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Recalling the past and grief-stricken, remember the mission of burying the bones of the loyal in the green mountains - the list of famous anti-Japanese martyrs is attached

author:资深媒体人journalist

The 14-year War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression is a sharp blade inserted in China's chest, and it is an eternal deep wound and great pain for the Chinese people. In the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, great losses were inflicted on the mainland. Post-war Chinese military and civilian casualties statistics:

Military and civilian casualties in the Kuomintang region. In February 1947, the National Military and Civilian Population Casualties Statistics in the Report of the Executive Yuan of the Nationalist Government on the Losses of the Anti-Japanese War and Japanese Compensation showed that 3227926 soldiers were killed or wounded in combat (including 1328501 killed, 1769299 wounded, and 130126 missing), 422479 soldiers died of illness, and 9134569 civilians were killed and injured (including 4397504 killed and 4739065 wounded). The total number of casualties among the military and civilian population in the country is 12784974. This figure does not include the number of military and civilian casualties in Taiwan Province, the Northeast Region and the Liberated Areas.

The number of casualties among the people in the 7 anti-Japanese base areas including Jinchaji in the liberated areas. In April 1946, the "Preliminary Statistical Table of Population Losses in the Eight Years of the War of Resistance in China's Liberated Areas" statistics: "According to preliminary statistics: during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, the seven liberated areas of Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei, Jinsui, Shanxi-Hebei, Luyu, Hebei, Shandong, Suzhou-Anhui, and the Central Plains were killed by the enemy and died of injuries and diseases, 3176123 2760227 were arrested, and 2963582 were widowed, lonely, and physically disabled. ”。

Casualties of the Chinese Communist Party-led army. "Statistics on the Losses of Enemy and Our Forces in the Eight Years of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression" contains: "The CCP army suffered 290,000 wounded, 160,000 killed, 46,000 captured, and 87,000 missing, totaling 583,000. "The total number of military and civilian casualties in the country. It is about 22 million people, and the figure of more than 400,000 people who died of disease in the Kuomintang region is more than 21 million. This statistic does not include military and civilian casualties in Taiwan Province, Hong Kong, Macao, Northeast China and other liberated areas not included in the statistics. Among them, 20 million people died in China's eight-year War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression.

In order to solve the problem of the depletion of domestic labor, Japan forcibly abducted Chinese civilians and prisoners of war and sent them to Japan for heavy labor. According to Japanese official statistics, the invading Japanese army forcibly abducted 41,758 young and middle-aged people in China, 2,823 died before being escorted on board, and 6,830 died after boarding the ship and in various enterprises, accounting for 17.5% of the total 38,935 people on board.

About bacteriological warfare casualties. According to the statistics collected in "Selected Archives of Japanese Imperialism's Invasion of China 8: Bacteriological Warfare and Poison Gas Warfare," the Japanese army conducted bacteriological warfare in 20 provinces on the mainland, and more than 270,000 soldiers and civilians died in bacteriological warfare. According to the statistics collected in the 1989 edition of Selected Archives of the Japanese Imperialist Invasion of China 8: Bacteriological Warfare and Poison Gas Warfare, the Japanese army conducted bacteriological warfare in 20 provinces on the mainland, and more than 270,000 soldiers and civilians died in bacteriological warfare. These were only incomplete statistics on the ground at the time, not counting the number of deaths that had continued to spread and spread to surrounding areas, nor the number of deaths from famine caused by agricultural bacteriological warfare. In recent years, after investigation, a large amount of criminal evidence of the Japanese army's bacteriological warfare has been collected. For example, from October 1940 to August 1945, the Japanese army repeatedly sprinkled plague, cholera, typhoid, paratyphoid, dysentery, anthrax and other bacteria in Quzhou, Zhejiang, causing a local epidemic of epidemics, by the end of 1948, a total of more than 300,000 people had been sick, and more than 50,000 people had died, and in 1940~1942, the Japanese army carried out bacteriological warfare in the eastern Zhejiang operation and the Hunan Changde operation, so that more than 10,000 Chinese people were "injured, and in the northwest of Shandong and Shandong, the Japanese army "encircled and suppressed" In the anti-Japanese base areas, cholera bacteria were released, causing more than 200,000 Chinese people to die; The Japanese army carried out bacteriological warfare in the Baoshan area of Yunnan Province, causing more than 200,000 people to be harmed by bacteria. After Japan's defeat in World War II, a large number of bacteria were abandoned, resulting in a continuous outbreak of infectious diseases in the area. For example, plague has been breaking out in the Pingfang area where Unit 731 is located for many years, the plague in 1947 has taken the lives of more than 30,000 people, and more than 40,000 people have died due to plague epidemics in Wangyemiao (now Ulanhot, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region) and other areas in eastern Inner Mongolia.

About in vivo experiment casualties. Unit 731 of the Japanese invasion of China conducted a large number of live experiments such as various bacterial infection experiments, frostbite experiments, pressure experiments, and poison gas experiments in the laboratory of the Harbin Bungalow Headquarters. In 1949, when the Soviet Union tried Japanese prisoners of war in Boli, Major General Kiyoshi Kawashima, who had been serving in Unit 731 from 1941 to the end of the war, confessed: The number of people used in Unit 731 for live experiments every year was 400~600. Based on this, it is estimated that 3,000 people died in the live experiments of Unit 731. This figure does not include the number of people killed by the unit before 1941. During the Japanese invasion of China, 5,000~6,000 people were killed in the bacteriological warfare death factories (Beijing, Nanjing, Guangzhou) under the direct control of Shiro Ishii, not including those who were prepared for live experiments when Unit 731 was defeated and fled in August 1945.

The invading Japanese army also conducted a large number of vivisection experiments for the purpose of medical teaching practice. According to Tang Qianqian, a military doctor at the Lu'an Army Hospital in Shanxi Province, the Japanese army confessed: According to the order of the North China Front, all divisions and regiments conduct surgical exercises twice a year in order to conduct military medical education. Yuasa participated in a total of 7 human vivisections, 1~4 people each time. Japan's North China Front alone has 300,000 people, more than 20 army hospitals, and thousands of military doctors.

About chemical warfare casualties. According to statistics, the Japanese army used poison gas 2,091 times in 77 counties (districts) in 14 provinces (cities) in China, including 423 times against the guerrilla forces in North China, causing more than 33,000 casualties, and 1,668 times against the Chinese regular army, killing more than 6,000 Chinese officers and soldiers and wounding more than 41,000 people. also poison gas was used in residential areas of China and poisoned water in wells and rivers; The number of Chinese soldiers and civilians injured by the Japanese army's chemical warfare was more than 100,000. According to statistics, Japan produced a total of 7.46 million rounds of chemical artillery shells during World War II, most of which were used or stored in the Chinese battlefield. In recent years, about 2 million poison gas bombs abandoned by Japan have been found in northeast and north China, and more than 2,000 people have been injured.

On the harm caused by the rape of women. It is estimated that the invading Japanese army forced Chinese women to serve as "comfort women" in China by means of robbery, capture, deception, forced conscription, and arrest, with a total number of more than 200,000. As for the 14 years from the "September 18" incident in 1931 to the surrender in 1945, the Japanese army harmed Chinese women in the occupied areas, especially the number of Chinese women raped and killed during the "Sanguang" operation in the anti-Japanese guerrilla areas and anti-Japanese base areas. According to historian Wu Tianwei's estimates: "The Japanese army has fought in China with more than 5 million officers and soldiers, and at least 1 million women have been raped." "The number of Chinese women raped and killed by the Japanese army is also very large. In 1941 alone, the Japanese army "swept up" Zhengjiazhuang in Quyang, Beiyue District, Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Border Region, and "robbed 427 of our women compatriots by car and transported them to the northeast to be prostitutes and cattle and horses." In the southern Hebei region, "in the 15-year war, there are probably no less than tens of thousands, or even hundreds of thousands, of Chinese women who have been secretly killed and buried in these two or three thousand strongholds." There are very few survivors of the Chinese "comfort women" in the comfort stations. "According to statistics, thousands of Hainan women who were forced to be the 'comfort women' of the Japanese invasion of Qiongqiong survived and only a few dozen are still alive today. ”

After 14 years, the "cold figures" intertwined with the blood and tears of the Chinese people slowly unfolded in front of the readers' eyes. We know in our hearts that the history of nearly 14 years from the fall of the Northeast City to the liberation is a history of blood and tears, humiliation and resistance.

With the passage of time, the wounds that were once blown by the Japanese artillery fire on this land of China have long been healed, high-rise buildings are erected, and people's material and cultural living standards are getting better day by day, as if those years of gunfire and gunpowder are far away from us. Just over 80 years ago, this land was trampled with blood by the iron hooves of the Japanese invaders. Similarly, 80 years ago, in this land, the people led by the Communist Party bought peace with their blood.

More than 80 years ago, the invasion of the Japanese invaders penetrated into almost every village in this land, and the "three-light policy" of killing, burning, and robbing all the people made the common people ruined, their wives and wives separated, and the fertile land was barren in patches, and the industrious Yimeng people could only flee hungry and keep fleeing, living under the guns of the Japanese invaders, and never dared to imagine tomorrow. To this day, the trauma and impact of this war of aggression on people are still there.

The indomitable Chinese peasants who put down their hoes and picked up guns were intellectuals who abandoned their pens and joined the army, while others were workers and businessmen. "There is a sentence that is said to be a disaster, there is a sentence that can be lit on fire, don't look at the five thousand years without saying it, can you guess through the silence of the volcano? Maybe it is suddenly enchanted, suddenly a thunderbolt in the blue sky, bursting: Our China!" Mr. Wen Yiduo's poems very accurately expressed the collective pathos of the Chinese nation at that time, as well as the volcanic patriotic passion that erupted in the pathos. At the critical moment of life and death for the survival of the nation, they followed the Communist Party to drive the Japanese out of the country regardless of personal gains and losses, personal honor and disgrace, and life and death.

Between heaven and earth, we respect them as heroes. When writing, the brushstrokes will freeze, and I will be speechless and choked for a while. The smoke of gunpowder dissipated, and the passion seemed to have long since retreated into the colorful shadow of history. This is a very different time. "Ten thousand people compete for the soil, and the bones are full of mountain incense", it seems that it is already too far away. The Internet transcends national borders, war seems to exist only in computer games, and the greatest anxiety for young people is no longer the pain of their home and country, but the ups and downs of employment, housing and the stock market. The opening up of China has given birth to an economic rise that has shocked the world and opened up a new way for China's rejuvenation...... What is the significance of commemorating the sufferings and heroic commemorations of 80 years ago after the change of the world? I am afraid that the significance of commemorating lies in passing on the moral courage, unbridled nature, and desire for peace of the Chinese nation from generation to generation in the process of never forgetting.

Born in sorrow, died in peace. So it is with man, so it is with the nation. 80 years are very close to us, and remembering history and remembering the martyrs is to better cherish peace and warn the future.

After launching a full-scale war of aggression against China on July 7, 1937, the Japanese army encountered stubborn resistance from the Chinese military and civilians. As a result, the Japanese fascist government pinned its hopes of destroying China's will to resist the war and ending the war as soon as possible on the rapid capture of Nanjing, the capital of China at that time. After the Battle of Songhu, the Central China Front of the Japanese Army suggested to the General Staff Headquarters: "In order to speed up the resolution of the incident, it is necessary to take advantage of the current enemy's decline to conquer Nanjing." ”

On December 1, the Japanese high command officially issued an order: "The commander of the Central China Front must coordinate with the navy to capture Nanjing, the capital of the enemy country." Matsui Ishine commanded 7 divisions and troops to attack Nanjing in two ways, of which 4 and a half divisions of about 100,000 troops approached the city of Nanjing.

Counting from Fan Li's construction of Yuecheng, the ancient city of Nanjing has experienced more than 2,500 years of vicissitudes of life. However, December 13, 1937, was the most barbaric, cruel and dark day the city had ever experienced.

- A horrific massacre. Ignoring the basic conscience of mankind and trampling on the norms of international law, the Japanese army not only killed soldiers who had laid down their arms, but also swung their butcher knives at unarmed civilians, and killed not only young and middle-aged people, but also the elderly and infants.

Shooting, assassination, beheading, knife chopping, belly gouging, heart gouging, drowning, burying alive, burning, cone stabbing, etc., the means of slaughter are all used to the extreme. What's even more outrageous is that there was a "100 people beheading" competition that took pleasure in killing.

According to the post-war International Military Tribunal for the Far East, "in the first six weeks after the Japanese occupation, more than 200,000 civilians and prisoners were massacred in and around Nanjing" and "this figure does not include the corpses burned by the Japanese army, thrown into the Yangtze River, or otherwise disposed of".

- Adultery raging with animal nature. Once man falls into barbarism and loses his humanity and reason, he will be indistinguishable from beasts. The Japanese army report said: "If you can be satisfied in Chinese women, you will be able to be satisfied in Chinese territory." Possession of Chinese women can breed the ambition of possession of China. ”

Nanjing, the capital of the ancient civilization of 5,000 years, has become a demon cave for the invading army to vent its beastly desires. Tens of thousands of Chinese women, ranging from septuagenarians to nine-year-old girls, and even pregnant women and women who have just delivered have been raped. Rape and gang rape are everywhere and at all times, and sometimes forced Chinese to watch them, in order to humiliate the dignity of the Chinese people and obtain the satisfaction of victory and conquest. Many women were ravaged and killed, some were killed for refusing to rape, and after rape and murder, they were arbitrarily humiliated corpses, and the barbarism of the methods and the cruelty of the tyranny were unheard of.

Pastor McGallen, who witnessed the brutality of the Japanese army, complained: "A week has passed, and this place has become a hell on earth...... For the first time in my life, I had heard of such cruelty. Rape, rape, rape, we count at least 1,000 cases in one night, and many during the day...... The populace groaned in desperation. ”

- Crazy looting. Hordes of Japanese troops marched through the city of Nanjing, haunting the streets and alleys, breaking down doors and locks, and looting frantically. Whether it is a government office, a private residence, a factory, a school, or a business shop, all money, grain, machinery, livestock, antiques, calligraphy and paintings, and books are all looted.

Johann Rabe, the agent of the German company Siemens in Nanjing and the deputy head of the Nazi Party's Nanjing regional group, revealed in his diary: "The plundering of the Japanese soldiers was all-encompassing. They were organized and outright plundering. ”

According to incomplete statistics after the war, the Japanese army looted a total of 14,200 taels of gold and silver jewelry, more than 7,300 antiques, more than 28,400 calligraphy and paintings, 880,000 books, more than 5.91 million pieces of clothing, and more than 1,200 pieces of grain......

- Savage arson. The Japanese combat order stated that "the enemy forces should be annihilated by all means." To this end, if necessary, to burn down the city". The Japanese army set up a special arson squad, and while frantically looting, they recklessly set fire everywhere to burn the evidence of their atrocities. The ancient capital of the Six Dynasties was burned fiercely and incomparably. At the beginning of the siege of the city, along the Zhonghua Gate to the Xiaguan River, there were fires everywhere, flames and candles, and half of the city was almost into ashes."

Christian Kreika, an employee of the German trading company in Nanjing, once wrote: "Since December 20, 1937, the Japanese army has systematically begun to burn the city...... Especially in the southern part of the city, the busy streets, various shops, and houses near our house were also burned down intensively. ”

In the 20th century, there were many atrocities against humanity in the world, such as the massacre of Jews by German fascists in Auschwitz, Poland. The Chinese Chief Justice of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, Mei Rujiao, pointed out: "Most of the massacres of the German army were simple massacres, while the massacres of the Japanese army were combined with rape, robbery, arson, and other atrocities.

Forgetting the sufferings of the past can lead to future disasters. Forgetting history means betrayal. "To forget the Holocaust is to suffer a second massacre. "It is true that the Nanjing Massacre is in the past, but the accumulated bones are still there, the memories of blood and tears still exist, and the pain caused to the Chinese people by the atrocities of the invaders has not disappeared with the passage of time. This is because it is not only the pain of the nation, the death of the country, the humiliation of the soldiers, and the suffering of the common people, but also a great tragedy that barbarously strangles civilization and brutally encroaches on human nature, and it must never be forgotten by all people with a conscience! For a long time, Japan has not only failed to thoroughly reflect on and settle accounts of its war crimes, but has always tried to use such and such despicable tricks to affix seals to the memory of the war, and has even repeatedly dished out the "fictional theory of the Nanjing Massacre" in order to confuse people who do not know the truth.

-- Although peace and development are the two major themes in the world today, war has not entered the museum of history, and the danger of war still exists. Since ancient times, slackness will decline, and forgetting war will be dangerous. In an environment of long-term peace, we must keep the alarm bell ringing, guard against the lingering spectre of militarism and the resurrection of the soul through the use of corpses, always strengthen the ideological preparation for war, and temper the spiritual will to fight war.

-- A strong military force has always been an important condition for a country's prosperity and an important guarantee for long-term peace and stability. If you are backward, you will be beaten, and only when you are strong can you win dignity. Only by keeping in mind the historical lessons of backwardness, being beaten and being bullied by others, making every effort to make the country prosperous, and making unremitting efforts, can we truly realize the dream of building a strong country and a strong army, and build a great wall of steel for national rejuvenation.

-- The army exists because of war, and soldiers are proud to win wars. The dialectic of war and peace shows that peace cannot be brought by bending the knee and being humiliated, and only when we can fight can we stop war. At present, the new military revolution in the world is surging, and our army has a long way to go in advancing from mechanization to informationization, so we must seize the day, dare to take responsibility, keep in mind the goal of strengthening the army, strengthen our belief in strengthening the army, dedicate ourselves to the practice of strengthening the army, and make concerted efforts to realize the dream of strengthening the army.

Today, I am not talking about this to dwell on yesterday's grievances or to uncover the scars of history, but to cherish the hard-won peace of today, and never allow the recurrence of tragedy.

Today, we do not forget the massacre of history, expose the war crimes of the Japanese aggressors, and remember the suffering and humiliation suffered by the Chinese people, not to incite national revenge or perpetuate hatred, but to awaken the conscience of the world, better defend human dignity and maintain permanent peace in the world!

It is a remarkable miracle in the history of world development that the Chinese nation has endured many hardships but has been able to stand firm in the long river of history of 5,000 years. From the Three Emperors and Five Emperors Zhou Wenwang, from Kongqiu Qu Yuan Xin to Qi Qi, from Wei Qingyue to Guan Tianpei, the fire has been passed on, and the fragrance of the heart continues. The only one who can do this is Huanghuang China on this earth. This is not because of comfort, but precisely because of the hardships and hardships, and in the hardships to temper the backbone of the nation that has become more and more tenacious, so that we can face all difficulties and obstacles, and have the wisdom and courage to win the final battle.

Born in sorrow, died in peace. People are like this, and so is the country, and this so-called difficulty is to prosper the country. The Chinese nation is endless, and its tolerance and cohesion to suffering are extraordinary. Again and again, we have risen from suffering, from blood, staggered down, and burned the flame that belongs to this generation in our hands brighter and delivered it to future generations.

A nation that grows up in the midst of suffering is the strongest nation, and only by remembering the suffering and the heroes who overcome it can we go more steadily and further from generation to generation.

We, and our next generation, have forgotten too many stories, too many Chinese heroes in too many stories.

We must not forget the Left Right. This Whampoa cadet who drank foreign ink, this determined Communist, this chivalrous and gentle father who still had to take time to wash diapers for his newborn children before the war, used supernatural guerrilla warfare to make the Japanese army fearful. "Famous generals will die for the country, and they are willing to fight hard to defend China."

We must not forget the Lee roots. The Japanese invaded Yunnan, and many military and political dignitaries were in a hurry, and this old scholar in Tengchong, western Yunnan, resolutely stepped forward, asked Ying to resist the enemy, "read the sage books in life", and vowed to live and die with Baoshan.

We can't forget Wang Zhicheng. At the time of the national crisis, Wang Jiantang, a student from Sichuan, threw his pen into Rong and formed a "Northwest Sichuan Youth Please Kill the Enemy Team". When the old father heard the news, he sent his son a flag with the word "death", and on the right side of the word "death" was written, "I don't want you to be filial to me, but I only want you to be loyal to the nation." Wipe blood when wounded, and wrap up after death. Go forward and don't forget your duty!"

We can't forget Zhao Yiman. This woman, who had studied and studied at the Whampoa Military Academy, insisted on resisting Japan in the white mountains and black waters, killing the enemy with a gun in red clothes and white horses. After being unfortunately captured, he was tortured by the Japanese army in every possible way, and never revealed the slightest information. Before the righteousness, she left a fist to her only son: "It is a pity that my mother did not fulfill your responsibility for education. Hurry up and come to comfort your underground mother! When you grow up, I hope you don't forget that your mother sacrificed for the country!

The wind roared, the torrential rain fell suddenly, the wind and sand rolled in the air, and then the red flag fluttered and rattled, although it stood in the night, it stood straight into the sky. The Communist Party of China rose to prominence in the midst of the country's death, and led the people to follow their own path in the prosperous era of peace, and our young people should be self-reliant and self-reliant, shoulder the heavy responsibility of the country, and inherit the spirit of our ancestors!

When the war was raging, countless martyrs fell on the battlefield, shrouded in horse leather. They turned the tide with all their might, overcame thorns and thorns, and helped the building to collapse, but they kept silent about their sufferings and hardships! Just like Qiu Shaoyun, they burned themselves, but they never moved like a mountain!

Scholars and literati also rose up to the occasion, using pens as guns, and angrily resisted! Mr. Wen Yiduo's speech was deafening and spoke the hearts of countless scholars, and the cry of the May Fourth Movement is still unforgettable! Under the layout of famine and political darkness, we have gone against the current!

"Heng Mei coldly pointed at Qianfu, bow his head and be willing to be a son of a cow!"

"Slaying the Wolf" wrote: "If the prosperous world will fall into the abyss on the side, our generation should die." In today's new China, although there is no war, young people should have the consciousness of "worrying about the worries of the world first, and enjoying the joys of the world after the world." How can they be depressed because of the prosperous times and retreat because of misery and hardships!

The Chinese War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression was the greatest patriotic war in the history of the Chinese nation and the first national liberation war in which China won a complete victory against foreign invasion in modern times. From the September 18 Incident in 1931, when the Chinese people opened the prelude to the partial War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, to the complete victory of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression in 1945, the Chinese military and people went forward one after another, fought bloody battles, and bravely resisted at the critical juncture of the threat of national extinction. Countless heroes and martyrs sacrificed their lives and martyrs to save the nation from peril, realize national independence and people's liberation, and safeguard world peace and international fairness and justice. The list of famous anti-Japanese martyrs and heroes is as follows:

Specific lists

The first batch

(Announced by the Ministry of Civil Affairs of the People's Republic of China in September 2014, 300, in order of year of sacrifice and surname strokes)

Sun Mingwu (1889-1932) Commander-in-Chief of the Liaodong Blood League's Anti-Japanese Salvation Army

Robert Short (1905-1932) was an American flight instructor at the Aviation School of the Ministry of Military Affairs

Teng Jiushou (1899-1932) Chief of Staff of the Wusong Fortress Headquarters of the 19th Route Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liu Sanchun (1911-1933) Political Commissar of the 1st Guerrilla Brigade of the Northeast People's Revolutionary Army in South Manchuria

Meng Jiemin (1912-1933) was the commander of the South Manchurian guerrillas of the 32nd Army of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army and the commander of the 1st Brigade

Deng Tiemei (1892-1934) Commander of the 28th Route Army of the Northeast People's Self-Defense Volunteer Army

Ji Hongchang (1895-1934) Commander of the 2nd Army of the Chahar People's Anti-Japanese Allied Army, former commander-in-chief of the Northern Route Army and commander of the Chahar garrison

Tong Changrong (1907-1934) Secretary of the East Manchurian Special Committee of the Communist Party of China

Sun Yongqin (189 3-1935) was the commander of the People's Anti-Japanese National Salvation Army

Li Hongguang (1910-1935) Chief of Staff of the 1st Army of the Northeast People's Revolutionary Army and Commander of the 1st Division

Wang Detai (1907-1936) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 1st Route Army and Commander of the 2nd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhang Jingwen (1902-1936) Secretary of the Harbin Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China

Li Shichao (1904-1936) Acting Secretary General of the Manchuria Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China

Li Xuezhong (1910-1936) Director of the Political Department of the 2nd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhao Yiman (1905-1936 female) Political Commissar of the 2nd Regiment of the 1st Division of the 3rd Army of the Northeast People's Revolutionary Army

Xia Yunjie (1903-1936) was the commander of the 6th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wang Renzhai (1906-1937) was the commander of the 3rd Division of the 1st Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Deng Yuzhuo (1903-1937) Chief of Staff of the 107th Division of the 67th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Le Yiqin (1914-1937) Commander of the 22nd Squadron of the 4th Air Force Air Brigade

Zhu Chi (1900-1937) was the commander of the 262nd Brigade of the 88th Division of the 9th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Tong Linge (1892-1937) was the deputy commander of the 29th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wu Keren (1894-1937) was the commander of the 67th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wu Jiguang (1903-1937) was the commander of the 174th Brigade of the 58th Division of the 74th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Song Tieyan (1909-1937) Director of the Political Department of the 1st Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhang Zhonghua (1912-1937) Director of the Political Department of the 5th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhang Jiazhou (1907-1937) was the commander of the Jiangbei Independent Division of the 36th Army of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army

Zhang Chengde (1880-1937) was the commander of the 3rd Division of the 2nd Cavalry Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Lanchi (1898-1937) was the deputy commander of the 112th Division of the 57th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Bojiao (1897-1937) was the commander of the 187th Brigade of the 63rd Division of the 28th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Chen Rongjiu (1904-1937) was the commander of the 7th Army and the commander of the 1st Division of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Guan Huimin (1901-1937) was the commander of the 270th Brigade of the 90th Division of the 4th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Pang Hanzhen (1901-1937) was the commander of the 510th Brigade of the 170th Division of the 7th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yi Anhua (1900-1937) was the commander of the 259th Brigade of the 87th Division of the 9th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Luo Cequn (1893-1937) was the deputy commander of the 159th Division of the 66th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zheng Tingzhen (1883-1937) was the commander of the 5th Independent Brigade of the 9th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yao Ziqing (1909-1937) was the commander of the 3rd Battalion of the 583rd Regiment of the 292nd Brigade of the 98th Division of the 18th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yao Zhongying (1896-1937) Chief of Staff of the 156th Division of the 83rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Jiang Yuzhen (1894-1937) was the commander of the 196th Brigade of the 65th Division of the 34th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhao Chongde (1910-1937) was the commander of the 3rd Battalion of the 769th Regiment of the 358th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Zhao Dengyu (1898-1937) was the commander of the 132nd Division of the 29th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Hao Mengling (1898-1937) was the commander of the 9th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Rao Guohua (1895-1937) was the commander of the 145th Division of the 21st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xia Guozhang (1896-1937) was the deputy commander of the 172nd Division of the 7th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Qin Lin (1900-1937) was the commander of the 511th Brigade of the 171st Division of the 7th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Gao Zhihang (1908-1937) Commander of the Air Force Destroyer Unit and Commander of the 4th Air Group

Gao Zhisong (1899-1937) was the commander of the 264th Brigade of the 88th Division of the 9th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liang Jiantang (1897-1937) was the commander of the 203rd Brigade of the 69th Division of the 33rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xiao Shanling (1892-1937) Deputy Commander of the Military Police of the Nanjing Garrison of the National Revolutionary Army

Yan Haiwen (1916-1937) was a pilot of the 5th Air Force Air Brigade

Huang Meixing (1897-1937) was the commander of the 264th Brigade of the 88th Division of the 9th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xie Caixuan (1896-1937) was the commander of the 477th Brigade of the 159th Division of the 66th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Cai Bingyan (1902-1937) was the commander of the 201st Brigade of the 67th Division of the 18th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Marc Nikolayevich Marchenkov (1914-1938) was a member of the Soviet Air Force Volunteer Corps

Ma Weilong (1906-1938) was the commander of the 136th Brigade of the 46th Division of the 27th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Pinglu (1901-1938) Commander of the 1st Detachment of the 3rd Military Region of the North China Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wang Guangyu (1911-1938) was the deputy commander of the 4th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wang Zhenxiang (1900-1938) Deputy Commander of the 20th Division of the 12th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Mingzhang (18 93-1938) was the commander of the 122nd Division of the 41st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Xishan (1902-1938) Deputy Commander of the 91st Division of the 53rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Deng Zuoyu (1898-1938) Chief of Staff of the 139th Division of the 75th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Feng Anbang (1885-1938) was the commander of the 42nd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Ye Chenghuan (1914-1938) was the commander of the 772nd Regiment of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Liu Lianke (1917-1938) Chief of Staff of the Eighth Route Army and the Eastern Hebei Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Liu Guiwu (1902-1938) was the commander of the 6th Division of the 2nd Cavalry Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liu Zhendong (1893-1938) was a senior staff officer of the 5th Theater Command of the National Revolutionary Army and commander of the 2nd Route Guerrilla

Liu Shuhua (1912-1938) Director of the Political Department of the 8th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhu Yanhui (1901-1938) was the commander of the 546th Brigade of the 85th Division of the 94th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhu Jialin (1892-1938) was the commander of the 115th Brigade of the 39th Division of the 40th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Yanping (1903-1938) was the commander of the 4th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Li Xuefu (1901-1938) was the commander of the 7th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Yang Jingyuan (1902-1938) Commander of the Jinnan Military Division of the Hebei-Shandong Border Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Shen Dongping (1905-1938) was a member of the Henan Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China and secretary of the Henan Special Committee of the Communist Party of China

Chen Yuhuan (1897-1938) was the deputy commander of the Eighth Route Army and the Eastern Hebei Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Chen Zhongshu (1891-1938) was the commander of the 542nd Brigade of the 183rd Division of the 60th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Chen Jinxiu (1911-1938) was the commander of the 688th Regiment of the 344th Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Chen Dexin (1904-1938) was the commander of the 86th Brigade of the 29th Division of the 55th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhou Yuan (1894-1938) Deputy Commander of the 173rd Division of the 48th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhou Zhuoran (1904-1938) was the commander of the 7th Division of the 6th Cavalry Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhou Jianping (1892-1938) Commander of the 4th Army Division of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Fan Xin (1899-1938) was the deputy commander of the 198th Division of the 54th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Fan Zhuxian (1882-1938) Commissioner and Security Commander of the 6th District of Shandong Province

Hong Linge (1902-1938) was the deputy commander of the Eighth Route Army and the commander-in-chief of the 3rd Route Army

Zhao Weibin (1894-1938) Chief of Staff of the 122nd Division of the 41st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhao Xizhang (1901-1938) was the commander of the 215th Brigade of the 70th Division of the 19th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Qi (1908-1938) Commander of the 3rd Army of the Shandong People's Anti-Japanese National Salvation Army and Chairman of the Military and Political Committee

Sa Shijun (1895-1938) was the captain of the Zhongshan Ship of the 1st Fleet of the Navy

Huang Qidong (1891-1938) Chief of Staff of the 23rd Division of the 27th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xie Shengbiao (1903-1938) was the guerrilla commander of the Soviet, Zhejiang, and Anhui forces of the National Revolutionary Army

Han Mingzhu (1913-1938) Deputy Commander of the Jiaodong Anti-Japanese Allied Army Headquarters of the Eighth Route Army

Ding Silin (1913-1939) was the commander of the new 1st Regiment of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Ma Yaonan (1902-1939) Commander of the 3rd Detachment of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Fang Shuhong (1908-1939) was the commander of the 114th Division of the 51st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Yujiu (1902-1939) Chief of Staff of the 79th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Genying (1907-1939 female) was a political instructor at the Financial and Economic Cadre School of the Supply Department of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Deng Yongyao (1912-1939) Director of the Political Department of the Eastward Column of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Ye Fuping (1902-1939) was the head of the Quartermaster Department of the New Fourth Army

Jiang Shangqing (1911-1939) was a member of the Special Committee of the Communist Party of China in Northeast Anhui

Mu Guangyi (1900-1939) Minister of the Workers' Department of the Jiaodong District Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Wu Kun (1910-1939) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Jiangnan Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army of the New Fourth Army and Commander of the 2nd Road

Yang Yumin (1889-1939) Director of the Political Department of the 1st Route of the Eighth Route Army and the Eastern Hebei Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Chen Anbao (1891-1939) was the commander of the 29th Army and the commander of the 79th Division of the National Revolutionary Army

Mao Liying (1910-1939 female) is the president of the China Professional Women's Club

Hu Fajian (1906-1939) Chief of Staff of the 1st Detachment of the New Fourth Army and Deputy Commander of the 3rd Route of the Jiangnan Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Tang Juwu (1899-1939) was the commander of the Northeast Guerrilla Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Grigory Alimovich Kulishenko (1903-1939) Captain of the Soviet Air Force Volunteer Corps

Norman Bethune (1890-1939) was a doctor of the Canadian-American Medical Corps for China

Guo Zheng (1914-1939) Chief of Staff of the 1st Independent Brigade of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Dong Yuhua (1907-1939) was the commander of the Eighth Route Army and the Eastern Hebei Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wei Daguang (1911-1939) was the commander of the 2nd Independent Brigade of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Ma Zhenhua (1904-1940) Secretary of the Jinnan Prefectural Committee of the Communist Party of China, Hebei-Shandong Border District

Wang Pu (1908-1940) was the commander of the guerrilla army of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Jie Zhenguo (1910-1940) Captain of the 1st Special Service Brigade directly under the 2nd Route Command of the Eighth Route Army and the Eastern Hebei Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wu Longzhuo (1914-1940) Deputy Commander of the 17th Regiment of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Zhang Zizhong (1890-1940) Commander-in-Chief of the 33rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Lin (1914-1940) was the commander and political commissar of the 25th Regiment of the 9th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Li Lin (1915-1940 female) Member of the 11th Administrative Office of Jinsui Border District

Li Rong (1901-1940) Commander and political commissar of the 4th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region

Yang Mugui (1901-1940) Director of the Quartermaster Department of the 3rd Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Yang Jingyu (1905-1940) Commander-in-Chief and Political Commissar of the 1st Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Chen Wenbin (1911-1940) was the political commissar of the Jinnan Anti-Japanese Self-Defense Army of the Eighth Route Army

Chen Hanzhang (1913-1940) was the commander of the 3rd Front Army of the 1st Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Guan Chuyin (1909-1940) Political commissar of the Ludong Corps of the Henan-Hubei Advance Column of the New Fourth Army

Luo Huacheng (1895-1940) Director of the Political Department of the 2nd Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Zheng Zuomin (1902-1940) was the deputy commander of the 2nd Army of the National Revolutionary Army and the commander of the 9th Division

Jin Fangchang (1920-1940) Deputy Director of the Propaganda Department of the Acting County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China and Secretary of the Chengguan District Party Committee

Jiang Molin (1921-1940) Captain of the Young Volunteer Army of the Teaching Regiment directly under the General Headquarters of the 2nd Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Hu Yixin (1907-1940) Political commissar of the 6th Independent Detachment of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Zhong Yi (1901-1940) was the commander of the 173rd Division of the 84th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wen Yunzhi (1904-1940) Political Commissar of the 1st Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xu Qiu (1903-1940) Commander of the 8th Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Gu Shiduo (1914-1940) Deputy Commander of the 2nd Regiment of the Jiangbei Guerrilla Column of the New Fourth Army

Gu Yongtian (1916-1940) was the commissioner of the 8th District of the Northwest Administrative Office of Shanxi Province

Cao Yafan (1911-1940) Commander of the 1st Route Army and 1st Front Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Huang Zhenya (1905-1940) Captain of the 3rd Brigade of the Independent Corps of the Qiongya Anti-Japanese Guerrillas

Dong Tianzhi (1911-1940) Political commissar of the 3rd Column of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Xie Jiaqing (1912-1940) Political Commissar of the 4th Army Subdivision of the Jin-Hebei-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Lu Yuting (1899-1940) Captain of the 1st Corps of the 6th Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Cun Xingqi (1895-1941) Commander of the 12th Division of the 3rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Liren (1910-1941) Director of the Enemy Engineering Department of the Political Department of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Wang Jun (1902-1941) was the commander of the 27th Division of the 80th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Hans Heber (1897-1941) Polish journalist

Bai Yihua (1911-1941) was the commander of the 10th Regiment of the Eighth Route Army

Bai Wenguan (1873-1941 female) was a villager of Dongxinzhuang, Xian County, Hebei Province

Ren Guang (1900-1941) musician

Xing Qingzhong (1899-1941) was the commander of the 65th Division of the 15th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liu Zichao (1906-1941) Director of the Propaganda Department of the Political Department of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Liu Haitao (1907-1941) Commander of the Luzhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Sun Chunlin (1906-1941) Commander of the Southern Naval Division of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Zhu Liwen (1909-1941) Deputy Brigade Commander of the 15th Brigade of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Zhu Hongxun (1899-1941) was the deputy commander of the 53rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army and the commander of the 130th Division

Zhu Yugan (1906-1941) was the head of the Social Department of the Luzhong District Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Li Shouling (1918-1941) Secretary of the Shandong Qingzhong Prefectural Committee of the Communist Party of China

Yang Zhong (1909.9-1941.9) was the director of the Political Department of the 6th Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army.

Wang Yachen (1911-1941) was the commander of the 10th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Su Jingcheng (1915-1941) Director of the Political Department of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army and Director of the Political Department of the Taiyue Military Region

Xin Rui (1918-1941 female) was the head of the Shandong Sister Troupe

Qiu Dongping (1910-1941) Director of the Central China Branch of Lu Xun Academy of Arts[7] [8] [9]

Chen Ming (1902-1941) Vice Chairman and Secretary-General of the Shandong Provincial Committee for the Implementation of Wartime Work

Chen Zhongzhu (1906-1941) Commander of the 4th Guerrilla Column of the Lusu-Anhui Border Region of the National Revolutionary Army

Chen Wenqi (1904-1941) Chief of Staff of the 27th Division of the 80th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Chen Ruoke (1919-1941 female) was a member of the Standing Committee of the Shandong Women's National Salvation Federation

Zhou Zikun (1901-1941) Deputy Chief of Staff of the New Fourth Army and Commander of the Teaching Corps of the New Fourth Army

Wu Hengtong (1902-1941) was the commander of the 47th Regiment of the 16th Brigade of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army

Lin Duo (1915-1941) Political Commissar of the Ministry of Health of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Wu Shimin (1892-1941) was the commander of the 98th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Luo Zhongyi (1907-1941) Chief of Staff of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army and Commander of the 16th Brigade

Xiang Ying (1898-1941) Deputy Commander of the New Fourth Army

Tang Huaiyuan (1886-1941) was the commander of the 3rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yuan Guoping (1906-1941) Director of the Political Department of the New Fourth Army

Jia Ligen (1907-1941) was the director of the Mongolian Administration Division of the Administrative Office of the Jinsui Guerrilla District in Suicha

Guo Meng (1913-1941) Political Commissar of the 4th Regiment of the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the New Fourth Army

Lai Chuanxiang (1904-1941) was the deputy commander of the 190th Division of the 10th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liao Haitao (1909-1941) Political Commissar and Director of the Political Department of the 16th Brigade of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army

Yan Dingjiu (1894-1941) Deputy Commander of the 22nd Column of the 1st Theater Guerrilla Advance Army of the National Revolutionary Army and Deputy Commander of the Security of the 8th Army Division of Henan Province

Wei Zhengmin (1909-1941) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 1st Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Yu Jiwu (1915-1942) Political Commissar of the 3rd Army Division of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Kong Qingtong (1912-1942) Commander of the 8th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army Jizhong Military Region

Wang Fengshan (1906-1942) was the commander of the 45th Division of the 34th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Yuanyin (1915-1942) Political Commissar of the 8th Army Subdivision of the Eighth Route Army Jizhong Military Region

Wang Bosheng (1915-1942) Political Commissar of the 6th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region

Bao Sen (1911-1942) Deputy Commander of the Eastern Hebei Army Division of the Eighth Route Army

Zuo Quan (1905-1942) Deputy Chief of Staff of the Eighth Route Army

Shi Jingfang (1910-1942) Commander of the 1st Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong Border Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Sun Kaichu (1910-1942) Political Commissar of the Military Industry Department of the Logistics Department of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters

Sun Bolong (1903-1942) Deputy Commander of the Lunan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Sun Yimin (1914-1942) Political Commissar of the 4th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army Southern Hebei Military Region

Zhu Shiqin (1904-1942) was the commander of the 30th Division of the Provisional Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xu Hengzhi (1909-1942) Chief of the General Staff of the 3rd Route Army and Commander of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

He Yun (1905-1942) was the president and editor-in-chief of the North China edition of Xinhua Daily

Wu Shimeng (1899-1942) was the head of the Military Industry Department of the 2nd Division of the New Fourth Army

Zhang Renhuai (1912-1942) Director of the Propaganda Department of the Political Department of the Eighth Route Army and the Jizhong Military Region

Teo Yuan Pao (1916-1942) was a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Malaysia and head of the Propaganda Department

Zhang Youqing (1904-1942) Secretary General of the Forward Headquarters of the Eighth Route Army

Zhang Qi (1910-1942) Deputy and commander of the 3rd Battalion of the 113th Regiment of the 38th Division of the 66th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Yongan (1912-1942) Commander of the 3rd Army Division of the Bohai Naval Region of the Hebei-Lubian Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Li Zhuru (1905-1942) Secretary General of the Shandong Provincial Committee for the Implementation of Wartime Work

Li Zhenqian (1903-1942) Commissioner of the Huxi Administrative Office

Li Songxiao (1906-1942) Commissioner of the 5th Special Administration of Southern Hebei

Du Zifu (1916-1942) Political Commissar of the 1st Military Division of the Eighth Route Army Hebei and Shandong Border Military Region

Yang Hongming (1910-1942) Commander of the 4th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army in the Southern Hebei Military Region

Wang Yang (1913-1942) Political Commissar of the 1st Military Division of the Luzhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Lu Shengxun (1907-1942) Deputy Commander of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Chen Zibin (1899-1942) was the commander of the 129th Brigade and 10th Regiment of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Lin Xinping (1919-1942 female) Chief of the Cultural and Educational Section of the Anti-Japanese Coalition Government of Jintan, Liyang, Yixing, Wujin and Danyang Counties

Lin Boxi (1909-1942) was the leader of the 3rd Detachment of the Independent Corps of the Qiongya Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Army

Fan Zixia (1908-1942) was the commander of the 129th Brigade of the 10th Division of the Eighth Route Army and the commander of the 6th Army Division of the Taihang Military Region

Zheng Wendao (1914-1942) was an intelligence officer of the Central Social Department

Yao Xianwei (1905-1942) was a professor at the Department of Literature and History of National Chung Cheng University and the head of the Anti-Japanese Field Service Corps

Kotnis (1910-1942) Doctor of the Indian Medical Corps to China

Hong Zhenhai (1910-1942) Captain of the Lunan Railway Guerrilla Brigade of the Eighth Route Army

Zhao Shangzhi (1908-1942) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 2nd Route Army and Commander of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhong Xiaopei (1914-1942) Secretary of the Youth Movement Committee of the Shandong Branch of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China

Xia Yunchao (1917-1942) Minister of Health of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xu Baoshan (1908-1942) was the commander of the 24th Regiment of the 8th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Guo Lushun (1914-1942) Political commissar of the Muslim Detachment of the 3rd Column of the Eighth Route Army

Guo Guoyan (1913-1942) Commander of the 3rd Army Division of the Taihang Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Cui Shuguang (1911-1942) Secretary General of the Party Committee of the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningbo Border Region of the Communist Party of China

Chang Deshan (1910-1942) Commander of the 8th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army Jizhong Military Region

Xie Hanwen (1904-1942) Director of the Political Department of the Logistics Department of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters

Dou Laigeng (1900-1942) was the commander of the 17th Brigade of Shandong Provincial Security

Dai Anlan (1904-1942) was the commander of the 200th Division of the 5th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Ma Dingfu (1915-1943) Political commissar of the 129th Brigade and 30th Regiment of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Wang Pu (1929-1943) was the head of the Anti-Japanese Children's League

Deng Zhenxun (1904-1943) Deputy Director of the Administrative Office of Southern Jiangsu

Tian Shouyao (1915-1943) was the commander of the 8th Brigade of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army

Shi Jiazhi (1918-1943) Chief of the Operations Section of the Enemy Engineering Department of the Political Department of the Southern Hebei Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Sun Mingjin (1905-1943) was the commander of the 10th Reserve Division of the 10th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhu Cheng (1901-1943) Commander of the 5th Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xu Guozhang (1898-1943) was the commander of the 150th Division of the 67th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Zhong (1915-1943) Political Commissar of the 2nd Army Subdivision of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region

Xiao Yongzhi (1915-1943) Commander of the 7th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army in the Southern Hebei Military Region

Chen Feilong (1908-1943) Acting Commander of the 10th Division of the 58th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhou Fu (1901-1943) Director of the Political Department of the Lusu Theater of the Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Meng Zhaoyu (1918-1943) Political Commissar of the Lunan Independent Detachment of the Eighth Route Army

Yi Liangpin (1912-1943) Commander of the 6th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region

Zheng Xingfu (1908-1943) was the head of the Supply Department of the 7th Division of the New Fourth Army

Zhao Yijing (1912-1943) Commander of the 5th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army in the Southern Hebei Military Region

Tang Kewei (1913-1943) Secretary of the Shuidong Prefectural Committee of the Communist Party of China

Chai Yixin (1898-1943) Chief of Staff of the 58th Division of the 74th Army of the National Revolutionary Army and Commander of the 169th Regiment

Guo Haoli (1904-1943) Chief of Staff of the 1st Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region and Commander of the Lunan Detachment

Gao Jiecheng (1909-1943) President of the head office of the Bank of Southern Hebei

Qianyunqing (1906-1943) Captain of the 40th District of the 6th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Jizhong Military Region

Fu Zhuting (1912-1943) Political Commissar of the Binhai Naval District of the Eighth Route Army

Huang Hua (1911-1943) Commander of the Hebei-Lubian Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Peng Xiong (1915-1943) Chief of Staff of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army

Peng Shiliang (1904-1943) was the commander of the 5th Division of the 73rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zeng Renwen (1906-1943) Chief of Staff of the Logistics Department of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters

Han Zengfeng (1916-1943) was the captain of the 8th District of the 4th Army Division of the Jinchaji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Lu Baoqi (1913-1943) was the head of the Enemy Engineering Department of the Luzhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xie Yunshan (1905-1943) was the first commissioner of the Southern Hebei Commissioner

Lei Ye (1917-1943) Chief of the Organization Section of the Political Department of the Jidong Military Subdivision of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Ding Zhenjun (1913-1944) Secretary of the 4th Prefectural Committee of the Hebei Rebian Special Committee of the Communist Party of China

Bu Rongjiu (1908-1944) Political Commissar of the Ministry of Health of the Eighth Route Army, Jireliao Military Region

Ma Benzhai (1902-1944) Commander of the 3rd Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army and Commander of the Muslim Detachment

Ma Xiaoyun (1906-1944) Deputy Commander of the 6th Army Division of the Bohai Naval Region of the Eighth Route Army

Wang Shaoqi (1912-1944) Minister of Health of the Eighth Route Army, Jireliao Military Region

Wang Jiaben (1901-1944) was the commander of the 79th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Keshan (1919-1944) Deputy squad leader of the 2nd Battalion, 4th Company, 2nd Battalion, 13th Regiment, 5th Brigade of the Eighth Route Army, Jiaodong Military Region

Wang Jianyue (1906-1944) Deputy Commander of the 8th Division of the 57th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Lu Guangwei (1903-1944) Deputy Commander and Director of the Political Department of the 8th Division of the 5th Army Cavalry of the National Revolutionary Army

Ren Changlun (1921-1944) Deputy platoon commander of the 5th Battalion, 5th Battalion, 14th Regiment, 14th Regiment, 8th Route Army, Jiaodong Military Region, and 3rd Platoon Commander

Lü Gongliang (1903-1944) was the commander of the 29th Division of the 15th Army of the National Revolutionary Army and the commander of the Xuchang garrison

Lü Zhanmeng (1905-1944) Chief of Staff of the 31st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

He Wanxiang (1915-1944) was the commander of the 2nd Company of the 6th Regiment of the 2nd Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Yu Ziwu (1901-1944) Deputy Commander of the 151st Division of the 62nd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wu Qifang ( ? —1944) was the head of the Supply Department of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Zhang Wenbin (1910-1944) Deputy Secretary of the Southern Working Committee of the Communist Party of China and Director of the Organization Department

Li Hanqing (1903-1944) Commander of the Northern Jiangxi Command of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Li Jiayu (1890-1944) was the commander-in-chief of the 36th Army and the commander of the 47th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yang Dazhang (1909-1944) was the first commissioner of the Jirebian Administrative Office

Yang Xiaogen (1922-1944) Deputy Captain of the 2nd Squad of the 44th District of the 6th Army Division of the Jizhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Yang Xuecheng (1915-1944) Political Commissar of the Headquarters of the Hubei-Anhui Corps of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Xiao Xiaoze (1902-1944) Senior Staff Officer and Acting Chief of Staff Office of the General Headquarters of the 36th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zou Taofen (1895-1944) was a journalist and publisher

Chen Baofeng (1925-1944) Leader of the Militia Flying Explosion Group of the Shandong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Chen Shaotang (1897-1944) Infantry Commander of the 104th Division of the 47th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Chen Jihuan (1893-1944) was Chief of Staff of the Guilin Urban Defense Command of the 16th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

William Reid (?—1944) was a pilot of the American Volunteer Air Force for China

Gao Xiaoan (1916-1944) Deputy Captain of the 1st District Team of the 13th Army Division of the Jin-Chahar-Hebei Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Huang Yonghuai (1902-1944) was a senior staff officer of the 31st Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army and deputy commander of the newly formed 29th Division

Huang Soul (1903-1944) Director of the Political Department of the Independent Corps of the Qiongya Anti-Japanese Guerrillas

Peng Xuefeng (1907-1944) was the commander and political commissar of the 4th Division of the New Fourth Army

Cheng Zhongyi (1916-1944) Commissioner of the Suinan Special Administration

Kan Weiyong (1900-1944) was the commander of the 131st Division of the 31st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Caishan (1911-1945) Deputy Chief of Staff of the Eighth Route Army, Jireliao Military Region

Ma Lixun (1920-1945) Platoon Commander of the 1st Battalion, 1st Company, 2nd Platoon, 3rd Regiment, 1st Army Division, Lunan Military Region, Eighth Route Army

Ma Yingyuan (1921-1945) Militia instructor and head of the flying shooting and explosion group of the 3rd Army Division of the Taihang Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Wang Xianchen (1914-1945) Commander of the 6th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army Jizhong Military Region

Zhang Hongyi (1912-1945) Political Commissar of the Independent Detachment of the Lunan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Shen Guodong (1912-1945) Commander of the Jiangnan Command of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Zhou Liping (1915-1945) Political commissar of the 1st Detachment of the Hanjiang Column of the Guangdong People's Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Army

Yu Dafu (1896-1945) was the President of the Anti-Japanese Federation of Singapore's Cultural Circles

Hideo Miyagawa (1918-1945) Vice Chairman of the Council of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region of the Japanese People's Liberation League and Senator of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region

Gui Gansheng (1911-1945) Commander of the 1st Army Division of the Eighth Route Army in the Southern Hebei Military Region

Cao Shifan (1924-1945) Deputy platoon commander of the 2nd Company of the 1st Battalion of the 1st Regiment of the Luzhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xie Jinyuan and other 800 heroes (1937) 524th Regiment of the 88th Division of the 9th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Leng Yun and other eight female soldiers (1938) Women's Regiment of the 2nd Route Army and the 5th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Five Heroes of Langya Mountain (1941) 7th Company and 6th Squad of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Army Division of the Jinchaji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Ma Shishan Ten Warriors (1942) 7th Company and 6th Squad of the 13th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Liu Laozhuang Company 82 Martyrs (1943) 4 Company of 2 Battalion, 19 Regiment, 7 Brigade, 3rd Division, New Fourth Army[4] [2] [3]

Second batch

On August 24, 2015, in order to solemnly commemorate the 70th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War, the Ministry of Civil Affairs issued an announcement announcing the second batch of famous anti-Japanese heroes and heroes.

The list is sorted by year of sacrifice and last name strokes as follows:

Ma Xingzhou (1884-1932) Chief of Staff of the 16th Route Army of the Northeast People's Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Cheng Qinglong (1898-1932) was the commander-in-chief of the 12th Route Einsatzgruppen of the Chinese National Salvation Army

Guan Yaozhou (1891-1932) was the commander of the 5th Route Army of the Jilin Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Li Yu (1896-1932) was the deputy commander of the 17th Route Army of the Northeast People's Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Zhang Jingdu (1904-1932) was the commander of the 2nd Infantry Brigade of Heilongjiang Infantry Provisional Organization

Huang Yuquan (1905-1932) was the commander of the 6th Central Aviation Team of the Air Force

Han Jialin (1898-1932) was a member of the General Staff of the Heilongjiang Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Wang Zhaolan (1910-1933) Captain of the South Manchurian Guerrilla Force of the 32nd Army of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army

Wang Runbo (1905-1933) was the commander of the 149th Regiment of the 25th Division of the 17th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Tian Lin (1900-1933) Commander of the Jilin People's Anti-Japanese Self-Defense Army

Bai Zifeng (1877-1933) was the deputy commander of the 5th Route Army of the Liaoning Anti-Japanese National Salvation Army

Chu Xiangchen (1910-1933) Political Commissar of the South Manchurian Guerrilla Corps of the 32nd Army of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army

Sun Mingchen (1894-1933) General Staff member and commander of the 4th echelon of the 3rd Army Corps of the Northeast People's Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Li Chunrun (1901-1933) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 3rd Army Corps of the Northeast People's Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Wu Zhige (1902-1933) Chief of Staff of the General Headquarters of the Chahar People's Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Jin Boyang (1907-1933) was a member of the Standing Committee of the Manchuria Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China

Hu Zemin (1902-1933) Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the Chinese National Salvation Army

Xu Dasan (1896-1933) was the commander of the 8th Route Army of the Liaoning People's Self-Defense Army

Pei Zhiyun Secretary of the Tangyuan Central County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Zhu Yunguang (1911-1934) was the deputy commander of the East Manchurian Anti-Japanese Combined Army Command

Zhu Shouyi (1905-1934) was the leader of the Mishan guerrillas

Zhang Wenkai (1907-1934) Captain of the Raohe Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Brigade

Due to the word limit of the entry, the list is incomplete, please click on the second batch of famous anti-Japanese martyrs and heroes to view the specific list. [5]

The third batch

On September 2, 2020, in order to solemnly commemorate the 75th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War, with the approval of the Party Central Committee and the State Council, the third batch of famous anti-Japanese heroes and heroes was announced, with a total of 185 people.

(Sorted by the year of sacrifice, and sorted by the stroke of the surname with the same year of sacrifice)

Name Position at the time of sacrifice

Fang Zhenguo (?-1932) Commander of the 36th Route Army of the Northeast People's Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Zhang Haichuan (1893-1932) Commander of the 6th Detachment of the 3rd Army Corps of the Northeast National Salvation Army

Xu Guang (1899-1933) Secretary of the Hunchun County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Mao Changshan (?) -1934) Commander of the Liaoning National Salvation Corps of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Kim Soon-deok (1911-1934) Commander of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Independent Division of the 2nd Army of the Northeast People's Revolutionary Army

Gao Xingya (1898-1934) Brigade commander of the Liaoning National Salvation Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Lin Xiuyi (1899-1934) Commander of the 9th Route Army of the Liaoning People's Self-Defense Army, Hailong Workers' and Peasants' Volunteer Army

Kim Chang-geun (1907-1935) Secretary of the Panshi Central County Committee of the Communist Party of China

Li Shouzhong (1906-1936) Director of the Political Department of the 1st Division of the 4th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Zhang Kui (1899-1936) was the commander of the 2nd Regiment of the 1st Division of the 4th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wang Jian (1914-1937) was the commander of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Division of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Wang Ziyang (?) -1937) Acting Commander of the 3rd Division of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Lu Yingchun (1905-1937) was the leader of the Hezhe squad of the 5th Regiment of the 2nd Division of the 6th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Liu Zhongyi (1897-1937) Political Commissar of the 22nd Division of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army

Du Jichen (1903-1937) was the commander of the 4th Regiment of the 2nd Division of the 5th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Li Deheng (1896-1937) Chairman of the Liaoning Huanren Anti-Japanese Salvation Association

Zhang Yanzhong (1895-1937) was the commander of the 4th Brigade of the 15th Division of the 4th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhang Weihua (1913-1937) was the head of the Fusong underground party branch of the Communist Party of China

Jin Gen (1903-1937) Director of the Political Department of the 3rd Division of the 8th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Hu Wenquan (1905-1937) was the commander of the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the 11th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Qin Shiquan (?-1937) Commander of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Brigade of the Teaching Corps of the Central Military Academy of the National Revolutionary Army

Chai Yinxuan (1903-1937) Director of the Political Department of the 4th Division of the 8th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Luan Tianlin (1899-1937) was the commander of the Anti-Japanese Salvation Army

Sui Xiangsheng (1880-1937) was the commander of the 4th Regiment of the 1st Division of the 1st Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Han Rongjiu (1900-1937) Deputy Commander of the 25th Route Army of the Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Cheng Zhi (1907-1937) Commander of the 302nd Regiment of the 151st Brigade of the 51st Division of the 74th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Zeng Qingmin (1898-1937) Deputy Brigade Commander of the 457th Brigade of the 159th Division of the 66th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Xie Jiaxun (?) -1937) Commander of the Supplementary Brigade of the 87th Division of the 71st Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Feng Guohua (1901-1938) Director of the Experimental Area of the Yutang People's Education Center in Jiangsu Province

Bi Yumin (1910-1938) Political Commissar of the Independent Regiment of the 7th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Li Youyu (1905-1938) Deputy Commander of the 529th Regiment of the 89th Division of the 13th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Bingjun (1904-1938) Commander of the 1143rd Regiment of the 572nd Brigade of the 198th Division of the 87th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Guiling (1905-1938) was the head of the anti-Japanese government of Xiajin County, Shandong Province

Wu Fuxia (1913-1938) Squadron Leader of the 3rd Squadron of the 1st Brigade of the Air Force of the National Revolutionary Army

Xin Lisheng (1909-1938) was the commander of the 12th Regiment of the 3rd Army Division of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Lu Xitian (?) -1938) Commander of the 4th Division of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Yuan Zhi (1892-1938) was the commander of the 442nd Brigade of the 144th Division of the 23rd Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Golyadev (?) -1938) was a pilot of the Soviet Air Force Volunteer Corps

Xu Demin (1909-1938) was the deputy commander of the 1st Division of the 8th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Gao Peng (1905-1938) Commander of the 150th Regiment of the 75th Brigade of the 25th Division of the National Revolutionary Army

Jiang Jichang (1895-1938) was the commander of the 9th Regiment of the 3rd Division of the 5th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Dai Kezheng (1915-1938) was the commander of the 9th Regiment of the 3rd Division of the 5th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Yu Manqing (1916-1939) was the head of the Yucheng Armed Working Group of the Independent Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Ma Tianmin (1910-1939) Commander of the Independent Battalion of the 3rd Detachment of the Shandong People's Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Force of the Eighth Route Army

Wang Jizhou (?) -1939) Director of the Political Department of the 2nd Brigade of the 11th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Civilized (1916-1939) Director of the Political Office of the 5th Regiment of the 8th Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Liu Yaoting (1894-1939) was the commander of the 12th Regiment of the 6th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Qi Zhizhong (1913-1939) Commander of the 11th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Li Enju (1893-1939) was the head of the traffic station of the Xiajiang Special Committee of the Communist Party of China

Yang Xingzhong (1919-1939) Political commissar of the First Ordnance Factory of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Yang Jialiu (1905-1939) was the commander of the 360th Regiment of the 60th Division of the National Revolutionary Army

Wu Qixing (1917-1939) Deputy Director of the Political Department of the 686th Regiment of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Qiu Jinsheng (1912-1939) Deputy Commander of the 3rd Regiment of the 2nd Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Zhang Haitian (1888-1939) Commander of the 3rd Route Army of the 2nd Army Corps of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Zhang Zhenxing (1904-1939) Deputy Chief of Staff of the Tianshui Battalion of the Military Commission of the Nationalist Government

Chen Fangjun (1906-1939) was the commander of the 29th Regiment of the 4th Division of the 6th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Shao Cuncheng (1902-1939) Chief of Staff of the 3rd Theater Command of the National Revolutionary Army

Fan Tinglan (1903-1939) was the commander of the 5th Brigade of the 97th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Luo Jinwen (1914-1939) Vice President of Xi'an Guangren Hospital

Zhao Qingxiang (?) -1939) Commander of the 6th Division of the 8th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Geng Dianjun (1903-1939) was the commander of the 12th Regiment of the 6th Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Huang Wenjie (1902-1939) Commissioner of the Yangtze River Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in Guangdong

Huang Shengbin (1912-1939) Political commissar of the Eighth Route Army, Pingjing, the 4th Army Subdivision of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region

Cui Zhekuan (1915-1939) was the commander of the 3rd Regiment of the 1st Route Army Guard Brigade of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Lu Junqing (1901-1939) Captain of the Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Brigade in Jingying County, Hubei Province

Qu Xianming (1911-1940) Secretary of the Rongcheng County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Liu Zhenxi (1895-1940) was the head of the special mission of the Lunan People's Anti-Japanese General Mobilization Committee

Sun Shusheng (1917-1940) Instructor of the 3rd Battalion of the 1st Regiment of the 386th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Li Xiaorui (1918-1940) Secretary of the Zhongling County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Sha Yanxiao (1914-1940) Instructor of the 3rd Battalion of the 22nd Regiment of the 8th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Chen Sancai (1902-1940) was the president of the Shanghai United Youth Society and the president of the Tsinghua Alumni Association

Zhao Jingfu (1916-1940) Political commissar of the 3rd Detachment of the 3rd Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Xi Xiaofeng (1906-1940) Director of the Organization Department of the 3rd Army Division of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Jiang Lin (1918-1940) Director of the Political Department of the 2nd Detachment of the Jidong Military Subdivision of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Xu Xukui (1915-1940) was the commander of the 9th Regiment of the 2nd Column of the Northern Jiangsu Command of the New Fourth Army

Xu Zhifu (1908-1940) Secretary of the Changyan Union County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Gao Junfeng (1898-1940) Deputy Commander of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army

Guo Zhen (1915-1940) Secretary of the Wenshang County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Yan Zugao (1914-1940) Chief of Staff of the 13th Regiment of the Eighth Route Army's Jirecha Advance Army into the Eastern Hebei Army Division

Su Zhijie (1905-1940) was the commander of the 223rd Regiment of the 112th Brigade of the 38th Division of the 29th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Lan Hechun (1901-1940) was the commander of the 10th Regiment of the 4th Reserve Division of the 75th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Pu Yunzhao (1919-1940) Director of the Political Department of the 9th Regiment of the Eighth Route Army

Qi Chenghong (1908-1940) Deputy Chief of Staff of the 2nd Independent Regiment of the Huainan Jinpu Road East Joint Defense Command of the New Fourth Army

Wang Xingxing (1914-1941) Chief of Staff of the 54th and 55th Regiments of the 18th Brigade of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army

Wang Chaokui (1907-1941) was the commander of the 2nd Battalion of the 398th Regiment of the 133rd Division of the 20th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Fang Heping (1906-1941) Deputy Chief of Staff of the 18th Regiment of the 6th Brigade of the 2nd Division of the New Fourth Army

Fang Ying (1904-1941) Captain of the 2nd Brigade of the New Fourth Army Advance Regiment

Bai Fuhou (1913-1941) Captain of the 7th Brigade of the 3rd Detachment of the 3rd Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Feng Hanying (1894-1941) was the commander of the 247th Regiment of the 169th Division of the 98th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Sun Zhanbiao (1920-1941) Deputy Commander of the Nantong Guard Regiment of the Soviet-Chinese Military Region of the New Fourth Army

Li Zhenghua (1905-1941) Commander of the Independent Battalion of Tai'an (West) County, Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Li Shi'an (?) -1941) Director of the Political Department of the 12th Division of the 3rd Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Li Guanghan (1907-1941) Secretary of the Fifth Prefectural Committee of the Eighth Route Army

Shi Mang (1914-1941) was the magistrate of Shanshuo County, Shanxi Province

Chen Jingrong (1918-1941) Secretary of the Ningjin County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China and County Magistrate of the Anti-Japanese Democratic Government of Wuqiao County

Ouyang Lin (?) -1941) Commander of the 30th Regiment of the Jizhong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Yi Yuanao (1904-1941) Commander of the 9th Regiment of the 2nd Detachment of the Henan-Hubei Advance Column of the New Fourth Army

Zhou Suping (1909-1941) Director of the Propaganda Department of the Special Committee of the Communist Party of China on the East Road of Sunan and Secretary of the Shazhou County Party Committee

Gao Teh (1911-1941) Political commissar of the Yuxian Cadre Brigade of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Huang Xinrui (1914-1941) was the captain of the 5th Brigade of the Air Force of the National Revolutionary Army

Liang Haibo (1917-1941) Commander of the 14th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Jiang Yongfu (1916-1941) Secretary of the Tonglu County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China and Captain of the Advance Independent Brigade

Cai Yaxiong (1911-1941) Captain of the Yunmeng County Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Brigade of the Henan-Hubei Advance Column of the New Fourth Army

Cai Rongqian (1914-1941) Political Commissar of the 2nd Regiment of the 5th Detachment of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Yan Jinglun (1908-1941) Commander of the 1st Independent Regiment of the Yihe Detachment of the Eighth Route Army

Xue Jinwu (1902-1941) Commander of the 100th Regiment of the 24th Division of the 9th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Hequan (1911-1942) was the commander of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army and the 2nd Column of the Decisive Death of the Northwest Military Region of Shanxi Province and the 4th Regiment of the 8th Army Division

Wang Dingchen (1910-1942) was a member of the 6th Prefectural Committee of the Eighth Route Army

Shi Ding (1901-1942) was a general of the Korean Volunteer Army

Bai Fengxiang (1897-1942) Commander of the 6th Cavalry Division of the Northeast Frontier Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Liu Xingnan (1887-1942) Chief of Staff of the 30th Provisional Division of the National Revolutionary Army

Sun Limin (1914-1942) Commander of the Independent Battalion of Guanxian County of the Eighth Route Army

Li Zengzhi (1894-1942) was the commander of the 29th Division of the 55th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Yang Wanxing (1912-1942) was the commander of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Yang Xifang (1917-1942) Political Commissar of the 13th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the Jiaodong Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Wu Xinzhi (1913-1942) Director of the Political Office of the 22nd Regiment of the 8th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Yu Guangkui (1907-1942) was the commander of the underground guerrilla forces in the Songhu area

Yu Bingjun (1911-1942) Chief of Staff of the 38th Regiment of the 1st Column of the Taiyue Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Miao Yucun (1913-1942) Political commissar of the 15th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the Eighth Route Army in Jiaodong

Robert Henry Money (1920-1942) Lieutenant Pilot of the American Volunteer Air Corps

Jin Wen (1908-1942) Captain of the 2nd Air Force Brigade of the National Revolutionary Army

Xun Zhenmin (1917-1942) Battalion commander of the 4th Detachment of the Shandong Column of the Eighth Route Army

Zhao Tongsan (1910-1942) Political Commissar of the 32nd Regiment of the Southward Advance Detachment of the Eighth Route Army

Tao Hongying (1905-1942) Secretary of the Yixian County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Ji Xingzhou (1909-1942) was the head of the International Arson Group in China

Xiao Zhiguo (1908-1942) was the commander of the 30th Regiment of the 8th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Jizhong Military Region

Mei Huafan (1909-1942) Commander of the 25th Regiment of the 2nd Army Division of the Eighth Route Army of the Southern Hebei Military Region

Cao Hongde (1917-1942) Commander of the 28th Regiment of the 2nd Army Division of the Taihang Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Liang Chongxin (1913-1942) was the commander of the 200th Division of the 5th Army of the Chinese Expeditionary Force of the National Revolutionary Army

Peng Weigong (1923-1942) Captain of the radio station of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters

Savings Mou (1905-1942) Director of the Intelligence Station of the 3rd Theater Command of the National Revolutionary Army

Wang Shangyuan (1921-1943) was a militia instructor in Piyan Village, Wuxiang County, Shanxi Province

Lu Di (1915-1943) was the commander of the 115th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Zhu Lian (1905-1943) Commander of the Wuyi Detachment of the New Fourth Army

Liu Yihong (1906-1943) Deputy Commander of the 46th Regiment of the 16th Brigade of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army

Jiang Ruzhi (1911-1943) Director of the Political Office of the 51st Regiment of the 16th Brigade of the 6th Division of the New Fourth Army

Xu Rumei (1919-1943) Instructor of the First Medical Center of the Qiongya Independent Corps

Mou Lunyang (1919-1943) Editor-in-chief of the New Great Wall and National Salvation Daily

Wu Yawu (1919-1943) was the county magistrate of the anti-Japanese democratic government and the commander of the 4th Independent Battalion of Chiping County, Shandong Province

Chen Zongsheng (1911-1943) Deputy Commander of the 13th Regiment of the 5th Brigade of the 2nd Division of the New Fourth Army

Wu Dafeng (1915-1943) was the head of the anti-Japanese democratic government of Yangxin County, Shandong Province

Zheng Qianxue (1916-1943) Chief of Staff of the 1st Military Division of the Eighth Route Army in the Southern Hebei Military Region

Hu Shiyu (1894-1943) Chief of the Military Division of the General Headquarters of the Lunan Guerrilla Zone of the National Revolutionary Army

Gang (1910-1943) Magistrate of Pingding County (Lubei), Shanxi Province

Tao Langqing (1911-1943) was the commander of the 41st Regiment of the 14th Brigade of the 5th Division of the New Fourth Army

Chang Longji (1921-1943) was a villager in Fenglou Village, Chengping Township, Xifeng County, Liaoning Province

Zeng Fei (1914-1943) Chief of Staff of the 5th Regiment of the Jin-Cha-Ji 4th Army Division of the Eighth Route Army

Tsang Fu (1921-1943) Chief of the Political Training Office of the Hong Kong and Kowloon Independent Brigade

Pan Yukai (1916-1943) was the head of the anti-Japanese democratic government of Nanpi County, Hebei Province

Xue Hansan (1915-1943) was the head of the Second Prefecture Committee of the Eighth Route Army in the Hebei-Shandong Border Region

Wei Shuanggui (1925-1943) was a member of the joint defense team of Weizhuang Village, Bocheng Township, Neihuang County, Henan Province

Bai Tongben (1920-1944) was the head of the Jumanan District and the head of the district team in Rugao County, Jiangsu Province

Fung Chi (1892-1944) Volunteer Traffic Officer of the Urban Squadron of the Hong Kong and Kowloon Independent Brigade

Zhu Xuemian (1912-1944) Captain of the 1st Brigade of the Jinxiao Detachment of the Zhedong Guerrilla Column of the New Fourth Army

Liu Xiudong (1911-1944) was the commander of the independent battalion of the 14th Regiment in Yenan County, Shandong

Guan Jie (1921-1944) Squadron Leader of the 7th Squadron of the 3rd Brigade of the 5th Detachment of the Zhedong Guerrilla Column of the New Fourth Army

Li Rentao (1904-1944) Major General and Captain of the Anti-Chemical Corps of the Ministry of Military Affairs of the Nationalist Government

Li Duo (1914-1944) Secretary of the Yinan County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Cen Keng (1906-1944) Commander of the 3rd Anti-aircraft Artillery Division of the National Revolutionary Army

Lin Yao (1911-1944) Captain of the 17th Air Force Destroyer Team of the National Revolutionary Army

Zhao Donglu (1919-1944) Secretary of the 2nd District Committee of Fushan County of the Communist Party of China

Jiang Gesheng (1911-1944) was the county magistrate of Jiaoxian County, Shandong Province and the captain of the county brigade

Jia Zhengyuan (1916-1944) Deputy Commander of the Rizhao Garrison Regiment of the Shandong Binhai Military Division

Peng Shifu (1901-1944) was the commander of the 532nd Regiment of the 178th Division of the 36th Army of the 47th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Tsang Fo-sun (1921-1944) Squad Leader of the Marine Squadron of the Hong Kong-Kowloon Independent Brigade

Bao Fu (1917-1944) Political commissar of the Lincheng Independent Battalion of Hebei Province and acting secretary of the Lincheng County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Ye Faqing (1891-1945) was a member of the Qujiang County Party Committee of Guangdong Province

Quan Yongbi (1909-1945) Secretary of the Changbai County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Ren Yihan (1917-1945) was the head of the 1st District of Lingchuan County of the Communist Party of China

Xu Zihe (1909-1945) Captain of the Wannan Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Brigade in Nanyang County, Henan Province

Li Dongjie (1906-1945) Political Commissar of the 7th Regiment of the 6th Division of the 2nd Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army

Li Defang (1913-1945) Commander of the 5th Regiment of the 8th Army Division of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army

Qiu Zihua (1915-1945) Chief of the Hoeing Section of the Political Department of the Zhedong Guerrilla Column of the New Fourth Army

Mao Jianqun (1916-1945) Chief of Staff of the 2nd Regiment of the Independent Brigade of the Soviet-Chinese Military Region of the New Fourth Army

Xu Jiabiao (1926-1945) was the squad leader of the Special Service Regiment of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army

Yin Delin (1919-1945) Deputy Commander and Director of the Political Department of the 2nd Special Service Regiment of the Soviet-Chinese Military Region of the New Fourth Army

Lai Zhang (1920-1945) Deputy Captain of the 1st Brigade of the 2nd Detachment of the Dongjiang Column of the Guangdong People's Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Army

Xiong Jingsheng (1915-1945) Secretary of the Beiliu County Party Committee of the Communist Party of China

Huo Shicai (1897-1945) was the commander of the 361st Regiment of the 121st Division of the 94th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Hero group unit

Seven Warriors of the Gubeikou Great Wall (1933) The 145th Regiment of the 25th Division of the 67th Army of the National Revolutionary Army

Four Martyrs of the Red Cross Anti-Japanese Martyrdom (1937) Field Ambulance Team of the Shanghai Branch of the Red Cross Society of China

128 martyrs in the battle of Genglou (1940) The 129th Regiment of the 8th Brigade of the 129th Division of the Eighth Route Army

Seven Martyrs of the Anti-Japanese War in Yanzige (1941) The 5th branch of the Anti-Japanese Military and Political University

The Eighteen Warriors of Musselsmouth (1941) The 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army taught the 1st Battalion and 1st Company of the 6th Regiment of the 2nd Brigade

Liu Chunxiang and 12 other heroes who died in the battle of Lung Kwu Chau (1943) Lantau Squadron of the Hong Kong and Kowloon Independent Brigade[1]

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