- Qi
Xieyuan (Chinese: 齊燮元; Wade–Giles: Ch'i Hsieh-yuan;
April 28, 1885 -
December 18, 1946), born Qi Ying, with a
courtesy name of Qi
Fuwan and the art...
- Army in
Fujian Province. One of his
first acts was to
support his ally Qi
Xieyuan,
moving up from the
south in a move that was
responsible for the defeat...
-
ambushed and
killed by
local aboriginals. The
commander on the scene, Zhu
Xieyuan,
immediately requested an
additional 200,000
troops as well as
three million...
- 6th
Route Army Wu Huawen:
Commander in
Chief of the 3rd
Front Army Qi
Xieyuan: Commander-in-Chief of the
North China Appea****t army,
Supervisor of...
- infamy. In
September 1924, the
Zhili clique general and
Jiangsu governor Qi
Xieyuan demanded control of Shanghai,
which belongs in his province, from Lu Yongxiang's...
- Treaty.
Beijing was
seized by the
combined forces of Sun
Chuanfang and Qi
Xieyuan. The
Chinese Communist Party opened its
Fourth Congress in Shanghai. Born:...
- Vil.
Zhongxing Vil. Zhanggeng[sic] Vil.
Qingwen Vil. Caotung[sic] Vil.
Xieyuan Vil.
Yongji Vil.
Minan Vil.
Xinsheng Vil.
Wenhua Vil. Youju[sic] Vil. Shalun...
-
Infantry Division 126th
Infantry Division East Group: Commander-Jiang
Xieyuan (Deputy
Commander of
Guangzhou Military Region) 55th Army Commander-Zhu...
-
trafficking operations. In 1924, Lu Yongxiang's
forces were
defeated by Qi
Xieyuan and from then on Wang's An**** Gang was
often emplo**** by the New Guangxi...
-
Zhizhong (張治中) Song
Zheyuan (宋哲元) Tang
Shengzhi (唐生智) Qin
Dechun (秦德純) Qi
Xieyuan (齊燮元)
Military of the Qing
dynasty Military history of
China before 1912...