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Founding General of the People's Republic of China

author:Big cousin of rural Buyi

On September 23, 1955, President Mao Zedong of the People's Republic of China signed a knighthood decree conferring the rank of Marshal of the People's Republic of China on 10 senior generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. The chronological list of titles is as follows:

Zhu De

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

 

Zhu De (December 1, 1886 – July 6, 1976), courtesy name Zhu Daijie, formerly known as Zhu Daizhen, was a great Marxist, a great proletarian revolutionary, statesman, and military figure, one of the main founders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, the founding father of the People's Republic of China, and an important member of the party's first generation of central leadership with Comrade Mao Zedong as the core.

Peng Dehuai

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Peng Dehuai (24 October 1898 – 29 November 1974), male, formerly known as Dehua, was born in Pengjiaweizi, Xiangtan County, Hunan Province. Founding Marshal of the People's Republic of China, proletarian revolutionary, military, politician, Chinese one of the founders and leaders of the People's Liberation Army.

Lin Biao

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Lin Biao (December 5, 1907 – September 13, 1971) was a Marshal of the People's Republic of China (1955). militarist. His original name was Lin Zuoda (林祚大), the character Yang Chun (阳春), and yu rong (毓蓉); he had used the names Yu Rong, Yu Rong, You Yong, and Li Jin.

He joined the Communist Party of China in 1925; during the Jinggangshan period, he successively served as battalion commander, regiment commander, army commander, and corps commander; during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the commander of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army; during the Liberation War, he served as commander of the Northeast Field Army, commanding major battles such as the Liaoshen Campaign and the Pingjin Campaign; and after liberation, he successively served as vice chairman of the National Defense Commission, minister of national defense, and vice chairman of the Central Military Commission.

 Liu Bocheng 

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Liu Bocheng (December 4, 1892 – October 7, 1986), formerly known as Liu Mingzhao, was a native of Kaizhou, Chongqing. He is an outstanding member of the Communist Party of China, a marshal of the People's Republic of China, one of the founders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, a great proletarian revolutionary, a military scientist, a Marxist military theorist, and a military educator. He joined the army during the Xinhai Revolution and joined the Communist Party of China in 1926. He successively participated in the Northern Expedition, the August 1 nanchang Uprising, the Agrarian Revolutionary War, the Long March, the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, and the War of Liberation. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as the second secretary of the Southwest Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, the chairman of the Southwest Military and Political Committee, the president and political commissar of the Military Academy of the people's liberation army of the Chinese, and the vice chairman of the People's Revolutionary Military Committee of the Central People's Government. In 1955 he was awarded the rank of Field Marshal. He died in Beijing on October 7, 1986, at the age of 94.

He Long

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

He Long (22 March 1896 – 9 June 1969), originally known as He Wenchang (何文常), was a Chinese poet. Hunan Sangzhi people. A great proletarian revolutionary, military man, and one of the founders and principal leaders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. In his career of revolutionary struggle for more than half a century, he made important contributions to China's old democratic revolution, new democratic revolution, socialist revolution and construction, and established immortal merits.

He Long is an outstanding leader of the Communist Party of China, the People's Republic of China, and the People's Liberation Army of Chinese. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Marshal of the People's Republic of China and the Order of August 1st Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the First Class, and the Liberation Medal of the First Class.

Chen Yi

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Chen Yi (August 26, 1901 – January 6, 1972), male, known as Shi jun, Zi Zhonghong, Sichuan Lezhiren, was a member of the Communist Party of China and one of the Ten Marshals of the People's Republic of China. Chinese founder and leader of the People's Liberation Army, military man. He was vice premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China, minister of foreign affairs of the People's Republic of China, and the first mayor of the Shanghai Municipal People's Government.

Luo Ronghuan 

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Luo Ronghuan (羅荣桓) (November 26, 1902 – December 16, 1963), formerly known as Luo Shenzhen (羅慎镇), was a Chinese poet. He was born in Nanwan Village, Hanshui Township, Hengshan County, Hunan Province (now part of Ronghuan Town, Hengdong County). After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Luo Ronghuan served as chief procurator of the Supreme People's Procuratorate and member of the Political and Legal Committee of the Government Council. He was the founding father of the People's Republic of China and one of the Ten Marshals of China.

Xu Xiangqian 

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Xu Xiangqian (November 8, 1901 – September 21, 1990), courtesy name Zijing, was born in Yong'an Village, Wutai County, Shanxi Province. In March 1927, he joined the Communist Party of China. Xu Xiangqian is an outstanding member of the Communist Party of China, a tried and tested proletarian revolutionary and military expert, a loyal communist fighter, one of the founders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, a marshal of the People's Republic of China, and an outstanding leader of the party and the state.

Nie Rongzhen

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Nie Rongzhen (29 December 1899 – 14 May 1992), courtesy name Fu Biao, was a native of Shiyuan, Wutan Township, Jiangjin County, Sichuan Province (now Jiangjin District, Chongqing). He joined the Communist Party of China in March 1923 and went to the Soviet Union in 1924 to study. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as secretary general of the Central Military Commission and acting chief of general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, vice chairman of the National Defense Commission, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, vice premier of the State Council and director of the State Science and Technology Commission, director of the National Defense Science and Technology Commission, honorary director of the China National Committee on Aging, and honorary president of the China Invention Association.

 Ye Jianying

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Ye Jianying (1897.04.28 – 1986.10.22), formerly known as Ye Yiwei, was a native of Meixian County, Guangdong Province, a tried and tested loyal communist fighter, a great proletarian revolutionary, statesman, and military figure, one of the founders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, an outstanding leader who has long held important leadership positions in the party and the state, and one of the ten marshals of the People's Republic of China. Comrade Ye Jianying is an outstanding leader who has long held important leading posts in the party and the state; he is an important member of the first and second generations of the central leadership collective of the Communist Party of China with Comrade Mao Zedong and Comrade Deng Xiaoping as the core; he is one of the founding fathers of the People's Republic of China who are highly respected and respected; he is an outstanding leader of our party, state, and army; he has stepped forward at countless crucial moments, saved countless lives, changed the destiny of a country, and enjoyed a lofty prestige and status in the international community. He is regarded as one of the most influential representative figures since the founding of the People's Republic of China.

Founding Generals - 10 Generals

  On September 23, 1955, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a knighthood decree awarding 10 senior generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army the rank of grand general. The chronological list of titles is as follows:

Su Yu

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Su Yu (August 10, 1907 – February 5, 1984), formerly known as Su Duozhen, was born in Huitong, Hunan. Chinese proletarian revolutionary and military figure, the main leader of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and the head of the Ten Great Generals of the People's Republic of China.

In 1927, he joined the Communist Party of China, participated in the Nanchang Uprising, and then entered Jinggangshan, where he participated in all five anti-"hui suppression" and all five anti-"encirclement and suppression" wars. During the Long March, he remained in the south to organize guerrilla warfare. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the deputy commander of the second detachment of the New Fourth Army, and the deputy commander of the Jiangnan Command and the Northern Jiangsu Command. In 1941, he was appointed commander of the First Division of the New Fourth Army, and later commander of the Sixth Division. During the Second Kuomintang Civil War, he served as commander of the Central China Field Army, deputy commander of the East China Field Army, acting commander and acting political commissar, and mainly commanded the Battle of Gaoyou, the Battle of Xu (Zhou) Hai (Zhou) section of the Longhai Line, the Battle of Suzhong, the Battle of Menglianggu, the Battle of Jinan, the Battle of Huaihai, the Battle of Crossing the River, and the Battle of Shanghai. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as chief of the general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, member of the Standing Committee of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China, and vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the Fifth National People's Congress.

On September 27, 1955, he was awarded the rank of Grand General and awarded the Order of August 1st Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom first class, and the Liberation Medal first class.

Xu Haidong

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

 Xu Haidong (June 17, 1900 – March 25, 1970), formerly known as Yuanqing, was a native of Xincheng Town, Dawu County, Hubei Province.[ He is one of the main leaders of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army and the Chinese People's Liberation Army, a famous military figure, and a general of the Chinese People's Liberation Army.

He joined the Communist Party of China in 1925, participated in the jute uprising, and successively served as the commander of the Independent Fourth Division of the Red Fourth Front of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, the commander of the Red Twenty-fifth Army, and the commander of the Red Fifteenth Army, and successfully defended the northern Shaanxi base area. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the brigade commander of the 344th Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army, the deputy commander of the Jiangbei Headquarters of the New Fourth Army and the commander of the Fourth Detachment. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he served as a member of the People's Revolutionary Military Commission and other positions. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Grand General, and was awarded the Order of August 1st Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the First Class, and the Liberation Medal of the First Class. He was a member of the First, Second and Third National Defense Commissions and a member of the Eighth and Ninth Central Committees of the Communist Party of China.

Huang Kecheng

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Huang Kecheng (October 1, 1902 – December 28, 1986) was born on October 1, 1902 to a poor peasant family in Yongxing County, Hunan Province. He joined the Communist Party of China in 1925. In 1926, he participated in the Northern Expedition. In 1928, he participated in leading the Yongxing Nianguan Rebellion during the Shonan Uprising, and led his troops to accompany Zhu De and Chen Yi to Jinggangshan. He once served as the commander of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, the political commissar of the division, the director of the military political department, and the acting director of the political department of the Third Red Army.

During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the director of the Organization Department of the General Political Department of the Eighth Route Army, the political commissar of the 344th Brigade, the political commissar of the 2nd and 4th Columns, the commander and political commissar of the 5th Column, the commander and political commissar of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army, and the secretary of the Party Committee of northern Jiangsu Province.

After the victory of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he marched into the northeast, led the creation of the West Manchuria base area, and served as the commander of the West Manchuria Military Region, the deputy secretary and acting secretary of the West Manchuria Branch of the CPC, the deputy commander, logistics commander, and political commissar of the Northeast Democratic United Army, the secretary of the Jichareliao Branch of the CPC and the political commissar of the Military Region, and the political commissar of the Second Corps of the Northeast Field Army. After the liberation of Tianjin, he served as secretary of the Tianjin Municipal CPC Committee and director of the Military Control Commission.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as vice chairman of the Hunan Military and Political Committee, deputy chief of general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, director and political commissar of the General Logistics Department, secretary general of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China, vice minister of national defense, chief of the general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, secretary of the Secretariat of the Eighth CPC Central Committee, vice governor of Shanxi Province, and adviser to the Central Military Commission. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955.

At the Lushan Conference in 1959, together with Peng Dehuai and others, they were mistakenly designated as "anti-party groups." He was brutally persecuted during the Cultural Revolution. In December 1978, he was rehabilitated. He died on December 28, 1986, at the age of 84.

 Chen Geng

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Chen Geng (February 27, 1903 – March 16, 1961), formerly known as Chen Shukang, was born on February 27, 1903 in Xiangxiang, Hunan. Born as a general, his grandfather was a general of the Xiang Army. Chinese proletarian revolutionary and military, general of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and excellent leader of the national and Chinese People's Liberation Army. He is one of the founders of new China's national defense science, technology and education undertakings.

In 1952, Chairman Mao Zedong ordered Chen Geng to prepare for the establishment of the Kazakh Military Industry (Chinese the Military Engineering College of the People's Liberation Army). One of the important leaders of the Central Special Branch.

He joined the Communist Party of China in 1922. In 1924, he entered the first phase of the Whampoa Military Academy. After graduation, he stayed on as a deputy captain and company commander. He participated in the suppression of the rebellion of the Shang Dynasty and the crusade against Chen Jiongming. Later, during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he successively served as the brigade commander of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army. After the Northern Expedition, the Nanchang Uprising, the Long March, the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, the War of Liberation, and the Korean War, he made great contributions to the cause of the people's liberation.

He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955. He was awarded the Order of August 1st Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the First Class, and the Liberation Medal of the First Class.

He died in Shanghai on March 16, 1961, at the age of 58.

 Tan Zheng

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Tan Zheng (14 June 1906 – 6 November 1988), formerly known as Tan Shiming ( 谭 Shiming ) , was born on June 14 , 1906 in Xiangxiang , Hunan Province. Proletarian revolutionary, military man, communist fighter, general of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, outstanding leader of the national and Chinese People's Liberation Army, one of the ten generals of the People's Republic of China.

In 1927, he served as a clerk and secretary in the special service battalion of the General Headquarters of the Second Army of the National Revolutionary Army. In September 1927, he participated in the Autumn Harvest Uprising. In October 1927, he joined the Communist Party of China. During the Agrarian Revolutionary War, he served as the secretary of the Thirty-first Regiment of the Red Fourth Army, the secretary general of the Military Commission of the Fourth Red Army, the director of the Training Department of the Political Department, and the director of the Organization Department of the Political Department of the Red Twelfth Army. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as director of the Rear Political Department of the Eighth Route Army, deputy director of the General Political Department, and deputy political commissar and director of the Political Department of the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia-Jinsui United Defense Army. During the Liberation War, he served as director of the Political Department of the Northeast Democratic United Army, the Northeast Military Region and the Northeast Field Army, the deputy political commissar and director of the Political Department of the Fourth Field Army, and a member of the Standing Committee of the Central China Bureau. After the founding of New China, he served as the third political commissar of the Central And Southern Military Region and the Fourth Field Army, the first deputy secretary of the Central and Southern Bureau, the first deputy director and director of the General Political Department of the People's Liberation Army, the vice minister of national defense, the deputy secretary of the Central Supervision Commission, the secretary of the People's Liberation Army Supervision Commission, and the standing committee member of the Central Military Commission.

In September 1955, he was awarded the rank of General of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and was awarded the Order of August 1, First Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the First Class, and the Liberation Medal of the First Class. In 1988, he was awarded the Medal of Merit of the Red Star of the First Class of the Chinese People's Liberation Army.

Xiao Jinguang

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

 Xiao Jinguang (January 4, 1903 – March 29, 1989) was a proletarian revolutionary and military strategist. A native of Changsha, Hunan. In 1922, he joined the Communist Party of China. During his revolutionary career, he successively served as a representative of the division party, chief of staff of the Military Commission of the SAR, chief of staff of the military region, chief of staff of the military, principal of the Central Military and Political School, political commissar of the corps, political commissar of the army, commander of the military region, political commissar of the corps, chief of staff of the corps, minister of the military department, chief of staff of the headquarters, commander of the corps, deputy commander-in-chief and chief of staff, and commander of the military region. He led his troops to participate in the battles of Nanchang, Nanjing, and Western Hubei, led his troops to participate in the battles of Ganzhou, Zhangzhou, Shuikou, Le'an Yihuang, and Jianlitai, participated in the fourth and fifth anti-"encirclement and suppression" operations in the Central Soviet Region, participated in the Long March, commanded the Four Guarantees Linjiang Campaign of the Southern Manchurian troops, led the troops to fight in Shenyang, encircled Beiping, Yuebei North, crossed the Yangtze River, occupied Wuhan, and entered Changsha, and participated in commanding the Battle of Hengbao and other campaigns.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as commander of the People's Liberation Army Navy, vice minister of national defense, and vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the Fifth National People's Congress, and made outstanding contributions to the construction and development of the People's Navy. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955. He died in Beijing on March 29, 1989 at the age of 86. (Note: "Xiao" is a common word for the word "Xiao")

Zhang Yunyi 

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Zhang Yunyi (10 August 1892 – 19 November 1974) was a native of Wenchang County, Guangdong Province (now part of Hainan Province). In his early years, he joined the Chinese League and participated in the Huanghuagang Uprising, the Xinhai Revolution, the Patriotic War and the Northern Expedition. In 1926, he joined the Communist Party of China, and in 1929, he led an armed uprising in Youjiang, Guangxi, and joined the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army.

During the Red Army period, he successively served as the commander of the Seventh Army of the Red Army, the deputy chief of staff of the Central Military Commission, the commander of the Guangdong-Gansu Military Region, the deputy chief of staff and the director of the Operations Department of the General Headquarters of the Red Army and the Headquarters of the Red Army, and participated in the Long March in October 1934.

During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he successively served as chief of staff of the New Fourth Army, commander of the Jiangbei Headquarters of the New Fourth Army, deputy commander of the New Fourth Army and commander of the 2nd Division, and president of the 8th Branch of the Anti-Japanese Military and Political University.

During the Liberation War, he successively served as deputy commander of the East China Military Region, commander of the Shandong Military Region, president of the East China Military and Political University, secretary of the East China Rear Work Committee of the CPC Central Committee, member of the Central China Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, and member of the East China Bureau of the CPC Central Committee. It made important contributions to the victory of the East China Liberation War.

After the liberation of the whole country, he successively served as secretary of the CPC Guangxi Provincial CPC Committee, chairman of the Guangxi Provincial People's Government, commander and political commissar of the Guangxi Military Region, member of the Central and Southern Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, second secretary of the South China Branch of the CPC Central Committee, vice chairman of the Central and Southern Administrative Committee, and deputy secretary of the Central Supervision Commission of the CPC Central Committee. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955. He was a member of the 7th, 8th and 9th Central Committees of the Communist Party of China, and a member of the Standing Committee of the 1st and 2nd National People's Congresses.

He died in Beijing on November 19, 1974.

Luo Ruiqing

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Luo Ruiqing (May 31, 1906 – August 3, 1978) was a Chinese proletarian revolutionary and military strategist. People from Nanchong, Sichuan. He joined the Communist Party of China in the seventeenth year of the Republic of China (1928) and joined the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army in the eighteenth year of the Republic of China (1929). In his revolutionary career, he successively served as party representative of the detachment, director of the political department of the column, political commissar of the division, political commissar of the army, director of the political protection bureau of the corps, participated in the battles of Le'an Yihuang, Jianlitai, and Jinzi, participated in the Long March, participated in the command of the battle of the Dadu River, participated in the battle of the strong crossing of the Wujiang River, led the troops to cross the Chishui River, participated in the battle of The Huishi Zunyi to annihilate the Kuomintang army Wu Qiwei Division, participated in the Battle of Zhiluo Town, participated in the command of the Hundred Regiments War and led the anti-Japanese guerrilla war behind enemy lines in North China, organized the Suidong Campaign, and participated in the command of Datong Jining and Zhangjiakou , Yi Man, Bao Nan, Zheng Tai, Qingcang, Bao Bei, Daqing Hebei and other battles, participated in the Battle of Qingfengdian, the Battle of Shijiazhuang, the Battle of Pingjin, the Battle of Taiyuan and so on.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Luo Ruiqing successively served as minister of public security, vice premier of the State Council, secretary general of the Central Military Commission, chief of the general staff of the People's Liberation Army, secretary of the Secretariat of the Central Committee, vice chairman of the National Defense Commission, and director of the National Defense Industry Office. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955 [5]. He died on August 3, 1978, at the age of 72.

 Wang Shusheng

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Wang Shusheng (May 26, 1905 – January 7, 1974), formerly known as Wang Hongxin, was a Han Chinese from Macheng, Hubei Province. Loyal communist fighters, tried and tested proletarian revolutionaries, outstanding military figures, and important founders and leaders of the construction of ordnance equipment and military scientific research in our army.

He joined the Communist Party of China in 1926, participated in the creation of the first peasant armed forces in Macheng County, and in 1927 participated in leading the Macheng Rebellion and the Jute Uprising. After 1928, he successively served as the commander of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, deputy division commander and regimental commander, division commander, deputy commander-in-chief of the Red Fourth Front and commander of the 31st Army, deputy commander-in-chief of the Western Route Army and commander of the 9th Army. He was brave and good at fighting, and his outstanding military achievements were outstanding, and he established immortal merits for the creation of the revolutionary base areas of Eyuwan, Sichuan and Shaanxi, and the Red Fourth Front. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955. He is a deputy to the First National People's Congress, a member of the First, Second and Third National Defense Commissions, and a member of the Eighth, Ninth and Tenth Central Committees of the Communist Party of China. He died in Beijing on January 7, 1974, at the age of 69.

 Xu Guangda

Founding General of the People's Republic of China

Xu Guangda (November 19, 1908 – June 3, 1969) was a Chinese proletarian revolutionary and military strategist. Turnip chong people in Dongxiang, Changsha County, Hunan Province. He joined the Communist Party of China in September 1925. In the spring of 1926, he entered the 5th term of the Whampoa Military Academy. During his revolutionary career, he successively served as a trainee platoon leader, platoon commander, acting company commander, army chief of staff, division political commissar, division commander, training director, education chief, and branch school principal of the Anti-Japanese Military and Political University, director of the Staff Department of the Revolutionary Military Commission of the CPC Central Committee and commander of Yan'an Transportation, Commander of Air Defense, commander of the Air Defense, commander of the 2nd Independent Brigade of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army and commander of the 2nd Military Subdistrict of the Jinsui Military Region, commander of the 3rd Column of the Jinsui Military Region, commander of the Northwest Field Army, commander of the 2nd Corps, and other positions, and participated in the Southern Expedition, the Battle of Maliangping, and the Battle of Suiyuan. The Battle of Gaojiabao, the Battle of Yulin, the Battle of Shajiadian, the Battle of Yanqing, the Battle of Yichuan, the Battle of Chengguo, the Battle of Libei, the Battle of Fuyu, the Battle of Lanzhou, etc.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Xu Guangda served as commander of the armored corps and vice minister of national defense, and made outstanding contributions to the modernization and regularization of the armed forces. He was awarded the rank of Grand General in 1955. He died on June 3, 1969, at the age of 61.

Founding Generals – 57 admirals

  On September 23, 1955, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a conferring order granting 55 senior generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army the rank of general or above. The list is as follows:

Xiao Ke, Li Da, Zhang Zongxun, Li Kenong, Wang Zhen, Xu Shiyou, Deng Hua, Peng Shaohui, Zhang Aiping, Yang Chengwu

Han Xianchu Li Tao Fu Qiutao Wang Ping Lü Zhengcao Fu Zhong Xiao Hua Gan Siqi Song Ren Poor Lai Chuanzhu

Hong Xuezhi Zhou Shidi Guo Tianmin Zhou Chunquan Yang Zhicheng Chen Zaidao Chen Qihan Wang Hongkun Su Zhenhua Liu Yalou

Liu Zhen Chen Xilian Wei Guoqing Chen Shiyu Chen Bojun Zhong Qiguang Song Shilun Zhu Liangcai Dong Qiwu Tang Liang

Ye Fei, Yang Dezhi, Wang Xinting, Huang Yongsheng, Li Tianyou, Chen Mingren, He Bingyan, Yan Hongyan, Xie Fuzhi, Tao Zhiyue

Ulanfu Zhou Huan Yang Yong Li Zhimin Zhao Erlu                    

  On January 25, 1956, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a decree conferring the rank of General Wang Jian'an.

  On March 7, 1958, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed an order conferring the rank of General Li Jukui.

A total of 57 students

Founding Generals - 177 lieutenant generals

  On September 25, 1955, Premier Zhou Enlai of the State Council of the People's Republic of China signed a knighthood decree awarding 175 senior generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army the rank of lieutenant general. The list is as follows:

Xu Liqing Xiao Xiangrong Zhang Jingwu Zhang Zhen Liu Zhijian Yan Yu Zhong Chibing Tang Tianji Tan Xilin Mo Wenhua

Liu Daosheng Tao Yong Wu Faxian Cheng Jun Cheng Shicai Li Tianhuan Liao Hansheng Guo Huaruo Tang Yanjie Zhang Nansheng

Du Yide Wang Bicheng Wang Jinshan Wan Yi Wang Yi Sun Yi Zhu Ming Wang Zonghuai Cai Shunli Qiu Huizuo

Zhang Lingbin Rao Zhengxi Ni Zhiliang Liang Biye Li Zuopeng Zhao Qimin Fang Qiang Luo Shunchu Wang Bingzhang Luo Yuanfa

Nie Fengzhi Cao Lihuai Zhou Chiping Qiu Chuangcheng Kuang Yumin Xiang Zhonghua Tan Jiashu Li Shouxuan Cui Tianmin Ouyang Yi

Xian Henghan Wang Enmao Zhang Guohua Xiao Wangdong Ding Qiusheng Lai Yi Kuang Ren Nong Lin Weixian Zhou Guanwu Liu Xiansheng

Liu Peishan Peng Jiaqing Huang Mars Liu Xingyuan Wen Niansheng Zhan Caifang Liang Xingchu Wu Kehua Bi Zhanyun Chen Zhengxiang

Peng Mingzhi Yao Zhe Du Ping Gan Weihan Zeng Siyu Zheng Weishan Wang Shangrong Su Jing Liu Shaowen Liu Xiyuan

Kong Shiquan Yuan Ziqin Fu Lianzhang Han Zhenji Li Yao Deng Yifan Tang Ping Yu Qiuli Chen Qingxian Liu Zhong

Sun Jixian, Zhang Fan, Xu Binzhou, Wei Jie, Teng Haiqing, Zhuang Tian, Liu Haotian, Yang Xiushan, Zhou Xihan, Dun Nebula

Zhou Renjie Kang Zhiqiang Fang Zhengping Rao Shoukun Wang Huiqiu Chang Qiankun Zeng Guohua Zhu Huizhao Yu Lijin Wu Fushan

Huang Zhiyong Hu Qicai Zhou Biao Peng Lin Liu Changyi Han Liancheng Zhang Xianyue Guo Peng Liu Jinxuan Zhang Dazhi

Sai Fuding Ai Zezi Zhong Hanhua Qin Jiwei Kong Congzhou Fan Chaoli Tan Guansan Li Chengfang Chen Kang Zhang Caiqian

Zhang Yixiang Qin Jian Bao Xianzhi Pi Dingjun Zhou Zhijian Zhang Zuyu Liao Rongbiao Liu Fei Liang Congxue Qian Jun

Zhang Renchu Rao Zijian Chen Renqi Yang Guofu Yan Fusheng Wu Ruilin Yang Meisheng Tian Weiyang Ouyang Wen Zhang Chiming

Liu Zhuanlian Kong Qingde Tan Furen He Dequan Xu Shenji Han Wei Yuan Shengping Wang Daobang Wang Zifeng Zhao Rong

Xiao Xinhuai Wu Xinquan Zhou Yucheng Zeng Zesheng Wen Yucheng Zeng Shaoshan Chen Xianrui Kuang Fu Zhao Li Xuesan Xie Youfa

Zhang Tianyun Lu Sheng Huang Xinting Wu Xian'en Ng Pei NgaWang Jigme Doga Phuntsok Rao Jie        

  On January 25, 1956, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a knighthood decree awarding Nie Heting the rank of Lieutenant General.

  In July 1958, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a knighthood decree conferring the rank of Lieutenant General He Cheng.

A total of 177 employees

Founding generals - major generals (awarded in 55 years) 800

  From September 25 to 29, 1955, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed successive orders awarding the rank of major general to 798 generals of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. The list is as follows:

Xie Fang Chen Yi Tong Lusheng Zhan Huayu Liu Qiren Zhang Rui Peng Fujiu Li Xin Cao Guanghua Wei Tradition

Sun Yizhi Fu Jiaxuan Yu Manyun Jiang Qixian Qian Xinzhong Jia Ruoyu Wang Guanghua Wang Yongjun Cao Danhui Li Zhongqi

Ye Chuping Wang Wenxuan Ye Yungao Li Zhaobing Huang Yuan Wu Tao Ma Wenbo Chen Waiou Liu Xianyi Zhang Songping

Fan Ziyu Yan Jun Dai Zhenghua Gong Naiquan Huang Caolong Yan Jiesan Yin Xipeng Zeng Yusheng Chen Yuanbo Huang Xinyou

Zhang Pingkai, Ji He, Hu Beiwen, Qian Jiang, Chen Fuchu, Chen Tiejun, Wang Lanlin, Hong Shui, Liu Shaoqing, Zhou Wei

Liu Shaowen An Dong Huang Youfeng Li Ji Quan Yu Chun You Shenghua Wang Zhaoxiang He Shenggui Wang Xinggang Che Min looked

Zhang Xunzhi He Jilin Pan Shizheng Luo Yijing Xu Guanghua Li Donghan Xing Yuanlin Wang Dongxing Zhang Wenzhou He Kexi

Xu Wenlie Dai Runsheng Tao Hanzhang Xie Zhenhua Xie Liquan Lin Hao Liu Juying Liu Youguang Xie Liang Lei Shaokang

Luo Ruoxiao, Fang Shengpu, Liu Yongyuan, Wang Shaonan, Yuan Yuan, Tan Zhigeng, Yu Keqin, Zhong Xidong, Tan Youming, Zhang Zhaowu

Zhou Zhigang, Liu Ziyun, Shen Qixian, Wu Jiamin, Li Xunshan, Wu Huaduo, Li Kaixiang, Li Zhi, Zhang Shuxiang, Gao Cunxin

Zhou Shizhong Chen Haihan Liu Qingming Fang Zheng Liu Ang Li Guanghui Zhong Mingbiao Tang Kai Tang Duo Hu Zhengping

Chen Jinyu Zheng Dalin Zhang Chongwen Hu Dingqian Cao Guanglin Li Zhen Li Yi Guo Qi Zhang Riqing Li Lianghan

Zhong Fazong Xu Qixiao Lin Zun Hu Huaju Jin Zhongfan He Zhenxin Duan Suquan Gu Guangshan Xue Shaoqing Qi Yuanwo

Wang Jingjing, Li Zhongquan, Zhang Tingfa, He Tingyi, Shi Zhonghan, Zhu Xuzhi, Sha Ke, Huang Weihua, Yang Huanmin, Wu Linhuan

He Zhenya Fu Chuanzuo Wang Degui Yang Shangru Liu Jinping Li Shi'an Li Zaishan Wei Zuzhen Pei Zhigeng Liu Fang

Wang Pingshui Li Ping Liang Dasan Chen Qin Xie Bin Gao Houliang Guan Shengzhi Liu Feng Deng Dongzhe Cai Yong

Xiao Qian Fang Ziyi Li Changwei Zhu Yunqian Wu Zongxian Liu Maogong Wang Yunlin Zhou Bin Li Qingliu Yu Fei

Zhao Zhenghong Huang Lianqiu Huang Yukun Zhang Baichun Li Bo Chen Hao Luo Weidao Liu Fusheng Yu Ming Li Zhensheng

Luo Yegang Chen Xi An Zhimin Zhu Huohua Liu Hekong Wang Xueqing Zeng Zheng Huang Renting Huang Yuting Yuan Xuekai

Xing Zhongfang Huai Zhang Yonggeng Qiao Xinming Xie Xiyu Zeng Kelin Yi Yaocai Zheng Guozhong Zhang Xuesi Wang Zhengzhu

Yuan Yelie Peng Deqing Zhao Yiping Zhang Hancheng Ma Long Zeng Sheng Duan Dezhang Lu Rencan Gui Shaobin Lei Yongtong

Zhang Xiong Gao Zhirong Ma Zhongquan Cai Changfeng Xiao Xuelin Huang Zhongzhong Liu Huaqing Su Qisheng Zhu Jun Liu Zhonghua

Mei Jiasheng He Hui Xie Fusheng Wu Xi Wei Tianlu Liu Yi Huang Zhongxue Ding Shifang Wang Xiaoming Fu Jize

Zhang Yuanpei Qi Yong Deng Longxiang Qiu Ziming Song Jinghua Jiang Yong as Xu Zhizhong Que Zhongyi Deng Zhaoxiang Luo Bin

Su Jin, Chen Ruiting, Jia Tao, Feng Yongshun, Zhang Yixiang, Tu Xidao, Guan Songtao, Liao Chengmei, Wang Wenjie, Zhu Guang

Liao Yunzhou Yan Dongshan Wang Zhenxiang Luo Tong Cheng Shiqing Lin Bin Deng Jiatai Song Qingsheng Wang Sheng Sun San

Li Yingxi Xu Decao Zhao Donghuan Tang Zheming Tang Jianbo Liao Shuyun Chen Huatang Wang Zhitao Gu Jingsheng Zhang Xisan

Sun Chaoqun Lin Jibiao Li Chiran Pan Shoucai Liu Bingyan Fan Zhexiang Cai Aiqing Huang Jingchen Zhang Xicai Cao Chuanzan

Li Zhen Long Fucai Liu Peng Li Huanan Kong Lingfu He Huiyan Min Xuesheng Zhang Jihou Zhu Shaotian Yuan Guang

Guo Weicheng Xu Bin Chen Li Deng Shaodong Zha Guozhen Luo Huasheng Wu Lie Li Yimin Xiong Botao Fang Guohua

Zou Guohou Sheng Zhihua Luo Wenfang Wang Minggui Du Guoping Chen Bo Liang Yuzhen Liu Huishan Zhang Tingzhen Cai Bingchen

Chen Bolu Bai Shoukang Guo Bingkun Zhang Xiqin Zeng Di Su Ao Yang Jiarui Cheng Yuechang Xia Yaotang Wang Zaixing

Zuo Qi, Li Quan, Guo Baoshan, Shi Kequan, Min Hongyou, Sun Guang, Margov Ishakov  

Maimaiti Yimin Yiminov Wu Xizhi Xu Guozhen Zhu Shengda Gao Langting Gan Zuchang Luo Zhang Hou Shikui

Yan Jinsheng Zhang Kaiji Zunong Taiyefu Cao Danov Zair Gao Weisong Li Jianliang Niu Shushen

Zhong Shengyi Sun Runhua Li Shumao Xiong Huang Li Shuquan Zeng Guangming Huang Zhengqing LiFuke Huang Liqing Lu Ruilin

Jin Rubai Li Wenqing Wang Qiming Chen Mingyi Zha Yusheng He Weizhong Guo Linxiang Yang Shanggao Hu Ronggui Wang Guide

Shi Xin'an, Fan Ming, Wang Qimei, Chen Heqiao, Yu Hongyuan, Zhang Guanghua, Tong Guogui, He Zhengwen, Li Xifu, Wang Naigui

Xiong Kui He Guangyu Xu Guangyi Zhang and Wu Rongzheng Xiao Xinchun Yu Shusheng Liu Zhenguo Lu Nanqiao Kong Junbiao

Zhou Changgeng Zhou Xueyi Tu Zesheng Jin Shaoshan Zhang Zhong He Deqing Cui Jiangong Wu Zhong Wang Jiadao Li Jue

Zhang Peirong, Jin Shibai, Ding Rongchang, Lu Jiahan, Ma Huanghuang, He Yixiang, Duan Huanjing, Qiu Wei, Zhu Shaoqing, Liao Haiguang

Liu Yong Zeng Ruqing Liao Zhengguo Li Youzhang Liu Yongsheng Li Jikai Chen Meizao Zhang Zhendong Chang Yuqing Hu Darong

Zhao Jun, Xiao Yongyin, Zhang Xiulong, Xiong Yingtang, Zhang Zhenxiu, Zhan Danan, Chen Hong, Yao Yunliang, Li Shuiqing, Zhou Chunlin

Xie Shengkun Long Qian Ouyang Ping Li Shiyan Liu Wenwen Tang Guanghui Xie Yunhui Wang Liusheng He Zhiyuan

Zhang Chuangchu, Fu Qijian, He Zhucheng, Liu Yubiao, Li Jingrui, Wan Zhenxi, Liu Jianting, Cheng Yetang, Xie Rui, Song Wen

Zeng Xuqing, Li Yuan, Guo Jinlin, Wang Wenmo, Li Huigao, Song Xianzhang, Yan Guang, Tong Yansheng, Tang Jianru, He Guanghua

Xiong Zhaoren Zhou Wen in Li Desheng Huang Chaotian Wang Jianqing Chen Shifa Sun Duanfu Xu Tishan Deng Shijun Wang Chenghan

Ma Hui Chen Qi Fu Shaofu Li Fa Ruan Xianbang Kuang Bin You Taizhong Wang Zhi Qin Hualong Yang Hanlin

Zi Feng Luo Xiangtao Yu Xinhua Zhang Wenbi Li Mancun Chen Dexian Wang Shaochuan Peng Shengbiao Luo Yinghuai Xiong Fei

Peng Xianlun Zhang Chaofu Wang Ruojie Wang Yixun Guo Zhuoxin Qiu Xiangtian Long Feihu Zhu Yaohua Chen Zhongmei Li Guohou

Yu Guangmao Tan Youfu Zhang Xinhua Zhang Zongsheng Xiong Ting Zhang Chunsen Cao Siming Zhou Mingguo He Jingzhi Yao Xingwu

Liu Xianquan Long Shujin Han Dongshan Yuan Overcoming Pan Zhenwu He Dongsheng Zhang Guangcai Zhong Wei Wu Zili Xiao Yuanli

Deng Keming Lu Shaowu Ye Changgeng Liu Ziqi Li Fuze Lei Zhen Ma Baishan Huang Yiping Yu Chengbin Qin Shimian

Zhang Guochuan Zhou Fatian Jiang Xieyuan Li Huamin Ou Zhifu Wei Zhen Liu Xinquan Fang Guoan Wang Quanguo Ye Ming

Xie Bozhong Liao Guanxian Li Bingling Chen De Chen Fahong Wang Zhenqian Li Jianzhu Sun Keji Hu Jicheng Yang Shugen

Guo Chengzhu Wu Chengzhong Wang Yuanfen Tian Houyi Luo Renquan Zhu Shifeng Ye Jianmin Li Daozhi Jiang Maosheng Xiang Shouzhi

Liu Zhenqiu Wang Kuixian Wu Shi'an Huang Lin Qin Guohan Zhao Lantian Wang Dongbao Chen Wenbiao Peng Longfei Liu Yutang

Zhang Ruguang Chen Banglan Huang Ronghai Li Shicai Hu Denggao Tan Wenbang Lin Zhongzhao Zhong Wenfa Chen Zhibin Zhang Taisheng

Song Weiyu Peng Qingyun Fang Guonan Lan Qiao Wei Hongliang Dong Hongguo Fu Chunzao Xiao Yuanjiu He Nengbin Ren Changhui

Yan Deming, Yang Dayi, Yu Pinxuan, Chen Zongkun, Qiu Guoguang, Tang Chi, Gao Tiqian, Qi Dinggen, Zeng Jingfan, Ding Wuxuan

Cheng Ruzhen Zheng Xiaofeng Zou Shanfang Wang Hongqing Liu Xinglong Ni Nanshan Bu Vanke Luo Yun Huang Shengming Jiang Tengjiao

Huang Dekui Gan Si and Pan Feng Fu Chongbi Xiao Siming Ye Qingshan Wang Qicai Long Daoquan Shuai Rong Pei Zhouyu

Huang Zhentang Li Renlin Zeng Mei Shi Zhiben Meng Qingshan Du Wenda Suo Libo Zhang Shizhen Cheng Shaofu Kang Jianmin

Zhang Zhengguang, Huang Zuozhen, Wang Zhiping, Xu Shaohua, Wang Yaonan, Yu Quanshen, Zhong Yuanhui, Bai Zhiwen, Liu Huaxiang, And Zhao Wenjin

Peng Shousheng Liu Dehai Lin Wei Zeng Wei Liu Bin fangzhong Ma Weihua Zeng Baotang Huang Guangxia Yang Zhiting

Ting Mao Chen Yigui Zhong Bingchang Liao Dinglin Liu Chang Weng Xiangchu Xiao Yongzheng Wang Yinggao Fan Zhongxiang Cai Changyuan

Zhong Huikun Zhang Yinghui Zheng Sansheng Yang Gensheng Cao Yuqing Zeng Xianchi Lu Ke Ma Zeying Yang Yongsong Su Lu

Tao Guoqing Han Weimin Yang Shiming Wang Caigui Kong Fei Li Zuoyu Wang Qian He Jinnian Luo Chengde Tang Zi'an

Jiang Yonghui Zhang Kaijing He Jian He Qingji Tan Youlin Wu Dai Qiu Xiantong Zhong Ren imitation Liu He Zou Yan

Zhang Qicheng Deng Yue Xie Zhengrong Xu Guofu Jiang Wen Liu Hengyun Song Chengzhi Zhao Jie Wang Liangtai Wang Lisheng

Zhao Chengjin Wu Ruiqing Long Kaifu Li Ziping Zhang Jimin Zeng Xianghuang Yuan Peijue Li Boqiu Cao Delian Zhong Hui

Tan Kaiyun Li Guilin Cao Wenbin Li Shaoyuan Chen Meifu Zhang Haitang Chen Xinzhong Luo Kunshan Sun Wencai Su Huanqing

Huang Sipei Ye Yinting Qiu Huikui Tang Qingshan Luo Guihua Wang Ping Yao Guomin Huang Huiliang Li Jingpu Wang Yunrui

Huang Wenming, Zhang Mingyuan, Hu Bingyun, Xiao Yingtang, Xiao Wenjiu, Pan Yan, Ding Sheng, Zhong Guochu, Chen Fangren, Chen Yunkai

Xie Ming, Li Chengrui, Liang Renhua, Zhao Guanying, Zhao Zhangcheng, Tan Shan, Xu Guoxian, Yang Junsheng, Wu Yongxiang, Zhou Changsheng

Xiao Quanfu Zeng Yongya Song Yulin He Dazeng Li Zhen Wu Baoshan He Yunhong Li Zhiyuan Xie Fulin Ding Laifu

Ding Xianguo, Dong Yongqing, Liu Luchang, Wang Keming, Wang Mingkun, Zhang Shuzhi, Zhang Yunlong, Chen Renhong, And Li Jiayi

Zhao Guotai Wu Ruishan Ouyang Jiaxiang Shu Xing Xiong Workshop Lai Chunfeng Jiang Kecheng Zhang Wanchun Liao Dingxiang Fan Yangchun

Xie Jiaxiang Yang Zhongxing Zhang Zizhen Peng Sheng Yan Qingdi Wu Rongfeng Li Binshan Liu Chun Yu Jide Guan Zongli

Yan Zheng Chen Maohui Zhang Xiuchuan Ren Rong Tang Jinlong Wu Zijie You Haoyang Lai Guangxun Li Musheng Xu Qihai

Li Guang He Jixiang Zhang Bufeng Fan Xuewen Wang Yi Li Bude                

  In November 1955, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a knighthood decree awarding major general Zhou Zizhen.

  In December 1955, Zhou Enlai, premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, signed a knighthood decree awarding Major General Mu Shengzhong the rank of Major General.

A total of 800 of the above