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Duan Qirui

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Duan Qirui
Provisional Chief Executive of the Republic of China
In office
November 24, 1924 – April 20, 1926
Vice PresidentVacant
Preceded byHuang Fu
Succeeded byHu Weide
Premier of the Republic of China
In office
June 26, 1916 – May 23, 1917
PresidentLi Yuanhong
Preceded byXu Shichang
Succeeded byWu Tingfang
In office
July 14, 1917 – November 22, 1917
PresidentFeng Guozhang
Preceded byLi Jingxi
Succeeded byWang Daxie
In office
March 23, 1918 – October 10, 1918
PresidentFeng Guozhang
Preceded byQian Nengxun
Succeeded byQian Nengxun
Personal details
Bornthumb
March 6, 1865
Hefei, Anhui, Qing Dynasty
DiedNovember 2, 1936 (age 71)
Shanghai, Republic of China
Resting placethumb
200px
NationalityChinese
Political partyAnfu Club
Parent
  • thumb
  • 200px
Alma materBaoding Military Academy
OccupationMilitary Officer

Duan Qirui (Chinese: 段祺瑞; pinyin: Duàn Qíruì; Wade–Giles: Tuan Ch'i-jui) (6 March 1865; November 2, 1936) was a Chinese warlord and politician, commander in the Beiyang Army, and the Provisional Chief Executive of Republic of China (in Beijing) from November 24, 1924 to April 20, 1926. He was arguably the most powerful man in China from 1916 to 1920. His nickname is Mr. Democracy because he was against Yuan being the emperor.

Early life

Born in Hefei as Duan Qirui (段啟瑞), his courtesy name was Zhiquan (芝泉). His grandfather was Duan Pei (段佩), an officer in Li Hongzhang's privately raised Huai Army (Huai Jun, 淮军). Duan Qirui's father died early and Duan Qirui was raised by his maternal grandmother.

Early career

In 1881, Duan Qirui entered Baoding Military Academy specializing in artillery, and graduated at the top of his class.[1] After graduation, he was sent to Lushun to oversee the construction of artillery fortifications and came to the attention of Li Hongzhang, who sent him to study military science in Germany for two years.[2] After returning to China, he was first named as a commissioner to the Beiyang Armory (北洋军械局) and then as an instructor of Weihai military academy. Soon he was able to gain the sponsorship of Yuan Shikai, who named him as an artillery commander in the New Army.[2]

Duan first saw action in the Boxer Rebellion, where he served Yuan in Shandong province; Yuan then gave him command over a Beiyang army division in 1904. In 1906 he was appointed as the director of the Baoding Staff College, which allowed him to begin recruiting his own clique of loyal junior officers.[3] During the Xinhai Revolution that toppled the Qing Dynasty, Duan's corps was successful against the Revolution army and recovered Wuhan. Duan commanded the Second Army Corps in Hubei and supported Yuan Shikai; for his loyalty,Yuan use Duan's military victory to cheat the Qing and forced the Queen announced the Qing failed. Yuan appointed him military governor of both Hunan and Hubei provinces. He was further named to Yuan's cabinet as minister of war in 1912, and then premier in 1913.[2]

Politics

Duan later opposed Yuan's bid for the throne - he was expecting to succeed Yuan in the presidency, but the imperial gambit was seen as a betrayal. Duan tried to play the intermediary between the rebels and Yuan, just as Yuan had done during the Xinhai Revolution. Their friendship never recovered even after he was given the premiership, because Yuan had shrewdly stripped that office of its powers. He served as premier intermittently from 1913 to 1918 under several governments as part of a series of shaky coalitions which often collapsed. Yuan's attempt to establish his own dynasty had destroyed the unity of China, many provinces had declared their independence from Beijing as long as Yuan was in power.[4] With his death the provinces demanded the old constitution of 1912, which Yuan had abrogated in 1914, be reinstated.

Premier

Duan Qirui, in his auspices as Premier, refused to recognize the old 1912 constitution. He was opposed by both President Li Yuanhong, who had assumed the presidency on Yuan Shikai's death, and Vice-President Feng Guozhang, the second most important Beiyang military commander after Duan himself.[5] Eventually, Feng was able to persuade Duan to relent and the separate government in the south agreed to dissolve itself when Parliament was reconvened. Nevertheless, the parliament and the country remained as divided as ever between north and south. Duan and the other Beiyang leaders refused to be dictated to by southern parliamentarians, composed mostly of Sun Yat-sen's Guangdong based Kuomintang party, backed by southern armies outside Beiyang control. Duan decided to take action against southern military commanders by reassigning them to other posts and thereby breaking their control. In order to do this, he decided to attempt to oust the pro-Kuomintang military commander of Hunan; however, cabinet refused to do so. In spite of this, Duan's right hand man and Cabinet Secretary Xu Shuzheng issued orders on his own initiative to launch an attack on Hunan.[5]

World War I

In Europe, World War I had reached a crucial point by 1916-17. Duan saw an opportunity to ingratiate China to the European powers and the United States by declaring on the side of the Allies against Germany.[2] By entering the war, Duan hoped for some quid pro quo from her new allies such as the cancellation of many of the indemnities and concessions that China had been forced to sign in the past. He also hoped China could gain great international prestige by involving itself in the great war.[5] However, Duan was opposed again by both the president and vice-president along with most of the parliament. Duan was impatient to gain parliaments approval through negotiation and resorted to bullying tactics with organized mobs. In response president Li Yuanhong dismissed Duan as premier after parliament had voted for his resignation.[6]

At this juncture, a monarchist general marched his army into Beijing and announced the restoration of the Qing dynasty in June 1917.[4] Outraged, the other Beiyang generals led by vice-president Feng Guozhang mobilized their forces and ended the short-lived restoration attempt. Duan was returned to power while Li Yuanhong, having had enough of Beiyang politics, resigned the presidency.[6] A few days later China entered the First World War on the side of the Allies.

Duan's strategy now was to negotiate financial loans with Japan, in exchange for concessions, to fund a military buildup for the conquest of the south. The political cover for this army was the entry of China into the First World War.[5] With the poor state of the government's credit and European wartime expenses making both Western and domestic financing impossible, he secretly negotiated the first of the Nishihara Loans with Japan on September 29, 1917.[5] In exchange, he offered Japan the right to station troops in Shandong province, then a German concession, as well as the right to build and run two new Shandong railroads. There would be a high political price to pay when these negotiations came to light later on, but in the meantime Duan got the money for his army. This later became part of the reason for the Shandong Problem.[7]

Anhui Clique

After Feng Guozhang had restored him as premier, Duan Qirui quickly began preparations to mobilize troops for conquest of the south. The south responded by forming another rival government against the north and organizing the Constitutional Protection Movement.[8] Duan dispatched two former subordinates of Feng Guozhang to the south to conquer Hunan, the linchpin of central China; one of these commanders was Wu Peifu. Wu supported Feng's preference for peaceful reconciliation with the south and refused to fight. Embarrassed by this fiasco in the south, Duan was forced to resign as premier in November 1917.[8]

Nevertheless, Duan still exercised enormous influence in Beijing due to the various military commanders that were still loyal to him. Feng Guozhang was forced to reappoint him to cabinet as Minister of War, and once again Duan dispatched troops to the south. He also ordered Zhang Zuolin, military ruler of Manchuria, to send troops to Beijing as a ploy to further pressure Feng to restore him to the premiership. However, Wu Peifu once again refused to follow his orders to invade the southern provinces.[8] Faced with the threat from Feng Guozhang, Cao Kun, and Wu Peifu's coalescing "Zhili clique," Duan attempted to strengthen his position by forming his own political party called the "Anfu Club." He also used the funds from the Nishihara Loans to build up his military forces, employing Japanese officers to train his troops.[9]

President Feng Guozhang's term expired on October 10, 1918; in an attempt to placate the south, he agreed not to seek re-election provided Duan also vacate the office of premier on the same day. Duan's position was also weakening as rumours of his secret dealings with the Japanese began to surface.[10] When the Nishihara Loans were exposed, along with the secret treaty between the Allies and Japan to transfer Shandong to the Japanese, at the Versailles peace conference, Beijing and the rest of the nation exploded in protest in what came to be known as the "May Fourth Movement" on May 4, 1919. Duan's rivals Cao Kun and Wu Peifu of the Zhili clique moved to corner him by organizing an alliance of military leaders, including Zhang Zuolin, who opposed Duan. They also engineered the dismissal of Duan's key subordinate Xu Shuzheng on July 4, 1919. In retribution, Duan forced the new president to dismiss both Cao and Wu even though there was no possible way to actually remove them from their posts. He also renamed his army the "National Pacification Army" and mobilized them for war with the Zhili clique and its supporters.[10]

Fall from Power

The conflict came to be known as the Zhili-Anhui War and lasted from July 14 to the 18th of 1920. Although Duan's army had been equipped and trained by Japan, it succumbed easily to Wu Peifu-led Zhili forces and their allies.[10] His military power shattered, Duan fled to a Japanese settlement in Tianjin and became an apartment landlord. The Anhui clique began to lose its coherency as some of its members became affiliated with either the Zhili or Zhang Zuolin's Fengtian faction. Only Zhejiang remained in the hands of the Anhui clique, although it eventually fell in 1924. Shandong was allowed by Zhili to later be taken over by an Anhui warlord under strict conditions of neutrality. Nevertheless, some Anfu club politicians remained active in government. Jin Yunpeng, who had been a protege of Duan, was appointed as premier in August 1920. Other Anhui members secretly mediated between Zhang Zuolin and Feng Yuxiang, an important leader in the Zhili clique, when the latter decided to revolt against his former allies in the Second Zhili-Fengtian War.

1 yuan, silver commemorative coin of Duan Qirui, minted in 1924

Return as Chief Executive

Feng Yuxiang's defection resulted in the defeat of Wu Peifu and the Zhili clique and forced them to withdraw to the south.[11] The victorious Zhang Zuolin named Duan Qirui as the new Chief Executive of the nation on November 24, 1924. Duan's new government was grudgingly accepted by the Zhili clique because, without an army of his own, Duan was now considered a neutral choice.[11] In addition, instead of "President" Duan was now called the "Chief Executive," implying that the position was temporary and therefore politically weak. Duan called on Sun Yat-sen and the Kuomintang in the south to restart negotiations towards reunification. Sun demanded that the "unequal treaties" with foreign powers be repudiated and that a new national assembly be assembled. Bowing to public pressure, Duan promised a new national assembly in three months; however he could not unilaterally discard the "unequal treaties," since the foreign powers had made official recognition of Duan's regime contingent upon respecting these very treaties.[11] Sun died on March 12, 1925 and the negotiations fell apart.

With his clique's military power in shambles, Duan's government was hopelessly dependent on Feng Yuxiang and Zhang Zuolin. Knowing that those two had poor relations, he tried to play sides secretly. On March 18, 1926 a protest march was held against continued foreign infringement on Chinese sovereignty and a recent incident in Tianjin involving a Japanese warship. Duan dispatched military police to disperse the protesters, and in the resulting melee 47 protesters were killed and over 200 injured, including Li Dazhao, co-founder of the Communist Party. The event came to be known as the March 18 Massacre. The next month Feng Yuxiang again revolted, this time against the Fengtian clique, and deposed Duan who forced to flee to Zhang's protection. Zhang, tired of his double-dealings, refused to restore him after re-capturing Beijing. Most of the Anhui clique had already sided with Zhang. Duan Qirui exiled himself to Tianjin and later moved to Shanghai where he died on November 2, 1936.

Personal

Duan was also well known as a player and patron of weiqi (Go). He usually won because his opponents feared defeating him, with an exception of his own son, who was also a patron of weiqi and was not afraid of defeating his own father. After Duan's complete defeat, he became a devoted Buddhist, built a worship hall within his own home, and prayed every morning. Many of his former subordinates frequently came to pray with him. On the first and the fifteenth days of each month (lunar calendar), Duan would go to temples to participate in various Buddhist events. Duan became a vegetarian; douchi was his favorite food and was served at every meal. Duan also kept a hen farm at home to provide him with eggs, but kept no roosters, as he claimed that without fertilization, the eggs remained vegetarian.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Spence, Jonathan D. (1990). The Search for Modern China. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 285. ISBN 0-393-37651-4.
  2. ^ a b c d Spence, p. 285.
  3. ^ Gray, Jack (2002). Rebellions and Revolutions: China from the 1800s to 2000. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 168–169. ISBN 978-0-19-870069-2.
  4. ^ a b Spence, p. 282-283.
  5. ^ a b c d e Gray, p. 171-172.
  6. ^ a b Gray, p. 173.
  7. ^ Spence, p. 288.
  8. ^ a b c Gray, p. 174-175.
  9. ^ Gray, p. 177.
  10. ^ a b c Gray, p. 178-179.
  11. ^ a b c Gray, p. 186-187.

References

Political offices
Preceded by
None (Republic established)
Minister of War of the Republic of China
1912-1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of the Republic of China (acting)
1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of War of the Republic of China
1916-1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of the Republic of China
1916-1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of War of the Republic of China
1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of the Republic of China
1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of the Republic of China
1918
Succeeded by
Preceded by Provisional Chief Executive of Republic of China
1924-1926
Succeeded by


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