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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chen_JitangChen Jitang - Wikipedia

    Chen Jitang (traditional Chinese: 陳濟棠; simplified Chinese: 陈济棠; pinyin: Chén Jìtáng; Wade–Giles: Chên 2 Chi 4 Tʻang 2; Jyutping: Can4 Zai3 Tong4) (January 23, 1890 – November 3, 1954), also spelled Chen Chi-tang, was a Chinese military officer during the era of Nationalist China.

  2. Chen Jitang is a Chinese officer of the remenants of the NRA, subordinate of Chen Mingshu, within Guangdong province. Chen Jitang joined Sun Yat-sen's movement in 1908 while he was in the Qing Army. He would be an officer during the Anti-Monarchy War, Constitutional Protection War, and...

  3. Get Access. 1. 1. Chen recognized the economic advantages of highways, but his primary interest in con structing them was to facilitate troop movements, which he deemed crucial to warding off attacks from the outside and maintaining order in the province (see Chen Jitang, 1933: 203-4).

  4. Chen Jitang was born into an ethnic Hakka family in Fangcheng, Guangxi, China. He joined the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance in 1908 and participated in the 1911 Xinhai Revolution. In 1920, he joined the regional army in Guangdong Province, China, and was made the commanding officer of the 11th Division of the 4th Army in 1925; the division ...

  5. the suspicions of Chen Jitang (Luo Yiqun, 1987: 83; Zhu Zongzhen, 1997: 65). A dramatic turn of events drew Chen Jitang into the vortex of GMD factional struggles and paved the way for his eventual domination of Guangdong. In late February 1931, Hu Hanmin, president of the Leg-islative Yuan, objected to Jiang Jieshi's proposal for a provisional ...

  6. The Experience of Chen Jitang in Guangdong, 1929-1936. Building and Funding a Warlord Regime: The Experience of Title Chen Jitang in Guangdong, 1929-1936. Author (s) Lin, AHY. Citation Modern China, 2002, v. 28 n. 2, p. 177-212. Issued Date 2002. URL http://hdl.handle.net/10722/48598.

  7. Chen Jitang, even contested the revolutionary legitimacy of the Nationalist Government from his provincial base in Guangzhou from 1931 to 1936. Chen Jitang was the most prominent of a succession of provincial warlords who governed Guangdong more or less independently of central control from shortly after the launching of the