Liu Bocheng (December 4, 1892-October 7, 1986), formerly known as Liu Mingzhao, [1] formerly known as Liu Bojian, was a native of Kaizhou, Chongqing City. [2] An outstanding member of the Communist Party of China, Marshal of the People's Republic of China, one of the founders of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, a great proletarian revolutionist, militarist, Marxist military theorist, and military educator.
He joined the army during the Revolution of 1911 and joined the Communist Party of China in 1926. He successively participated in the Northern Expedition, the August 1st Nanchang Uprising, the Agrarian Revolutionary War, the Long March, the Anti-Japanese War, the Liberation War, etc. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as the second secretary of the Southwest Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, chairman of the Southwest Military and Political Commission, president and political commissar of the Military Academy of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and vice chairman of the People's Revolutionary Military Commission of the Central People's Government. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of marshal. He died in Beijing on October 7, 1986, at the age of 94. [3] Liu Bocheng established immortal contributions to the liberation cause of the Chinese nation and the Chinese people, made outstanding contributions to our country's national defense construction and socialist construction, and made outstanding contributions to the regularization and modernization of our army. [4]
Chinese name
Liu Bocheng
Alias
Liu Mingzhao (original name), Liu Bojian (former name)
Nationality
Chinese
Ethnicity
Han
Birthplace
Kaizhou District, Chongqing< /p>
Relationships
Wang Ronghua
Wife
Liu Miqun
Daughter
Liu Taihang
Son
Liu Meng
Son
Liu Taichi
Son
Cheng Yizhi< /p>
Ex-wife
Zhu De
Comrade-in-arms
Tang Tianji
Comrade-in-arms
Chen Zaidao
p>Comrade
Su Yu
Comrade
Chen Yi
Comrade
Peng Dehuai
Comrade
Nie Rongzhen
Comrade
Ye Jianying
Comrade
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Main contributions anecdotes, allusions, historical evaluations, artistic images of family members
Life of characters
Early experiences
Comrade Liu Bocheng is a member of the Chinese people ***Marshal of the Republic of China (1955). Military strategist. His original name was Liu Mingzhao and his courtesy name was Bocheng. Born on December 4, 1892 in Zhaojiachang, Kaixian County, Sichuan Province. He went to private school at the age of 5 and began to receive new education at the age of 12. When he was 15 years old, due to his father's death and family difficulties, he was forced to drop out of school and work in farming. He experienced hardships in life and determined to "save the people from water and fire."
Democratic Revolution
In 1911, when the storm of the Revolution of 1911 swept across the land of China, he resolutely chose to join the army. At that time, many relatives and friends disapproved of this move, but he responded enthusiastically: "A man should use his sword to save the people from fire and water, how can he care about his own wealth?" He cut off his braid, and with the strong belief of enriching the country and strengthening the army, he threw himself into Sun Yat-sen's army. democratic revolution.
Liu Bocheng
In February 1912, he was admitted to the General School run by the Shu military government in Chongqing, where he studied various modern military courses and was familiar with ancient Chinese military books, such as "Sun Tzu" and "Wu". Can recite many chapters of classics such as "The Son of Heaven". After spending 10 months in the General Academy, he not only excelled academically, but was also well-known throughout the school for his upright conduct, integrity, and abstention from bad habits. He was called the "Bodhisattva" in the military by his classmates.
After graduation at the end of 1912, he was assigned to the Xiong Kewu Department of the 5th Division of the Sichuan Army and served successively as division chief, platoon leader, and company commander.
In 1913, he participated in the battle against Yuan in Sichuan. After the failure, he joined the Chinese Revolutionary Party led by Sun Yat-sen in Shanghai in 1914.
At the end of 1915, he was ordered to return to Sichuan and raise 400 people