Zhang Zongchang
Zhang Zongchang | |
---|---|
Native name | 張宗昌 |
Nickname(s) | "Dogmeat General" "72-Cannon Chang" "The Three Don't-Knows" |
Born | 1881 Yi County, Laizhou, Shandong, Qing China |
Died | 3 September 1932 (aged 50–51) Jinan, Shandong, Republic of China |
Allegiance | Fengtian clique National Pacification Army |
Rank | General |
Commands | Shandong Army Shandong–Zhili Army |
Battles / wars |
Zhang Zongchang | |||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 張宗昌 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 张宗昌 | ||||||||
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Zhang Zongchang (13 February 1881 – 3 September 1932), was a Chinese warlord in Shandong in the early 20th century. Time dubbed him China's "basest warlord".[1] He was known by many nicknames such as the "Dogmeat General" (Chinese: 狗肉将军; pinyin: Gǒuròu Jiāngjūn).
Biography
Zhang was born in 1881[2] in Yi County (now Laizhou) in Shandong.[3] His family was poor; his father worked as head shaver and trumpeter, while his mother was an exorcist.[4] In his teens, his family moved to Manchuria, where Zhang became involved in petty crime in Harbin.[2] He eventually became a bandit in the countryside, though served as auxiliary for the Imperial Russian Army during the Russo-Japanese War in 1904–1905. Following the conflict, he returned to crime and rose to lead his own bandit gang. His activities during the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 are unclear,[5] though he offered his band's services to the army of Jiangsu's military governor.[citation needed] By 1913, he commanded an army division, and served in various military factions during the Warlord Era's early stages.[5]
He returned to Manchuria in 1922, and joined the Fengtian clique of warlord Zhang Zuolin.[5] He made a good impression, with one story being that he rose in popularity one year at Zhang Zuolin's birthday party: in contrast to other guests who showered the warlord with expensive gifts, Zhang Zongchang sent him two empty coolie baskets and failed to turn up himself. Zhang Zuolin was baffled until the purpose of the gift was ascertained: Zhang Zongchang's empty basket implied he was a man willing to shoulder whatever heavy responsibilities the warlord entrusted him with. He was subsequently rewarded with a command position in his army, though only after proving himself in battle did Zhang Zongchang visit his superior in person.
Zhang Zongchang proved to be one of the more capable warlord generals, making effective use of armoured trains manned by experienced White Russian mercenaries. He recruited up to 4,600 White Russian refugees from the Russian civil war, from which he formed a cavalry regiment, complete with pseudo-Tsarist uniforms and regalia. He was also one of the first Chinese generals to incorporate women into the military on a large scale, including using a regiment of nurses consisting entirely of White Russian women. They trained their Chinese counterparts, resulting in greater efficiency in taking care of Zhang's wounded troops, a significant boost for morale and combat capability.
In 1924, he took part in the Second Zhili–Fengtian War and helped partition Shanghai between the opposing forces. In April 1925 he conquered Shanghai proper and then seized Nanjing, both for the glory of Zhang Zuolin's Fengtian clique.[citation needed] He was subsequently appointed military governor of Shandong, which he ruled as warlord until May 1928.[5] Zhang traveled to Shanghai for frequent carousing sessions with Zhang Zuolin's son, Gen. Zhang Xueliang. Both men enjoyed opium, for which Shanghai was a key site in the smuggling trade, and the Fengtian economy became increasingly reliant on the drug. In an infamous incident in 1925, an argument in Zhang's headquarters over who among a group of officers should receive the biggest payment from an opium deal led to a shootout which saw three of them kill each other.
In 1928, during the Northern Expedition, Gen. Bai Chongxi led Kuomintang forces that defeated and destroyed Zhang Zongchang's army, capturing 20,000 of his 50,000 troops and almost capturing Zhang himself, who escaped beyond the Great Wall to Manchuria.[6] He fled to Japanese protection in Dalian, though remained unwilling to accept his reduced status. From Dalian, he plotted to regain his former territories. Possibly enjoying covert support by Japan, Zhang, his long-time follower Chu Yupu and another warlord, Huang Feng-chi, returned to Shandong in 1929 and launched a major rebellion against Liu Zhennian, the Nationalist-aligned de facto ruler of eastern Shandong at the time. Gathering tens of thousands of demobilized soldiers who were still loyal to them, the three warlords fought for several months against Liu's followers, thereby causing great destruction and many casualties among the civilian population. In the end, the rebellion was defeated, though Zhang managed to escape back to Dalian.[7] Later that year, he was living quietly in Beppu, Japan, with his mother, though he was thrown into the spotlight again when he "accidentally" shot Prince Xiankai (憲開), a cousin of the deposed emperor Puyi. According to Zhang the gun he was holding while standing at his hotel window happened to go off and shoot the young prince in the back, killing him instantly, though it was more likely he killed the playboy prince for dallying with one of Zhang's many concubines. He was charged, found guilty by a Japanese court and given the choice between 15 days' imprisonment or a $150 (US) fine. He chose the fine.[8]
While visiting Shandong in 1932, he was assassinated by the nephew of one of his many victims, who was in turn given clemency and pardoned by the Kuomintang government. Contemporary claims were made that the "filial murder" might have been part of a plan set up by a local governor to remove Zhang as a political rival.[9]
Personal life
Nicknames and titles
In course of his career, Zhang gained a great number of nicknames, most of them derogatory:[10]
- "Dogmeat General":[10][11] Some write that the name was based on his preference for or a Chinese brand of tonic known as "dogmeat".[12], but James Sheridan in Cambridge History of China writes that the name derived not from his diet but from his addiction to paijiu, a high stakes gambling game popularly known as "eating dog meat." [13]
- "Monster"[10]
- "Lanky General"[11]
- "Old Eighty-Six": The origin of this nickname is unclear. According to rumours it either referred to his height or to the length of his penis[11] which was said to measure up to a pile of 86 Mexican silver dollars when erect.[14]
- "Three Don't Knows": Based on Zhang's alleged lack of knowledge about how much money he had, how many soldiers, and how many women in his harem.[15]
- "72-Cannon Chang"[16]
- "Chang of Shantung" by the foreign press[1]
- "Great General of Justice and Might": A title he had awarded to himself.[17]
Character
You tell me to do this,
He tells me to do that.
You're all bastards,
Go fuck your mother.
"Poem about bastards" by Zhang Zongchang[a]
Zhang Zongchang was one of the most infamous Chinese warlords.[2] Being of impressive height and physically strong, he was often regarded as a brute and loathed by his victims,[5] though he could also be very sociable, charming and commanded the respect of his troops as well as superiors.[19] Zhang Zongchang was often described as behaving "mindlessly brutal" during his military campaigns[5] and having "the physique of an elephant, the brain of a pig and the temperament of a tiger". Writer Lin Yutang called Zhang "the most colorful, legendary, medieval, and unashamed ruler of modern China". Former Emperor Puyi remembered Zhang as "a universally detested monster" whose ugly, bloated face was "tinged with the livid hue induced by heavy opium smoking". A brutal man, Zhang was notorious for his hobby of splitting the skulls of prisoners with his sword, which he called "smashing melons". He loved to boast about the size of his penis, which become part of his legend.[11][14] He kept some 30 to 50 concubines of different nationalities, who were given numbers since he could not remember their names nor speak their language. According to the Time, several of his concubines had been forcibly seized from rich families in Shandong.[1] He was free with his gifts, lavishly squandering money and concubines on superiors and friends. As a result, his commanders were very loyal to him, contributing to his military success. According to the wife of Wellington Koo:
[Zhang] was known everywhere as the "Three Don't Knows" (Chinese: 三不知; pinyin: sān bù zhī). He said he didn't know how much money he had, how many concubines, or how many men in his army.
Zhang Zongchang was also known for writing poetry, though his works (such as the "Poem about bastards", the "Daming Lake poem", "Visiting Penglai Pavilion" and "Pray for Rain") are generally considered to be quite bad.[18][20] However, some sources have disputed these poems as being fabrications made by his political opponent Han Fuju to slander Zhang Zongchang.[21]
From afar, Mount Tai looks blackish,
Narrow on top and wide at the bottom.
If you flipped it upside down,
It would be narrow at the bottom and wide on top.
"Visiting Mount Tai" by Zhang Zongchang[b]
Though not very pious, Zhang was reportedly superstitious. According to David Bonavia, he was strongly influenced by a Daoist diviner who had allegedly convinced the warlord of his powers by successfully prophesying that a train would derail. It was rumoured that the diviner had ensured this outcome by bribing some peasants to sabotage the tracks.[22] Zhang also refused to drink any water except that which came from a minor tributary stream of the Jinan River. He preferred to drink the water directly from the stream, often excusing himself from dinner to go drink from the stream. After he participated in the partioning of Shanghai, he began drinking water solely from the Huangpu River. He claimed the water tasted "divine, as if the urine of heaven." In preparation for his military campaigns, he would instruct his soldiers to gather large quantities of drinking water from his favorite river at the time, which he would not allow others to drink. Whether near or far from his favorite river, his soldiers would present him with water from the nearest available source and claim it was water from his preferred river. There are no known accounts of Zhang disputing the water's origin. Zhang was regularly seen to relieve himself in both rivers.
While having a reputation as one of the most brutal and ruthless warlords,[2] he was also one of the most colourful. After defeating the army of general Wu Peifu by making his enemy's forces defect, he rewarded the defectors by allowing them to keep their original ranks. He then promoted his own officers, but since there was not enough metal to make the gold and silver stars for their rank insignia, he ordered the stars to be made from the gold and silver paper foil in cigarette packages. During the mass promotion ceremony, the officers were surprised to find their insignia already torn even before the ceremony had ended. During one of his campaigns, he publicly announced he would win the battle or come home in his coffin. When his troops were forced back he was true to his word—he was paraded through the streets, sitting in his coffin and smoking a large cigar. It was also a matter of public amusement that he kept his aged mother with him at all times, except when on campaign, when he left her at his opulent palace.[citation needed]
During the Famine of Northwestern China in 1928–1930, a famine that struck Shandong particularly hard, Zhang Zongchang was reported to have gone into a temple of Zhang Xian where there were many people praying for rain and offering gifts to the deity, then walking up to the statue, he slapped it and said "Fuck your sister! How dare you make Shandong's people suffer by not giving us rain!" He then left the temple, the next day ordering his artillery to shoot into the sky until it rained. It rained the next day. This is also where his nickname of "72-Cannon Chang" came from.[citation needed]
Notes
References
- ^ a b c "CHINA: Basest War Lord". TIME. 7 March 1927. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Sheridan (1975), p. 66.
- ^ Sheridan (1975), pp. 66–67.
- ^ a b c d e f Sheridan (1975), p. 67.
- ^ "CHINA: Potent Hero". TIME. September 24, 1928. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
- ^ Jowett (2017), pp. 195–200.
- ^ "JAPAN: Murder Price". TIME. 23 September 1929. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
- ^ Jowett (2017), p. 200.
- ^ a b c Jowett (2017), p. 195.
- ^ Waldron (2003), p. 105.
- ^ James E. Sheridan, "The Warlord Era: Poliics and Militarism under the Peking Government, 1916-28," in, John King Fairbank, ed., Cambridge History of China Vol 12 Republican China 1912-1949 Part I (Cambridge, 1983) p. 286 n 6.
- ^ a b Fenby (2004), p. 102.
- ^ The People's Almanac Presents The Book of Lists. New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell. 1978. pp. 326–7. ISBN 0-553-11150-7.
- ^ a b "民國時期最狂軍閥,出版過詩集的草莽將軍張宗昌" [The most insane warlord during the Republic of China, the published poetry collection of the generals Zhang Zongchang]. The News Lens. 10 August 2018. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
- ^ Sheridan (1975), pp. 67–68.
- ^ a b Guang Zijian; Wang Xing (3 February 2016). "古代奇葩"诗人":乾隆酷爱卖弄 张宗昌粗话连篇" [Ancient wonderful "poet": Qianlong loves to show off Zhang Zongchang's swearing]. Beijing Evening News, People's Daily. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
- ^ http://www.sohu.com/a/160378922_383724
Works cited
- Bonavia, David (1995). China's Warlords. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-586179-5.
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(help) - Fenby, Jonathan (2004). Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the China He Lost. London.
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(help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Jowett, Philip S. (2017). The Bitter Peace. Conflict in China 1928–37. Stroud: Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445651927.
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(help) - Sheridan, James E. (1975). China in Disintegration : The Republican Era in Chinese History, 1912-1949. New York: Free Press. ISBN 0029286107.
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(help) - Waldron, Arthur (2003). From War to Nationalism: China's Turning Point, 1924–1925. Cambridge UP. ISBN 978-0-521-52332-5.
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