Event class: china, chinese, people, government, republic, japanese, army, wang, communist party, beijing
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Koo Chen-fu | The following year Koo and Wang held preliminary talks in Hong Kong that resulted in the so-called'' 1992 Consensus'' and facilitated negotiations of practical matters. |
Sun Qichang | Following the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, he went into hiding in Shenyang, and later in Beijing, but was discovered after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in February 1951. |
Tang Yulin | In May 1934, Tang became a senior adviser to Song Zheyuan in command of the Beijing Government and 29th Army. |
Lin Biao | Tao probably did not understand Lin's advice, and was subsequently purged in 1967. |
Wen Tsung-yao | After Japan unconditionally surrendered and the Wang Jingwei regime collapsed, Wen Tsung-yao was arrested by the Nationalist Government in Shanghai on September 27, 1945. |
Yi Seok | In October 2004, Yi Seok returned to the royal city of Jeonju upon the invitation of the mayor, to bring new focus to Jeonju's attempt to regain cultural primacy in Korea. |
Lee Myung-bak | On May 5, 2012, the Pyongyang Times newspaper published stories and pictures of Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK, North Korea) workers threatening to'' wipe out'' the Lee clan. |
Zhou Zijian | In 1932, he participated in a peripheral organization of the Communist Party of China, the Great Anti-Imperialist Alliance, for which he undertook underground communications work. |
Tsai Ing-wen | Ma emphasized the importance of the so-called 1992 Consensus and called Tsai an Taiwan independence extremist. |
Lai Shin-yuan | On 20 July 2011, Lai preceded the ceremony to rename the ROC representative office to Hong Kong from Chung Hwa Travel Service to Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Hong Kong, bringing it inline with other ROC representative offices naming around the world. |
Puyi | In 1962 under an arrangement with premier Zhou Enlai, Puyi married his fifth and last wife, Li Shuxian, a nurse of Han Chinese ethnicity. |
Wen Tsung-yao | In October 1911 Xinhai Revolution broke out, Wen Tsung-yao, Wu Tingfang and Zhang Jian declared their support for republicanism. |
Chung Keng Quee | In March 1894, Chung, Keng Quee hosted in his gardens, in the name of Vice Consul Chang, Pi Shih (Cheong Fatt Tze), a dinner to welcome Admiral Ting (see Battle of Yalu River (1894) and Battle of Weihaiwei) and the Chinese Imperial Fleet of warships that he commanded. |
Augustine Henry | He was sent to the remote posting of Yichang (Ichanh) in 1882 in Hubei Province, Central China, to investigate plants used in Chinese medicine. |
Stirling Fessenden | In 1938, he was elected a Secretary-general of Municipal Council, but soon the Japanese occupation authorities claimed that he conspired with the Americans against Japan. |
Lee Yuksa | In 1925 Lee returned to Daegu and along with his brothers, joined the Uiyoldan, an association formed in response to Japanese repression of the Korean Independence Movement. |
Liu Xiaobo | During the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, he was in the United States but decided to return to China to join the movement. |
Choi Ik-hyun | Choi's efforts in encouraging armed resistance through the Righteous Army Movement would last well until 1911, years after he died, in no small part as a result of his instilling of nationalism and the hatred for Japan in his supporters. |
Kang Sheng | Kang allegedly demonstrated his loyalty to Wang Ming by betraying to the Kuomintang secret police a meeting convened on January 17, 1931 by He Mengxiong, who had been strongly opposed to Li Lisan and was disgruntled by Pavel Mif's high-handed role in securing the ascendancy of Wang within the Chinese Communist Party. |
Zhang Chunxian | Zhang is known for his use of a popular microblog service supported by Tencent, which spiked in usage during the 2011 National People's Congress. |
Sun Weishi | Sun's father was killed by the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1927, and Sun was eventually adopted by Zhou Enlai, who later became the first Premier of the People's Republic of China. |
S?gol?ne Royal | Royal visited China in January 2007 ; after speaking with a lawyer in that country she noted to the press that he had pointed out to her that the Chinese legal system was'' faster'' than the French one. |
Deng Yanda | When Sun Yat-sen announced his policy of alliance with the Soviet Union in 1923, Deng strongly supported it and was appointed to the preparatory committee for the Whampoa Military Academy which the Russians helped the Chinese Nationalists build. |
Edwin H. Conger | Conger's arrival in China in July 1898 coincided with the emergence of a violent anti-foreign, anti-Christian movement, the Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists in China (known as'' Boxers'' in English). |
Kathleen Blanco | In 2005, Governor Blanco also visited Asia (primarily Japan, China, and Taiwan). |
Sum Ying Fung | She visited China in 1989, and was in Beijing during the Tiananmen Square protests. |
Wong Nai Siong | In June 1906, Wong Nai Siong met Sun Yat-sen in Singapore and joined the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance. |
Sun Li-jen | Lin Wang As the commander of the Army Training Command and deputy commander of the Republic of China Army in 1947, Sun moved one training facility to Taiwan, independent from the on-going civil war. |
Huang Xing | In 1903, in order to protest against Russia's growing hegemony over Outer Mongolia and Manchuria, Huang organized a volunteer army of over two hundred fellow students in Japan. |
Liu Xiaobo | In 1969, during the Down to the Countryside Movement, Liu's father took him to Horqin Right Front Banner, Inner Mongolia. |
Bo Hi Pak | In 1994, Pak visited North Korea to attend the funeral of President Kim Il Sung, risking legal trouble by the South Korean government in doing so. |
Ma Lin (warlord) | Ma Lin assisted the Xidaotang in filing a lawsuit against Ma Anliang after his death in 1919, to gain recognition for them as a legitimate Muslim sect. |
Ching-cheng Huang | On March 19, 1938, the artists who had formed the new group, Wan-chuan Chang (Zhāng Wànchuán 張萬傳), Jui-Lin Hung (Hóng Ruìlín 洪瑞麟), Dewang Chen (Chén Déwàng 陳德旺), Chi-ch' eng Lu (Lǚ Jīzhèng 呂基正), Chunde Chen (Chén Chūndé 陳春德), Ching-cheng Huang (Huang Qing-cheng 黃清埕), and Liu-jen Teng (Děng Liùrén 等六人) had their first group exhibition. |
Nozu Michitsura | From February -- April 1885, Nozu was sent to Beijing in Qing Dynasty China as a military attaché. |
Kang Sheng | In October 1980, just in advance of commencing the trial of the Gang of Four, Kang Sheng was posthumously expelled from the Chinese Communist Party and the Central Committee formally rescinded Marshal Ye Jianying's eulogy. |
Wei Guoqing | The MR Commander, General Xu Shiyou, was an old ally of Deng Xiaoping and together they sheltered him from the Gang of Four after the April 1976 Tiananmen Incident and Deng's third purge. |
Shintaro Ishihara | This was recorded on film and turned into a video that was sent around the world as the Save Minamiyama Movement In 2010, Ishihara claimed that Korea under Japanese rule was absolutely justified due to historical pressures from Qing Dynasty and Imperial Russia. |
Yeung Ku-wan | Chiang Kai-shek offered a million dollars for this photo and its negative, as it shows Yeung Ku-wan (seated to left of Hirayama Shu, center) in a more honoured position than Sun Yat-sen (standing, center) His relationship with Sun Yat-sen was complicated : Yeung was President (and Sun was Secretary) when his Furen Literary Society first merged with Sun's Revive China Society in 1895 (renamed as the Hong Kong chapter of the Xingzhonghui). |
Zhang Boling | As the Japanese military advanced towards the Chinese interior, Zhang Boling organized a second evacuation to Kunming, Yunnan province in 1938. |
Vo Nguyen Giap | In retaliation, Cambodia's ally China responded by invading the Cao Bang province of Vietnam in January 1979 and once again Giap was in overall responsibility for the response, which drove the Chinese out after a few months. |
K. C. Wu | In 1954, following his son's departure from Taiwan, Wu began to speak out against what he saw were serious problems with the Kuomintang government. |
Lee Bong-chang | In 1931, Lee Bong-chang traveled to Shanghai where he met Kim Gu, president of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea and a leader in the Korean independence movement. |
Jiang Kanghu | In 1939 he was invited by Wang Jingwei to take a position in Wang's Japanese puppet-government based in Nanjing. |
Chen Geng | In March 1933, Chen was sent to Shanghai to have better medical treatment of his leg wounds, and gave some first-hand accounts of the Chinese Soviet Republic in Jiangxi to Agnes Smedley, becoming a source for her book China's Red Army Marches. |
Yu Youren | In 1922, his post as commander is disbanded and he returns to Shanhai where he established Shanghai University along with Ye Chucang and assumes the post as president of the school. |
Wang Yitang | After the Wang Jinwei regime had collapsed, Wang Yitang was arrested by Chiang Kaishek's Government at a hospital of Beiping on December 5, 1945. |
Li Lili | After war with Japan broke out in 1937, she joined the China Film Studio in Chungking, China's wartime capital. |
Kim Chang-ryong | Despite what seems to be commonly believed, Kim Chang-Ryong's involvement in the assassination of Kim Gu is not definite : while Kim seems to have looked after Ahn after the assassination, the chief of the operation was Major Chang En-san, then the commander of the artillery corps, who himself was arrested by Kim in July 1950 and executed in Daegu. |
Hu Jintao | Both Hu and his new counterpart Ma Ying-jeou agreed that the 1992 Consensus is the basis for negotiations between the two sides of the Taiwan strait. |
Ry?kichi Tanaka | In March 1940, Tanaka was promoted to major general, and briefly returned to China as Chief of Staff of the Japanese First Army, during which time he initiated the Three Alls Policy and unsuccessful attempted to woo Chinese warlord Yen Hsi-shan of Shanxi Province to support the Japanese cause. |
Li Peng | During the Tiananmen protests of 1989, Li used his authority as Premier to declare martial law, and in cooperation with Deng Xiaoping, who was the Chairman of the Central Military Commission, to order the June 1989 military crackdown against student pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, Beijing. |
Chiang Kai-shek | In 1926, Chiang led the Northern Expedition to unify the country, becoming China's nominal leader. |
Wang Dazhi | After the People's Republic of China was founded, Wang Dazhi first served as the president of Nanjing Xiaozhuang Normal College, his alma mater, which had been closed due to political reasons in 1930. |
Kang Sheng | In January 1956, Kang made his first public appearance in years at a meeting of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in Beijing. |
Li Changchun | Li Changchun (; born February 1944) was the propaganda chief of the Communist Party of China. |
Kang Sheng | After his fall from the security posts, in December 1946 Kang was assigned by Mao, Zhu De and Liu Shaoqi to review the Party's land reform project in Longdong, Gansu Province. |
Liu Yongzhi | Liu Yongzhi (Chinese : 刘永治 ; November 1944 -) is a general in the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of the People's Republic of China. |
Peng Zhen | Peng was removed as Communist leader in Manchuria after further failure by Lin Biao's forces in March 1946 led to the Communists retreat back to Harbin. |
Ma Bufang | On April 7, 1949 Ma Bufang and Ma Hongkui made a joint announcement in which they said that they would continue to fight the Communists, and they would not make an accord with them. |
Percy Cradock | Yet, the rumour never turned into reality, John Major Chris Patten, the last -LSB- -LSB- Governor of Hong Kong -RSB- -RSB- Cradock was instructed to visit Peking secretly in the end of 1989, trying to maintain the Joint Declaration and to cool down the Communist antipathy in Hong Kong. |
Lim Bo Seng | When the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out in 1937, Lim and other Chinese in Singapore participated in anti-Japanese activities, such as the boycotting of Japanese goods and fund-raising to support the war effort in China. |
John Leighton Stuart | When the invaders overran Beijing in 1937, the Japanese ordered Stuart to fly the puppet regime flag at the Yenching University campus and offer his personal'' thanks'' to the Japanese military for the institution's'' liberation.'' |
Bai Chongxi | Bai personally had around 2,000 Muslims under his control during his stay in Beijing in 1928 after the Northern Expedition was completed, it was reported by TIME magazine that they'' swaggered riotously'' in the aftermath In Beijing, June, 1928, Bai Chongxi announced that the forces of the Kuomintang would seize control of Manchuria, and the enemies of the Kuomintang would'' scatter like dead leaves before the rising wind''. |
Liu Buchan | March 3, 1894 (January 26, (Chinese calendar)), Liu leaded The'' Ding Yuan'' and other five warships arrived in Singapore with the Ding Yu. |
Lin Biao | The American journalist Edgar Snow met Lin Biao in the Communist base of Shaanxi in 1936, and wrote about Lin in his book, Red Star Over China. |
Zhang Yunyi | Zhang left the Whampoa Military Academy and took part in the Second Guangzhou Uprising in 1911. |
Sam Rainsy | while Nhiek Tioulong revealed that he had a Chinese grandfather during a dialogue session with Zhou Enlai in 1954. |
John Gunther Dean | While in Da Nang, South Vietnam, he helped to protect the famous Cham Museum for which he was officially thanked in 2005 by the Vietnamese and French authorities. |
K. P. Chen | After the communist revolution in mainland China, K. P. Chen followed the Kuomintang - led government to Taiwan, though his Shanghai Commercial and Savings Bank was unable to reestablish its headquarters until 1954. |
Kazuo Aoki | He joined a right-wing faction within the LDP in 1960 which was adamantly opposed to Japan's normalization of relations with the People's Republic of China and supported Japan's continued recognition of the Republic of China on Taiwan. |
Cai Tingkai | In November 1933, Cai and fellow 19th Route Army officer Li Jishen rebelled against the ruling Kuomintang regime and, with Jiang Guangnai, they established the Fujian People's Government, on 22 November 1933. |
Henry Lee Hau Shik | When Japan invaded China in 1937, Lee headed the Selangor China Relief Fund in support of China. |
Liu Bocheng | During the Long March, near the end of 1934, Liu was reappointed as Chief of the General Staff of the Red Army and commander of Central Column, which consisted of the majority of the CPC senior leaders, such as Bo, Braun, Zhou and Mao. |
Wu Peifu | In 1939, when the Japanese invited him to be the leader of the puppet government in North China, Wu made a speech saying that he was willing to become the leader of North China again on behalf of the New Order in Asia, if every Japanese soldier on China's soil gave up his post and went back to Japan. |
Zhang Jingyao | In 1933, Zhang became involved in the scheme of the Empire of Japan to set up the monarchy of Puyi in northern China with Japanese money. |
Gao Xingjian | In 1975, he was allowed to go back to Beijing and became the group leader of French translation for the magazine Construction in China (中國建設). |
Deng Xiaoping | After the Gang of Four was purged in October 1976, Deng gradually emerged as the de facto leader of China following Mao's death on 9 September 1976. |
Yilin Zhong | In 2012, she translated'' The Noble Price in Literature 2012 Award Ceremony Speech'' (Awarded to Chinese writer Mo Yan) into Chinese and published in China, which was the only complete full version released in China without any official abridgment. |
Peng Dehuai | In August 1927 Peng was approached by an old military comrade, Huang Gonglue : Peng was sympathetic, but could not decide to join the Party. |
Huang Tzu | In 1935, Huang established the Shanghai Orchestra, the first all-Chinese orchestra, and taught many famous Chinese musician, such as He Luding, Zhu Ying, Jiang Dingxian, Lin Sheng, Lin Shengxi and Liu Xuean. |
Ai Weiwei | On 3 April 2011, Ai was arrested at Beijing Capital International Airport just before catching a flight to Hong Kong and his studio facilities were searched. |
Zhang Zuoji | Born in Bayan County, Heilongjiang, Zhang joined the Communist Party of China (CPC) in June 1972. |
Zhou Enlai | Zhou Enlai and -LSB- -LSB- Anastas Mikoyan are among them -RSB- -RSB- After Stalin died on March 5, 1953, Zhou left for Moscow and attended Stalin's funeral four days later. |
Richard Frey | In 1945 he succeeded in synthesizing Penicillin for the first time in China despite harsh conditions in Yan' an -- the political and military base of the Communist Party of China. |
Jamalul Kiram III | Kiram forged the century-old relationships between Sulu and China during a royal visit to Dezhou, Shandong Province, People' Republic of China in September 1999 with an 87-man entourage. |
Taketora Ogata | In 1940, he joined the Taisei Yokusankai (大政翼賛会,'' Imperial Rule Assistance Association'') which was Japan's para-fascist organization created by Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe on October 12, 1940, to promote the goals of his Shintaisei ('' New Order'') movement. |
Wang Zuo | On September 30, 1927, Mao Zedong arrived at Sanwan (三湾) village of Yongxin (永新) county, just north of Jinggangshan, with the remnants from the abortive Autumn Harvest Uprising, and sent letters to both Yuan Wencai and Wang Zuo to ask their help to establish a communist base locally. |
Kenji Doihara | Then, after using the Japanese funds to raise and re-equip a new volunteer force, on 1 April 1932 he led his troops to Tsitsihar, re-establishing the Heilongjiang Provincial Government as part of Republic of China and resumed the fight against the Japanese. |
Rao Yutai | In 1949, Rao chose to stay at Peking University, upon the establishment of the People's Republic of China. |
Liu Zhidan | Liu's base became a refuge for the other defeated Red Armies and grew to become the Yan' an Soviet, the primary base of the Chinese Communists until 1947. |
Homer Lea | In 1899, while recuperating from a bout of smallpox, he learned of a recently organized Chinese society called the Bao Huang Hui (Protect the Emperor Society ; also known as the Chinese Empire Reform Association), which Kang Youwei, a former adviser to the Chinese emperor, helped establish to restore the Guangxu Emperor to his throne. |
Lin Biao | After Mao's second-in-command, Liu Shaoqi, was denounced as a'' capitalist roader'' in 1966, Lin Biao emerged as the most likely candidate to replace Liu as Mao's successor. |
Zhou Enlai | By 1924, the Soviet-Nationalist alliance was expanding rapidly and Zhou was summoned back to China for further work. |
K. P. Chen | In 1916, both K. P. Chen and Li Ming stood up for Chang Kia-ngau and accused the government of wrongfully issuing the order when Chang's Bank of China's Shanghai office got into trouble for refusing to obey the governments order to suspend banknote remittance. |
Yikuang, Prince Qing | After the fall of the Qing Dynasty in 1911, the Republic of China was established. |
Li Rui (writer) | Actually, Li's peasant tales are more concerned with the gloomy aspects of rural China than with the optimistic depiction of socialist construction characteristic of this school'' (Leung, 2004). |
Fang Zhenwu | He left when the Japanese occupied Hong Kong in 1941, but was assassinated by Kuomintang agents on his way back to Guangdong with crowds of refugees in December 1941, near Zhongshan, in Guangdong province, China. |
John S. Service | Prior to the outbreak of the Chinese Civil War in 1946, Service had predicted that the CPC would prevail, thanks to their ability to stamp out corruption, gain popular support, and to organize grass root organizations. |
Guan Linzheng | In August 1949, the acting president Li Zongren appointed him as commander-in-chief of the ROC army, because Chiang Kai Shek put Guan's old rival General Chen Cheng in charge of Taiwan and greatly favored him, General Guan decided to retire in Hong Kong in that November. |
Yeung Ku-wan | In October 1895, the Revive China Society planned to launch an uprising in Guangzhou, with Yeung directing the uprising from Hong Kong. |