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Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Ruo Qinghu swooped down on the Fuhu Hill, and the clear spring of the Guan Gong Zhuo Sword in 1800 was overhead, carrying several martyrs of the Xinhai Revolution and so on. The nine martyrs' cemeteries surround the emerald green mountains, followed by Liu Gong, Lan Tianwei, Hao Mengling (a heroic anti-Japanese martyr), Cai Jimin, Liu Jingyong, Li Hanjun (a major representative of the Communist Party of China), Zhang Sen (a general of the Northern Expedition), Wu Zhaolin, and Sun Wu.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Fuhushan Martyrs Cemetery

Liu Gong (1881-1920), a native of Dongjin Town, Xiangyang. In 1910, he and Sun Wu prepared for the uprising and were elected as the prime minister of the Communist Progressive Society. After the Wuchang Uprising, he served as the general inspector of the Hubei military government. Houzhen guarded Xiangyang. He died in Shanghai in 1920. In 1928, he was buried in Fuhu Mountain after Zhuo DaoQuan in Wuchang.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Liu Gong and the tomb

Lan Tianwei (1878-1921), a native of Huangpi, Wuhan. In his early years, he studied in Japan, and after returning to China, he served as the 2nd Mixed Association Andi Commandery, stationed in FengtianBeiying. During the Wuchang Uprising, it echoed in the northeast. When the Provisional Government of the Republic of China was established, Sun Yat-sen appointed Lan Tianwei as the chief of staff, and later appointed as the governor of Guanwai and the commander-in-chief of the Northern Expeditionary Army. On February 12, 1912, the Qing Emperor was forced to announce his abdication. In 1920, Sun Yat-sen formed a military government to protect the Law and appointed Lan Tianwei as the commander-in-chief of the Hubei Andi Coalition Army. In 1921, he was defeated and captured by Sun Chuanfang and committed suicide.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Blue sky and tomb

Hao Mengling (1898-1937), a native of Gaocheng, Hebei. Commander of the Ninth Army of the National Revolutionary Army, who participated in the Battle of Xinkou in 1937, was a pioneer and died heroically. The coffin was escorted from Taiyuan to Wuchang, where a public sacrifice was held and posthumously awarded to the admiral.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Hao Mengling and the tomb

Cai Jimin (1887-1919), a native of Huangpi, Wuhan. In 1911, he led the 29th Biao to participate in the Wuchang Uprising, and after the success of the uprising, he participated in the creation of the Governor's Office of the Ejun Army, and served as the chief inspector of various ministries. In 1917, he was appointed by Sun Yat-sen as the commander-in-chief of the Hubei Army of the Protector of France, and later the commander-in-chief of the Jingguo Army in Western Hubei. He was killed by the Sichuan Army in 1919. President Li Yuanhong posthumously awarded him the rank of General of the Army.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Cai Jimin and the tomb

Liu Jingling (1875-1911), a native of Qianjiang, Hubei Province. In 1903, he joined the Hubei New Army, and in 1906, he joined the League, planning to attack in Wuhan, and was arrested for traitors. Tortured in prison, he died of illness before the Wuchang Uprising.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Liu Jingling and the tomb

Li Hanjun (1890-1927), a native of Qianjiang, Hubei Province. In 1920, he and Chen Duxiu initiated the formation of a communist group in Shanghai, and went to Wuhan to help prepare the Wuhan Communist Group. In 1921, he attended the First Congress of the Communist Party of China in the apartment of his brother Li Shucheng. In 1922, he had a disagreement with Chen Duxiu and others, and returned to Wuhan to specialize in teaching. In 1927, he was arrested and killed by Hu Zongduo, commander of the Wuhan Garrison District. Li Hanjun's cemetery is separated from zhuo Daoquan's Daxiong Treasure Hall by only one wall.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Lee Han Joon and the tomb

Zhang Sen (1887-1928), a native of Macheng, Hubei Province. He participated in the Xinhai Revolution, the Dharma Protection Movement, the First and Second Northern Expeditions, and was appointed as the commander of the 66th Division of the National Revolutionary Army. He died in 1928.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Zhang Sen's tomb (no photo of him found)

Wu Zhaolin (1882-1942), a native of Ezhou, Hubei Province. On the eve of the Wuchang Uprising, just as the Wuchang Chuwangtai Armory was in place, the soldiers elected him as the temporary commander-in-chief, that is, to command the rebel forces to attack the Huguang Governor's Office and occupy Wuchang. Later, he served as the head of the General Staff Department of the Ejun Government. Soon, he retired from politics and devoted himself to social undertakings, and once donated funds to build Wuchang Shouyi Park. In his later years, he believed in Buddhism and died of illness in 1942.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Wu Zhaolin and the tomb

Sun Wu (1880-1939), a native of Hanyang, Wuhan. In September 1911, he was elected chairman of the Communist Progressive Association to plan the Wuchang Uprising. On October 9, when he was testing a bomb in Baoshanli in the Russian concession, he was injured by a soot spot explosion from Liu Tong's smoking and was diverted to other places. Liu Tong was immediately captured by the concession patrol and offered to the revolutionaries Liu Fuji, Peng Chufan, and Yang Hongsheng, who were arrested and killed. The Wuchang uprising was hastily held on October 10. After the uprising, Sun Wu served as the minister of military affairs of the Ejun government. Sun Wu always regarded himself as a hero of the Wuchang Uprising, hoping to obtain the post of deputy commander of the army of the Provisional Government in Nanjing, but Huang Xing refused. He then supported Li Yuanhong and Yuan Shikai. He was forced to resign after the Second Revolution. In 1915, Yuan Shikai declared himself emperor, and Sun Wu openly supported it. After Yuan's death, Sun Wu lived in seclusion for a long time and did not care about politics. He died in Beijing in 1939 and was relocated to Fuhu Mountain in Wuchang in 1981.

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Sun Wu and the tomb

Crouching Tiger Dragon at the head of Fuhu Mountain

Secluded Fuhu Mountain