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"The Age of Awakening" The true historical face of the Beiyang government officials

author:The eons are scattered

Grand President Xu Shichang: Late Qing Dynasty, Jinshi, Military Minister, Yuan Shikai's adviser and ally. In October 1918, Xu Shichang was elected president of the National Assembly of the People's Republic of China. In his later years, he refused to be a traitor and died of illness in Tianjin.

"The Age of Awakening" The true historical face of the Beiyang government officials

Premier Qian Nengxun, late Qing Dynasty Jinshi, Hanlin. Qian Nengxun advocated taking back the sovereignty of Shandong Province and refusing to sign the Paris Peace Treaty.

Wang Da Xie ( ) was a prominent figure in the late Qing Dynasty and early years of the Republic of China , who served as a diplomat and government official , and as prime minister.

Wu Bingxiang, a general in Beiyang, was born in the Military Academy. At the end of 1924, Duan Qirui returned, and Wu Bingxiang was again appointed as the director of the Beijing Police Department, but did not arrive, and in 1925 he was appointed governor of Anhui Province.

"The Age of Awakening" The true historical face of the Beiyang government officials

Gu Weijun, In 1919 and 1921, Gu Weijun attended the Paris Peace Conference and the Washington Conference as a member of the Chinese delegation, and made contributions to safeguarding the rights and interests of the Chinese nation.

Lu Zhengxiang, graduated from the Canton dialect hall and the Tongwen museum, accompanied the Qing Dynasty minister in Russia, Germany, Austria, and the Netherlands as an interpreter at the Embassy in Russia, and has been serving in the diplomatic circles ever since, becoming the first generation of professional diplomats in China. After the end of World War I, he led a delegation to France on behalf of the Republic of China to participate in the Paris Peace Conference.

Cao Rulin, during the May Fourth Movement in 1919, he was associated with Lu Zongyu and Zhang

"The Age of Awakening" The true historical face of the Beiyang government officials

Zong Xiang was also denounced as a traitor, and his residence, Zhao Jialou, was burned down by the masses. He was deposed on June 10. He later served as prime minister of the Bank of Communications for a period of time, and was soon promoted to chairman of the board of directors by the Jinglong Zhengfeng Coal Mining Company, which he invested in. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he was successively appointed as an adviser to the puppet North China Provisional Government and an advisory member of the Puppet North China Political Affairs Committee. During the Liberation War, he moved from Beiping to Shanghai. He fled to Taiwan on the eve of liberation in 1949. In 1950, he went to Japan via Hong Kong and lived in Tokyo and other places. He moved to the United States in 1957 and died in Detroit on August 4, 1966.

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