Chekiang Province, Republic of China
Chekiang Province (1912–55) 浙江省 | |
---|---|
Former Province | |
Map of Chekiang Province | |
Coordinates: 29°00′N 120°00′E / 29.000°N 120.000°ECoordinates: 29°00′N 120°00′E / 29.000°N 120.000°E | |
Capital | |
County |
List
|
Area | |
• Total | 17 km2 (7 sq mi) |
Population (1954) | |
• Total | 1,700 |
Chekiang Province, Republic of China (1912–1955) was abolished after the ROC Forces, ROC government officials and local residents were evacuated from Tachen to Taiwan in 1955 following the military defeat of ROC by People's Republic of China's People's Liberation Army forces during the Battle of Tachen Archipelago.[2]
After the Chinese Civil War, the Kuomintang-led Republic of China government lost its control in Mainland China and only held several east coast islands off Mainland Chekiang Province, including Tachen, Ichiangshan (Yikiangshan), Pishan, Taumenshan, Yüshan and Nanki.[3] After losing the mainland, the Nationalists used the islands to stage commando raids into Zhejiang, occasionally penetrating as far as the area around Shanghai.[4] The county governments withdrawn to the islands from the mainland included seven counties, namely Wenling, Linhai, Huangyan, Pinyang, Sanmen, Leqing and Yuhuan. Chiang Kai-shek, the late President of the Republic of China, appointed Hu Zongnan, the general of the ROC Armed Forces, to establish the "Government of Chekiang Province" on the Dachen Islands on September 1951. Its purpose was to fight against the mainland which was controlled by the Communist Party of China.
In 1952, the Chekiang Government reorganized the seven counties into four counties, which were Wenling, Linhai, Pinyang and Yuhuan. Sanmen county was reorganised as "Yushan Administrative Bureau", and "Zhuyu Administrative Bureau" was also established. These administrative bureaus were originally intended to be used as the "special region" for direct economic trading with Mainland China, however they were abolished one year later. In 1953, the Chekiang Government office moved to Taiwan. In 1955, the People's Liberation Army conquered Yijiangshan Island during the Battle of Yijiangshan Islands. The Republic of China evacuated the military garrison and civil residents from Dachen and Nanji to the island of Taiwan with the assistance of the United States Seventh Fleet. The Chekiang Government in Taiwan was abolished soon afterwards, and the People's Republic of China successfully occupied the offshore islands, establishing control over the whole of Zhejiang Province.[5][6]
List of Governors
Non-partisan/ unknown Unity Party Republican Party Military/ Warlords Kuomintang/ National Revolutionary Army
Military Governors (Zhejiangsheng Dudu)
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of Office | Political Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tang Shouqian 湯壽潛 (1856–1917) |
November 1911 | January 1912 | ||
2 | Jiang Zungui 蔣尊簋 (1882–1931) |
January 1912 | August 1912 | Unity Party | |
3 | Zhu Rui 朱瑞 (1883–1916) |
January 1912 | 1916 | Republican Party | |
4 | Lü Gongwang 呂公望 (1879–1954) |
1916 | 1916 | ||
Military Governors (Zhejiangsheng Dujun)
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of Office | Political Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yang Shande 楊善德 (1873–1919) |
January 1917 | 13 August 1919 | Anhui Clique | |
Died in office. | |||||
2 | Lu Yongxiang 盧永祥 Lú Yǒngxiáng (1867–1933) |
? | 1924 | Anhui Clique | |
3 | Sun Chuanfang 孫傳芳 Sūn Chuánfāng (1885–1935) |
1924 | August 1927 | Zhili Clique | |
Governor
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of Office | Political Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lü Gongwang 呂公望 (1879–1954) |
1916 | January 1917 | ||
2 | Qi Yaoshan 齊耀珊 (1865–1954) |
January 1917 | 24 June 1920 | ||
3 | Shen Jinjiani 沈金鑒 (1875–1924) |
24 June 1920 | 29 October 1922 | ||
4 | Zhang Zaiyang 張載揚 |
29 October 1922 | ? | ||
5 | Xia Chao 夏超 (1882-1926) |
1924 | 23 October 1926 | Zhili Clique | |
NRA | |||||
6 | Chen Yi 陳儀 Chén Yí (1883-1950) |
October 1925 | July 1927 | Zhili Clique | |
NRA | |||||
Chairperson of the Provincial Government
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of Office | Political Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Chang Ching-kiang 張靜江 (1877–1950) |
27 July 1927 | 5 October 1927 | Kuomintang | |
2 | He Yingqin 何應欽 Hé Yìngqīn (1890–1987) |
5 October 1927 | 7 November 1928 | Kuomintang | |
(1) | Chang Ching-kiang 張靜江 (1877–1950) |
7 November 1928 | 4 December 1930 | Kuomintang | |
3 | Zhang Nanxian 張難先 (1873–1968) |
4 December 1930 | 15 December 1931 | Kuomintang | |
4 | Lu Ti-ping 魯滌平 (1887–1935) |
15 December 1931 | 12 December 1934 | Kuomintang | |
5 | Huang Shaohong 黃紹竑 (1895–1966) |
12 December 1934 | 25 July 1936 | Kuomintang | |
6 | Pai Chung-hsi 白崇禧 (1893–1966) |
25 July 1936 | 6 September 1936 | Kuomintang | |
Refused to take office; Director of Civil Affairs Department Xu Qingfu acted as Chairperson. | |||||
(5) | Huang Shaohong 黃紹竑 (1895–1966) |
6 September 1936 | 2 December 1936 | Kuomintang | |
7 | Chu Chia-hua 朱家驊 Zhū Jiāhuá (1893–1963) |
12 December 1934 | 26 November 1937 | Kuomintang | |
(5) | Huang Shaohong 黃紹竑 (1895–1966) |
26 November 1937 | 26 March 1946 | Kuomintang | |
8 | Shen Honglie 沈鴻烈 (1882–1969) |
26 March 1946 | 22 June 1948 | Kuomintang | |
9 | Chen Yi 陳儀 Chén Yí (1883-1950) |
22 June 1948 | 21 February 1949 | Kuomintang | |
10 | Zhou Yan 周喦 |
21 February 1949 | 6 December 1949 | Kuomintang | |
11 | Shi Jue 石覺 (1908-1986) |
7 December 1949 | 13 May 1950 | Kuomintang | |
12 | Hu Tsung-nan 胡宗南 Hú Zōngnán (1896-1962) |
19 October 1950 | 23 July 1953 | Kuomintang | |
Evacuated to Taiwan 23 July 1953. | |||||
See also
- Zhejiang Province
- Dachen Islands
- Yijiangshan Island
- Battle of Dachen Archipelago
- Battle of Yijiangshan Islands
- Fujian Province, Republic of China and Taiwan Province
References
- ↑ 蔣經國巡視大陳島 (Chinese Version)
- ↑ 國民政府的浙江省政府 (Chinese Version)
- ↑ 三軍渡海攻占一江山島 (Chinese Version)
- ↑ Domes, Jurgen. Peng Te-huai: The Man and the Image, London: C. Hurst & Company. 1985. ISBN 0-905838-99-8. p.66
- ↑ 1955: US evacuates Pacific islands
- ↑ Tachen Island Evacuation History
External links
"Cheh-kiang". Encyclopædia Britannica. 6 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 23.