicine to treat his diabetes.[16] He died in 1969 after being hospitalized for the severe malnutrition that he developed while under house arrest. He died soon after being admitted to hospital, after a glucose injection complicated his chronic diabetes.[17]

He was posthumously partially rehabilitated by Mao in 1974, then fully rehabilitated after Deng Xiaoping came to power in the late 1970s.[citation needed] A stadium in Changsha was named after him in 1987.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Winchester 1
  2. ^ a b c d Lew 11
  3. ^ a b Whitson & Huang 28
  4. ^ a b c d e f Leung 49
  5. ^ a b c d e China at War 162
  6. ^ a b Whitson & Huang 34
  7. ^ China at War 147
  8. ^ a b Leung 49-50
  9. ^ a b c d Leung 50
  10. ^ a b Domes 43
  11. ^ a b c d China at War 163
  12. ^ Minami, Kazushi (2024). People's Diplomacy: How Americans and Chinese Transformed US-China Relations during the Cold War. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501774157.
  13. ^ Rice 185-186
  14. ^ Domes 116-117
  15. ^ a b Central Intelligence Agency ii
  16. ^ Chung 391
  17. ^ The Cambridge History of China 213

Sources

  • The Cambridge History of China. Vol 15: "The People's Republic". Part 2: "Revolutions". Eds. Roderick MacFarquhar & John K. Fairbank. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1991. ISBN 0-521-24337-8.
  • "Intelligence Report: Mao's 'Cultural Revolution' III. The Purge of the P.L.A. and the Stardom of Madame Mao". Central Intelligence Agency. June 1968. Retrieved May 27, 2012.
  • China at War: An Encyclopedia. Ed. Li Xiaobing. United States of America: ABC-CLIO. 2012. ISBN 978-1-59884-415-3. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
  • Chung, Jang. White Swans: Three Daughters of China. New York, NY: Touchstone. 2003. ISBN 0-7432-4698-5.
  • Domes, Jurgen. Peng Te-huai: The Man and the Image. London: C. Hurst & Company. 1985. ISBN 0-905838-99-8.
  • Rice, Edward E. Mao's Way. Berkeley: University of California Press. 1974. ISBN 0-520-02623-3.
  • Leung, Edward Pak-wah. Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Civil War. United States of America: Scarecrow Press. 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4435-4.
  • Lew, Christopher R. The Third Chinese Revolutionary War, 1945-1949: An Analysis of Communist Strategy and Leadership. The USA and Canada: Routelage. 2009. ISBN 0-415-77730-5
  • Whitson, William W., & Huang Chen-hsia. The Chinese High Command: A History of Communist Military Politics, 1927-71. New York: Praeger Publishers. 1973.
  • Winchester, Simon. "China's Ancient Skyline". The New York Times. July 5, 2007. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ten Marshals of the People's Republic of China
  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1954–1959)
Premier
12 Vice-Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

01 Ministry of Internal Affairs Xie Juezai
02 Ministry of Foreign Affairs Zhou EnlaiPSC
03 Ministry of National Defense Peng DehuaiP
04 Ministry of Public Security Luo Ruiqing
05 Ministry of Justice Shi Liang
06 Ministry of Supervision Qian Ying♀
07 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
08 State Infrastructure Commission Bo Yibo → Wang Heshou
09 Ministry of Finance Li XiannianP
010 Ministry of Food Zhang Naiqi
011 Ministry of Commerce Zeng Shan
012 Ministry of Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
013 Ministry of Heavy Industry/ Ministry of Metallurgical Industry Wang Heshou
014 Ministry of Chemical Industry Peng Tao
015 Ministry of Building Materials Industry Lai Jifa

016 First Ministry of Machine Building Huang Jing
017 Second Ministry of Machine Building Zhao Erlu
018 Ministry Of Fuel Industries Chen Yu
019 Ministry of Geology Li Siguang
020 Ministry of Building Construction Liu Xiufeng
021 Ministry of Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
022 Ministry of Light Industry Jia Tuofu → Sha Qianli
023 Ministry of Local Industry Sha Qianli
024 Ministry of Railways Teng Daiyuan
025 Ministry of Transport Zhang Bojun
026 Ministry of Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan
027 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
028 Ministry of Forestry Liang Xi
029 Ministry of Water Resources Fu Zuoyi
030 Ministry of Labor Ma Wenrui

031 Ministry of Culture Shen Yanbing
032 Ministry of Higher Education Yang Xiufeng
033 Ministry of Education Zhang Xiruo
034 Ministry of Health Li Dequan
035 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He LongP
036 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
037 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission He Xiangning
038 Third Ministry of Machine Building Zhang Linzhi
039 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
040 National Technical Commission Huang Jing
041 Ministry of Urban Development Wan Li
042 Ministry of Food Industry Li Zhuchen
043 Ministry of Aquatic Products Xu Deheng
044 Ministry of State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
045 Ministry of Timber Industry Luo Longji

  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1959–1965)
Premier
16 Vice-Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

01 Internal Affairs Qian Ying → Zeng Shan
02 Foreign Affairs Chen Yi P
03 National Defense Peng DehuaiPLin BiaoP
04 Public Security Luo RuiqingXie Fuzhi
05 National Basic Construction Commission Chen YunPSC
06 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
07 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
08 National Science and Technology Commission Nie Rongzhen
09 Finance Li XiannianP
010 Food Sha Qianli
011 Commerce Cheng ZihuaYao Yilin
012 Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
013 Aquatic Products Xu Deheng

014 Metallurgical Industry Wang Heshou
015 Chemical Industry Peng Tao
016 First Ministry of Machine Building Zhao ErluDuan Junyi
017 Second Ministry of Machine Building Song RenqiongLiu Jie
018 Coal Industry Zhang Linzhi
019 Petroleum Industry Yu Qiuli
020 Geology Li Siguang
021 Building Construction Liu Xiufeng
022 Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
023 Light Industry Li Zhuchen
024 Railways Teng Daiyuan
025 Transport Wang Shoudao
026 Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan

027 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
028 State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
029 Forestry Liu Wenhui
030 Water Resources and Electric Power Fu Zuoyi
031 Labor Ma Wenrui
032 Culture Mao Dun
033 Education Yang Xiufeng
034 Ministry of Health Li Dequan
035 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He LongP
036 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
037 Foreign Cultural Liaison Commission Zhang Xiruo
038 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission Liao Chengzhi
039 Agricultural Machinery Chen Zhengren
040 Machinery Industry Zhang Liankui → Sun Zhiyuan

  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1965–1975)
Premier
16 Vice-Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

01 Foreign Affairs Chen Yi P
02 National Defense Lin BiaoPSC
03 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
04 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
05 Science and Technology Commission Nie Rongzhen
06 Public Security Xie Fuzhi
07 Internal Affairs Zeng Shan
08 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
09 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
010 State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
011 Forestry Liu Wenhui
012 Aquatic Products Xu Deheng
013 Metallurgical Industry Lü Dong
014 Chemical Industry Gao Yang
015 First Ministry of Machine Building Duan Junyi
016 Second Ministry of Machine Building Liu Jie

017 Third Ministry of Machine Building Sun Zhiyuan
018 Fourth Ministry of Machine Building Wang Zheng [zh]
019 Fifth Ministry of Machine Building Qiu Chuangcheng
020 Sixth Ministry of Machine Building Fang Qiang [zh]
021 Seventh Ministry of Machine Building Wang Bingzhang
022 Eighth Ministry of Machine Building Chen Zhengren
023 Coal Industry Zhang Linzhi
024 Petroleum and Chemical Industries Yu Qiuli
025 Water Resources and Electric Power Fu Zuoyi
026 Geology Li Siguang
027 Building Construction Li Renjun [zh]Liu Yumin
028 Building Materials Industry Lai Jifa
029 Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
030 Light Industry Li Zhuchen
031 Railways Lü Zhengcao 032 Transport Sun Daguang

033 Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan
033 Material Management Yuan Baohua
034 Labor Ma Wenrui
035 Finance Li XiannianP
036 Food Sha Qianli
037 Ministry of Commerce Yao Yilin
038 Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
039 Culture Lu Dingyi
040 Education He Wei [zh]
041 Higher Education Jiang Nanxiang
042 Ministry of Health Qian Xinzhong
043 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He Long
044 Foreign Cultural Liaison Committee Zhang Xiruo
045 Foreign Economic Liaison Committee Fang Yi
046 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission Liao Chengzhi
047 Second Ministry of Light Industry Xu Yunbei [zh]
048 National Basic Construction Commission Gu Mu

  • v
  • t
  • e
Before 11th Plenum
(Aug 1966)
Standing Committee
(PSC)
  1. Mao Zedong (Chairman)
  2. Liu Shaoqi (Vice-Chairman)
  3. Zhou Enlai (Vice-Chairman)
  4. Zhu De (Vice-Chairman)
  5. Chen Yun (Vice-Chairman)
  6. Lin Biao (added May 1958, Vice-Chairman)
  7. Deng Xiaoping (General Secretary)
Other members
in surname stroke order
Alternate members
After 11th Plenum
Standing Committee
  1. Mao Zedong (Chairman)
  2. Lin Biao (Vice-Chairman)
  3. Zhou Enlai
  4. Tao Zhu (purged Jan 1967)
  5. Chen Boda
  6. Deng Xiaoping (purged Jan 1967)
  7. Kang Sheng
  8. Liu Shaoqi (purged Jan 1967)
  9. Zhu De
  10. Li Fuchun
  11. Chen Yun
Other members
in surname stroke order
Alternate members
  1. Ulanhu (purged Aug 1966)
  2. Bo Yibo (purged Jan 1967)
  3. Li Xuefeng
  4. Song Renqiong (purged Aug 1967)
  5. Xie Fuzhi
7th→8th→9th→10th→11th→12th→13th→14th→15th→16th→17th→18th→19th→20th
  • v
  • t
  • e
Provisional Cabinet
1st Cabinet
2nd Cabinet
3rd Cabinet
  1. Lin Biao (died 1971)
  2. Chen Yun (dismissed 1969)
  3. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1968, reinstated 1973)
  4. He Long (died 1969)
  5. Chen Yi (died 1972)
  6. Ke Qingshi (died 1965)
  7. Ulanhu (dismissed 1968)
  8. Li Fuchun (died 1975)
  9. Li Xiannian
  10. Tan Zhenlin
  11. Nie Rongzhen
  12. Bo Yibo (dismissed 1967)
  13. Lu Dingyi (dismissed 1966)
  14. Luo Ruiqing (dismissed 1966)
  15. Tao Zhu (died 1969)
  16. Xie Fuzhi (died 1972)
4th Cabinet
  1. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1976, reinstated 1977)
  2. Zhang Chunqiao (dismissed 1977)
  3. Li Xiannian
  4. Chen Xilian
  5. Ji Dengkui
  6. Hua Guofeng
  7. Chen Yonggui
  8. Wu Guixian(resigned 1977)
  9. Wang Zhen
  10. Yu Qiuli
  11. Gu Mu
  12. Sun Jian
5th Cabinet (1978)
5th Cabinet (1980)
5th Cabinet (1982)
6th Cabinet
7th Cabinet
8th Cabinet
9th Cabinet
10th Cabinet
  1. Huang Ju (died 2007)
  2. Wu Yi ♀
  3. Zeng Peiyan
  4. Hui Liangyu
11th Cabinet
12th Cabinet
13th Cabinet
14th Cabinet
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