Autumn Harvest Uprising
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2023) |
Autumn Harvest Uprising | |||||||
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Part of Chinese Civil War | |||||||
Planned insurrection locations by the August Seventh Conference. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Mao Zedong Li Zhen | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
About 390,000 Hunanese civilians were killed[1] |
Autumn Harvest Uprising | |||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 秋收起义 | ||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 秋收起義 | ||||||||
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The Autumn Harvest Uprising was an insurrection that took place in Hunan and Jiangxi provinces of China, on September 7, 1927, led by Mao Zedong, who established a short-lived Hunan Soviet.
After initial success, the uprising was brutally put down by Kuomintang forces. Mao continued to believe in the rural strategy but concluded that it would be necessary to form a party army.[2]
Background
[edit]In support of the Northern Expedition, Mao was sent to survey peasant conditions in his home province of Hunan. His Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan urged support for rural revolution.[3]
The uprising
[edit]Initially, Mao struggled to garner forces for an uprising, but Li Zhen rallied the peasantry and members of her local[where?] communist troop to join.[4] Mao then led a small peasant army[where?] against the Kuomintang and the landlords of Hunan, successfully establishing a Soviet government. The uprising was eventually defeated by Kuomintang forces within two months after the Soviet was established. Mao and the others were forced to retreat to the Jinggang Mountains on the border between Hunan and Jiangxi provinces, where he encountered an army of miners which would help him in later battles. This was one of the early armed uprisings by the Communists, and it marked a significant change in their strategy. Mao and Red Army founder Zhu De went on to develop a rural-based strategy that centered on guerrilla tactics. This paved the way for the Long March of 1934.
Reasons for the uprising's failure
[edit]The uprising shows the overwhelming importance of an organized military force to the success or failure of an insurrection, the failure reveals that the role and question of military force was given different emphasis by operatives of different levels in the communist party and came to be a topic of serious contention and disagreement which led to the disorganization. An obvious lack of appreciation for rudimentary pre-insurrectionary military organization hints that Mao was more "putschist" (to a point) than his Chinese or Russian superiors.[5]
Mass killings against Hunanese civilians
[edit]Nationalist anti-communist mass killings were directed against all Hunanese civilians. About 80,000 Hunanese were killed in Hunan's Liling and about 300,000 Hunanese were killed in Hunan's Chaling County, Leiyang, Liuyang and Pingjiang.[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Short, Philip (18 December 2016). Mao: The Man Who Made China. Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781786730152.
- ^ Li, Xiaobing. China at War: An Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2012) pp 5–8.
- ^ Hofheinz, Jr. (1977).
- ^ Wu 吴, Zhife 志菲 (2003). "Li Zhen: cong tongyangxi dao kaiguo jiangjun 李贞:从童养媳到开国将军". Renmin Wang. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
- ^ Hofheinz, Roy (1967). "The Autumn Harvest Insurrection". The China Quarterly. 32 (32): 37–87. doi:10.1017/S0305741000047214. ISSN 0305-7410. JSTOR 651405. S2CID 154891728.
- ^ Short, Philip (18 December 2016). Mao: The Man Who Made China. Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781786730152.
Bibliography
[edit]- Hofheinz, Jr., Roy (1977). The Broken Wave: The Chinese Communist Peasant Movement, 1922-1928. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674083912. Reprinted: De Gruyter, 2014 eBook Archived 2018-06-09 at the Wayback Machine
- Li, Xiaobing. China at War: An Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2012) pp 15–16.