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Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

author:Shizhou Afeng
Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photograph was taken in the Sichuan region in 1917, where a local soldier was traveling on a sliding pole.

As can be seen from the photo, this kind of transportation is very simple, that is, a knot is tied with a rope between two bamboo poles, and then the person sits on the rope, giving people the feeling of carrying a pig.

The soldiers sitting on it did not look much older, and the men who raised the pole in the back looked younger, and their feet were still wearing straw shoes, which were worn by the Sichuan army to reach the front line when they went out to resist the Japanese.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photograph was taken at the end of the Qing Dynasty, and the man sitting in the photo is Prince Gongsan Norbu, a leading figure among the Mongol princes in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Ming Dynasty.

In the late Qing Dynasty, Gonsanoorbu actively embraced the idea of democratic enlightenment, and he actively opened schools, newspapers, post and telecommunications offices, etc. in southern Mongolia, and he was also a person who firmly defended the reunification of the motherland and opposed national separatism.

The woman sitting next to Prince Gonsanoorbu in the photo is his princess, who is also the sister of Prince Su of the Qing Dynasty, and the woman standing behind them is Kawahara Fuzi from Japan.

This Kawahara Fuzi was a spy deliberately arranged by the Japanese to prince Gonsan Norbu through the relationship between Prince Su and Good Qi, when Prince Gongsan Norbu agreed to establish a school in the palace under the pillow wind of his princess, and Kawara Fuzi lurked around Prince Gonsanoerbu in the name of a teacher.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

The man in this photo is Huang Kaiwen, an important figure in the late Qing Dynasty and early Ming Dynasty, and he is also wearing sacrificial clothing, which should have been taken during Yuan Shikai's restoration.

Born in 1866 in Jialing County, Guangdong Province, Huang Kaiwen went to tianjin telegraph school at the age of thirty to study, and after graduating from Tianjin, he successively held positions such as Persuasion Road, Hubei Hankou Huangde Daotai, and Wuchang Yanfa Daotai.

His greatest achievements were during the Russo-Japanese War, because the war destroyed most of the power poles in the eastern part of the northeast, Huang Kaiwen personally braved the bad weather to lead the workers to the front to repair the line, and won the praise and recognition of Chinese and foreign people in the work of presiding over the diplomatic envoys to submit the credentials to China.

During the Beiyang government, Huang Kaiwen served as a ceremonial official in the presidential palace for six terms.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photograph was taken during the Great Wall War of Resistance in 1933, when four commanders of the Second Division of the Central Army stood on the city wall and lectured the officers and men.

At the beginning of 1933, the Japanese invaders vainly attempted to break through the Great Wall from Gubeikou to invade in the direction of Rehe, and the 17th Army, composed of the 2nd, 25th and 83rd Divisions of the Central Army, was ordered to go to Gubeikou to fight the Japanese army.

The four people standing on the Great Wall in the photo are from left to right: Huang Jie, commander of the Second Division, Hui Ji, deputy division commander, Qiu Pingfan, chief of staff, and Zheng Dongguo, commander of the Fourth Brigade.

At that time, Zheng Dongguo led his officers and men to fight the Japanese army on the Great Wall for eight days, and after successfully completing the blockade task, Zheng Dongguo, who was preparing to retreat to the rear, heard that the position of the 83rd Division had been broken by the Japanese army, and he immediately led the officers and men of the exhausted Fourth Brigade back to the front line of the battle.

When the Fourth Brigade arrived at the position of the 83rd Division, the Japanese army had almost completely occupied the position, and after Zheng Dongguo took off his shirt, he rushed to the front line with a pistol, and the officers and men saw that their brigade commander rushed up regardless of life and death, and everyone rushed to the Japanese army desperately.

Finally, under the desperate battle of the officers and soldiers, they successfully drove the Japanese devils out of the position.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photograph, taken in 1938 on Liugong Island in Weihai, is a scene of a British major holding a wedding.

There are two scenes in this photo, the first is the scene of the bride sitting on a palanquin, and the second is the picture of the bride and groom riding in a rickshaw.

From the photos, it can be seen that the national ceremony is held in a combination of Chinese and Western methods, and the crowd of onlookers standing around can see that the sedan drivers in the first scene who are responsible for carrying the palanquins do not look professionals, and judging from their dress, they should still be local famous people.

Originally, the British lease of Weihaiwei was only until 1930, because the British wanted to continue to use this place as a supply base for their own navy, so they renewed the lease for ten years on the basis of the original, and it has to be mentioned that Liugong Island was once the base of the Qing Dynasty's Beiyang Fleet.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photo was taken in Guangdong in 1917, the man holding the sapling was Zhu Qinglan, who was the governor of Guangdong Province at the time, and the man holding the sign to help Zhu Qinglan hold the sapling was Yan Scribe, the president of Lingnan University, but he did not know whether the tree was still there.

Zhu Qinglan served as the co-commander of the Sichuan Patrol Police Daohe (the Thirty-second Association) in the late Qing Dynasty, and after the outbreak of the Xinhai Revolution, he immediately responded to the revolution and declared Sichuan independent from the Qing government.

After the founding of the Republic of China, Zhu Qinglan was first appointed by Yuan Shikai as the president's military adviser, and later as an envoy to the army and the chief of civil affairs, the inspector, and the general of Heilongjiang Province.

Later, during Duan Qirui's reign, he was appointed by Duan Qirui as the governor of Guangdong Province, and during Zhu Qinglan's tenure as governor of Guangdong, Zhu Qinglan was the first to stand up against it because Zhang Xun was engaged in restoration.

Zhu Qinglan also actively raised materials to support the anti-Japanese front during the War of Resistance Against Japan, and the march of our national anthem volunteer army was named after him.

Old photo: Sichuan Jun in 1917, a Japanese spy by the side of the Mongolian prince, the governor of Guangdong Province who planted trees

This photo was taken in Shanghai in 1911, and the two women in the photo are the top masters of the Republic of China period, and they are known as the three masters of the modern female world together with the famous heroine Qiu Jin.

The two women, named Yin Ruizhi and Yin Weijun respectively, joined the League in their twenties under the introduction of Qiu Jin.

Because of their high martial skills, from November 1911, they undertook the work of defending Sun Yat-sen, and they were praised by Dr. Sun Yat-sen as heroines of Zhejiang because of their outstanding professional ability and loyal supporters of the revolution.

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