'Li Tsung-jen' () (
13 August 1890 -
13 January 1969),
courtesy name 'Delin' (德鄰), was prominent
Guangxi warlord and
Kuomintang (KMT) military commander during the
Second Sino-Japanese War and
Chinese Civil War. He served as vice-president and
acting president of the Republic of China under the
1947 Chinese Constitution.
Biography
Born in Xixiang Village (西鄉村),
Guilin,
Guangxi Province to a teacher father, Li Beiying (李培英) as the second eldest in a family of five boys and three girls. Li joined
Tongmenghui in
1910.
Schooled under
Cai E, Li graduated from the Guilin Military Cadre Training School and became a platoon commander in the formidable force of
Lu Rongting's subordinate
Lin Hu in 1916, then served in the northern expedition during 1918 in Hunan, his bravery earned him a promotion to battalion commander.
Li Zongren accompanied Lin Hu and Lu Rongting into Guangdong and led the rear guard when the
Old Guangxi Clique forces retreated before
Chen Jiongming's attack. Most of Lin Hu's officers were former bandits and militia recruited earlier by Lin from the
Zhuang areas of
Guangdong. They defected to the Guangdong forces, taking their units with them. Li Zongren his battalion, shrunk to about one thousand men "sank into the grasses." Li, intending to become more than a bandit, began building a personal military machine of professional units of soldiers that were the equal of any number of bandits or Zhuang irregulars that Lu Rongting drew on in his war to re-establish his power in Guangxi.
Li joined the
Kuomintang in 1923, when he already controlled a considerable numbers of troops in northern Guangxi. Having wiped out the bandits, local warlords, and remnant forces of the north, he joined
Huang Shaohong and
Bai Chongxi in the spring of 1924 to form the
new Guangxi Clique and create the Guangxi Pacification Army. Li Zongren was the Commander in Chief, Huang Shaohong the deputy Commander, and Bai Chongxi the Chief-of-Staff. By August they had defeated Lu Rongting and driven other contenders out of the province. Li Zongren was military governor of Guangxi from 1924-25, and from 1925 to 1949, Guangxi remained under Li Zongren's influence.
Li went on to be the commanding general of the Seventh Army in the
Northern Expedition and captured
Wuhan in 1927. Appointed commander of the 4th Army Group, composed of the Guangxi Army and other provincial forces amounting to 16 corps and six independent divisions. In April, 1928, Li Zongren, with Bai Chongxi led the Fourth Army group to advance on
Beijing, capturing
Handan,
Baoding, and
Shijiazhuang, by June 1.
Zhang Zuolin withdrew from
Beijing on June 3, and Li's army seized Beijing and
Tianjin.
At the end of the Northern Expedition,
Chiang Kai-shek began to agitate to reorganize the army in a military conference in 1929, the fact that it would alter the existing territorial influences among the cliques in the party quickly aggravated the relationships between the central government and the regional powers. Li Zongren, and the New Guangxi clique were the first to break off relations with Chiang in March 1929. This effectively started the confrontation which lead to the
Central Plains War. After the Guangxi Army captured
Yueyang, Chiang's forces cut them off from behind. The Guangxi Army was eventually forced to withdraw back to Guangxi.
Following defeat in that civil war, Guangxi allied with
Chen Jitang after he became chairman of the government of Guangdong in 1931, and turned against Chiang Kai-shek. Another civil war would have broken out if there had been no
September 18 Incident, which prompted all sides to unite against the
Empire of Japan.
During the
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945), Li participated in several battles including the
Battle of Tai'erzhuang,
Battle of Xuzhou,
Battle of Wuhan,
Battle of Suixian-Zaoyang,
1939-40 Winter Offensive,
Battle of Zaoyang-Yichang,
Central Hopei Operation, and
Battle of South Henan. From 1943 to 1945 Li was made Director of the Generalissimo's Headquarters.
According to
Jonathan D. Spence, Li was one of Chiang Kai-shek's best generals and "fought a brilliant battle (at
Xuzhou), luring the
Imperial Japanese Army into an
trap and killing as many as 30,000 of its combat troops" in 1938.
After the war, Li was given the post of Director of the Peiping Field Headquarters from 1945 to 1947. This was a post without effective power, he was sidelined from command in the early part of the
Chinese Civil War.
On
28 April 1948, Li was elected by the
National Assembly as the vice-president, five days after his political opponent,
Chiang Kai-shek became the president. (Chiang had supported
Sun Fo's candidacy instead.) The day after Chiang resigned on
21 January,
1949 as a response to the
Chinese Communist uprisings and several victories, Li became the acting president. Li attempted to negotiate with the communists in
Beijing. Such "pacifist attacks" increased the already-strained Li-Chiang tension. Li's intended and never implemented Seven Great Peace Policies were:
# "Bandit commands" (剿總) to be controlled by military officers
# Overly strict orders are to be more lenient
# Eliminate "chaotic expedition nation-establishing troops" (戡亂建國總隊)
# Release
political prisoners
#
Press freedom
# Eliminate
unusual cruelty in punishment
# Eliminate arrest of civilians without
proper reasons
Li's attempts to carry out these policies, faced varying degrees of opposition from Chiang's supporters.
When the capital
Nanjing fell to Communist forces in April 1949, Li led the evacuation of the government to
Guangzhou. Li hoped to launch a counter-attack against the Communists from Guangdong, much like the KMT advance against the warlords during the
Northern Expedition. Chiang Kai-shek supported retreating to the interior to regroup, as he had done during the
Second Sino-Japanese War. So in November 1949, when Guangzhou fell to the Communists, Chiang relocated the government to
Chongqing while Li effectively surrendered his powers and flew to
New York for treatment of his chronic duodenum illness at the Hospital of
Columbia University. Li visited the
United States President Harry S. Truman and denounced Chiang as a "dictator" and "usurper." Li doughtily vowed he would "return to crush" Chiang's movements once he went back to China.
[1]
In December 1949, Chongqing fell too, and Chiang relocated his government to
Taipei, but he did not formally reassume the presidency until March 1, 1950. In January 1952, Chiang commanded the
Control Yuan now in Taiwan to impeach Li in the "Case of Li Zongren's Failure to carry out Duties due to Illegal Conduct" (李宗仁違法失職案), and officially relieved Li of the position as vice-president in the
National Assembly in March 1954. Li became a communist sympathizer and moved to
Beijing with the support of
Zhou Enlai on July 20,
1965. He died of
duodenum cancer in
Beijing at 78.
Li's residence in
mainland China is viewed by some Chinese communists as a defect that caused Li to "patriotically return to the embrace of his Motherland with smiles" -- something similarly in perception to the former
Qing Emperor
Puyi's "reformation". To this day, some Nationalists supporters view him as a traitor to the democratic cause.
Personal
Li was married to Li Xiuwen (李秀文) at 20 in an arranged marriage and separated eventually. The Lis had a son, Li Youlin (李幼鄰). In 1924, Li married Guo Dejie (郭德潔), who died of
breast cancer soon after returning with Li to Beijing. Li and Guo had one son: Li Zhisheng (李志聖). Li then remarried, to Hu Yousong (胡友松), who was 48 years younger than Li. Hu changed her name to Wang Xi (王曦) after Li died and remarried.
He co-wrote ''Memoirs of Li Zongren'' with historian
Te-Kong Tang (唐德剛), which vehemently criticizes Chiang Kai-shek and analyzed Japan's strategic failure to conquer China. A more detailed and accurate account for Li's life is depicted in the less popular biography ''Wo De Gu Gong'' by his distant relative
Namgo Chai.
See also
★
Chiang Kai-shek
★
Second Sino-Japanese War
★
National Revolutionary Army
★
History of the Republic of China
★
Military of the Republic of China
★
President of the Republic of China
★
Politics of the Republic of China
★
Kuomintang
External links
★
民国军阀派系谈 (The Republic of China warlord cliques discussed )
★
THE ZHUANG AND THE 1911 REVOLUTION
★
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MODERN ECONOMY IN GUANGXI