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Mao Zedong

Mao Zedong[a] (26 December 1893 – 9 September 1976), also known as Chairman Mao, was a Chinese communist revolutionary who was the founder of the People's Republic of China (PRC), which he led as the chairman of the Chinese Communist Party from the establishment of the PRC in 1949 until his death in 1976. Ideologically a Marxist–Leninist, his theories, military strategies, and political policies are collectively known as Maoism.

Mao Zedong
毛泽东
Mao in 1959
Chairman of the Communist Party of China
In office
20 March 1943 – 9 September 1976
DeputyLiu Shaoqi
Lin Biao
Zhou Enlai
Hua Guofeng
Preceded byZhang Wentian (as General Secretary)
Succeeded byHua Guofeng
1st Chairman of the People's Republic of China
In office
27 September 1954 – 27 April 1959
PremierZhou Enlai
DeputyZhu De
Succeeded byLiu Shaoqi
Chairman of the Central Military Commission
In office
8 September 1954 – 9 September 1976
DeputyZhu De
Lin Biao
Ye Jianying
Succeeded byHua Guofeng
Chairman of the Central People's Government
In office
1 October 1949 – 27 September 1954
PremierZhou Enlai
Personal details
Born(1893-12-26)26 December 1893
Shaoshan, Hunan, Qing Dynasty
Died9 September 1976(1976-09-09) (aged 82)
Beijing, People's Republic of China
Resting placeChairman Mao Memorial Hall
Political partyCommunist Party of China (1921–1976)
Other political
affiliations
Kuomintang (1925–1926)
Spouses
  • (m. 1907; died 1910)
  • (m. 1920; died 1930)
  • (m. 1928; div. 1937)
  • (m. 1938)
Children10, including:
Mao Anying
Mao Anqing
Mao Anlong
Yang Yuehua
Li Min
Li Na
Parents
Alma materHunan First Normal University
Signature
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese毛泽东
Traditional Chinese毛澤東
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinMáo Zédōng
Bopomofoㄇㄠˊ   ㄗㄜˊ   ㄉㄨㄥ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhMau Tzerdong
Wade–GilesMao² Tsê²-tung¹
IPA[mǎʊ tsɤ̌.tʊ́ŋ] (listen)
Wu
SuzhouneseMáu Zéh-ton
Hakka
RomanizationMô Chhe̍t-tûng
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationMòuh Jaahk-dūng
JyutpingMou4 Zaak6-dung1
IPA[mȍu tsàːk̚.tóŋ]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJMô͘ Te̍k-tong
Tâi-lôMôo Ti̍k-tang
Courtesy name
Simplified Chinese润之
Traditional Chinese潤之
Central institution membership

Other offices held
Paramount Leader of
the People's Republic of China

Mao was the son of a prosperous peasant in Shaoshan, Hunan. He supported Chinese nationalism and had an anti-imperialist outlook early in his life, and was particularly influenced by the events of the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 and May Fourth Movement of 1919. He later adopted Marxism–Leninism while working at Peking University as a librarian and became a founding member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), leading the Autumn Harvest Uprising in 1927. During the Chinese Civil War between the Kuomintang (KMT) and the CCP, Mao helped to found the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, led the Jiangxi Soviet's radical land reform policies, and ultimately became head of the CCP during the Long March. Although the CCP temporarily allied with the KMT under the Second United Front during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), China's civil war resumed after Japan's surrender, and Mao's forces defeated the Nationalist government, which withdrew to Taiwan in 1949.

On 1 October 1949, Mao proclaimed the foundation of the PRC, a Marxist–Leninist single-party state controlled by the CCP. In the following years he solidified his control through the Chinese Land Reform against landlords, the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries, the "Three-anti and Five-anti Campaigns", and through a psychological victory in the Korean War, which altogether resulted in the deaths of several million Chinese. From 1953 to 1958, Mao played an important role in enforcing planned economy in China, constructing the first Constitution of the PRC, launching the industrialisation program, and initiating military projects such as the "Two Bombs, One Satellite" project and Project 523. His foreign policies during this time were dominated by the Sino-Soviet split which drove a wedge between China and the Soviet Union. In 1955, Mao launched the Sufan movement, and in 1957 he launched the Anti-Rightist Campaign, in which at least 550,000 people, mostly intellectuals and dissidents, were persecuted.[2] In 1958, he launched the Great Leap Forward that aimed to rapidly transform China's economy from agrarian to industrial, which led to the deadliest famine in history and the deaths of 15–55 million people between 1958 and 1962. In 1963, Mao launched the Socialist Education Movement, and in 1966 he initiated the Cultural Revolution, a program to remove "counter-revolutionary" elements in Chinese society which lasted 10 years and was marked by violent class struggle, widespread destruction of cultural artifacts, and an unprecedented elevation of Mao's cult of personality. Tens of millions of people were persecuted during the Revolution, while the estimated number of deaths ranges from hundreds of thousands to millions. After years of ill health, Mao suffered a series of heart attacks in 1976 and died at the age of 82. During Mao's era, China's population grew from around 550 million to over 900 million while the government did not strictly enforce its family planning policy.

A controversial figure within and outside China, Mao is still regarded as one of the most influential figures of the twentieth century. Beyond politics, Mao is also known as a theorist, military strategist, and poet. During the Mao era, China was heavily involved with other southeast Asian communist conflicts such as the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the Cambodian Civil War, which brought the Khmer Rouge to power. The government during Mao's rule was responsible for vast numbers of deaths with estimates ranging from 40 to 80 million victims through starvation, persecution, prison labour, and mass executions.[3][4][5][6] Mao has been praised for transforming China from a semi-colony to a leading world power, with greatly advanced literacy, women's rights, basic healthcare, primary education and life expectancy.[7][8][9][10]

English romanisation of name

During Mao's lifetime, the English-language media universally rendered his name as Mao Tse-tung, using the Wade-Giles system of transliteration for Standard Chinese though with the circumflex accent in the syllable Tsê dropped. Due to its recognizability, the spelling was used widely, even by the Foreign Ministry of the PRC after Hanyu Pinyin became the PRC's official romanisation system for Mandarin Chinese in 1958; the well-known booklet of Mao's political statements, The Little Red Book, was officially entitled Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung in English translations. While the pinyin-derived spelling Mao Zedong is increasingly common, the Wade-Giles-derived spelling Mao Tse-tung continues to be used in modern publications to some extent.[11]

Early life

Youth and the Xinhai Revolution: 1893–1911

Mao Zedong was born on 26 December 1893, in Shaoshan village, Hunan.[12] His father, Mao Yichang, was a formerly impoverished peasant who had become one of the wealthiest farmers in Shaoshan. Growing up in rural Hunan, Mao described his father as a stern disciplinarian, who would beat him and his three siblings, the boys Zemin and Zetan, as well as an adopted girl, Zejian.[13] Mao's mother, Wen Qimei, was a devout Buddhist who tried to temper her husband's strict attitude.[14] Mao too became a Buddhist, but abandoned this faith in his mid-teenage years.[14] At age 8, Mao was sent to Shaoshan Primary School. Learning the value systems of Confucianism, he later admitted that he did not enjoy the classical Chinese texts preaching Confucian morals, instead favouring classic novels like Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Water Margin.[15] At age 13, Mao finished primary education, and his father united him in an arranged marriage to the 17-year-old Luo Yixiu, thereby uniting their land-owning families. Mao refused to recognise her as his wife, becoming a fierce critic of arranged marriage and temporarily moving away. Luo was locally disgraced and died in 1910, at only 21 years old.[16]

 
Mao Zedong's childhood home in Shaoshan, in 2010, by which time it had become a tourist destination

While working on his father's farm, Mao read voraciously[17] and developed a "political consciousness" from Zheng Guanying's booklet which lamented the deterioration of Chinese power and argued for the adoption of representative democracy.[18] Interested in history, Mao was inspired by the military prowess and nationalistic fervour of George Washington and Napoleon Bonaparte.[19] His political views were shaped by Gelaohui-led protests which erupted following a famine in Changsha, the capital of Hunan; Mao supported the protesters' demands, but the armed forces suppressed the dissenters and executed their leaders.[20] The famine spread to Shaoshan, where starving peasants seized his father's grain. He disapproved of their actions as morally wrong, but claimed sympathy for their situation.[21] At age 16, Mao moved to a higher primary school in nearby Dongshan,[22] where he was bullied for his peasant background.[23]

In 1911, Mao began middle school in Changsha.[24] Revolutionary sentiment was strong in the city, where there was widespread animosity towards Emperor Puyi's absolute monarchy and many were advocating republicanism. The republicans' figurehead was Sun Yat-sen, an American-educated Christian who led the Tongmenghui society.[25] In Changsha, Mao was influenced by Sun's newspaper, The People's Independence (Minli bao),[26] and called for Sun to become president in a school essay.[27] As a symbol of rebellion against the Manchu monarch, Mao and a friend cut off their queue pigtails, a sign of subservience to the emperor.[28]

Inspired by Sun's republicanism, the army rose up across southern China, sparking the Xinhai Revolution. Changsha's governor fled, leaving the city in republican control.[29] Supporting the revolution, Mao joined the rebel army as a private soldier, but was not involved in fighting. The northern provinces remained loyal to the emperor, and hoping to avoid a civil war, Sun—proclaimed "provisional president" by his supporters—compromised with the monarchist general Yuan Shikai. The monarchy was abolished, creating the Republic of China, but the monarchist Yuan became president. The revolution over, Mao resigned from the army in 1912, after six months as a soldier.[30] Around this time, Mao discovered socialism from a newspaper article; proceeding to read pamphlets by Jiang Kanghu, the student founder of the Chinese Socialist Party, Mao remained interested yet unconvinced by the idea.[31]

Fourth Normal School of Changsha: 1912–1919

Over the next few years, Mao Zedong enrolled and dropped out of a police academy, a soap-production school, a law school, an economics school, and the government-run Changsha Middle School.[32] Studying independently, he spent much time in Changsha's library, reading core works of classical liberalism such as Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations and Montesquieu's The Spirit of the Laws, as well as the works of western scientists and philosophers such as Darwin, Mill, Rousseau, and Spencer.[33] Viewing himself as an intellectual, years later he admitted that at this time he thought himself better than working people.[34] He was inspired by Friedrich Paulsen, a neo-Kantian philosopher and educator whose emphasis on the achievement of a carefully defined goal as the highest value led Mao to believe that strong individuals were not bound by moral codes but should strive for a great goal.[35] His father saw no use in his son's intellectual pursuits, cut off his allowance and forced him to move into a hostel for the destitute.[36]

 
Mao in 1913

Mao desired to become a teacher and enrolled at the Fourth Normal School of Changsha, which soon merged with the First Normal School of Hunan, widely seen as the best in Hunan.[37] Befriending Mao, professor Yang Changji urged him to read a radical newspaper, New Youth (Xin qingnian), the creation of his friend Chen Duxiu, a dean at Peking University. Although he was a supporter of Chinese nationalism, Chen argued that China must look to the west to cleanse itself of superstition and autocracy.[38] In his first school year, Mao befriended an older student, Xiao Zisheng; together they went on a walking tour of Hunan, begging and writing literary couplets to obtain food.[39]

A popular student, in 1915 Mao was elected secretary of the Students Society. He organised the Association for Student Self-Government and led protests against school rules.[40] Mao published his first article in New Youth in April 1917, instructing readers to increase their physical strength to serve the revolution.[41] He joined the Society for the Study of Wang Fuzhi (Chuan-shan Hsüeh-she), a revolutionary group founded by Changsha literati who wished to emulate the philosopher Wang Fuzhi.[42] In spring 1917, he was elected to command the students' volunteer army, set up to defend the school from marauding soldiers.[43] Increasingly interested in the techniques of war, he took a keen interest in World War I, and also began to develop a sense of solidarity with workers.[44] Mao undertook feats of physical endurance with Xiao Zisheng and Cai Hesen, and with other young revolutionaries they formed the Renovation of the People Study Society in April 1918 to debate Chen Duxiu's ideas. Desiring personal and societal transformation, the Society gained 70–80 members, many of whom would later join the Communist Party.[45] Mao graduated in June 1919, ranked third in the year.[46]

Early revolutionary activity

Beijing, anarchism, and Marxism: 1917–1919

Mao moved to Beijing, where his mentor Yang Changji had taken a job at Peking University.[47] Yang thought Mao exceptionally "intelligent and handsome",[48] securing him a job as assistant to the university librarian Li Dazhao, who would become an early Chinese Communist.[49] Li authored a series of New Youth articles on the October Revolution in Russia, during which the Communist Bolshevik Party under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin had seized power. Lenin was an advocate of the socio-political theory of Marxism, first developed by the German sociologists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and Li's articles added Marxism to the doctrines in Chinese revolutionary movement.[50]

Becoming "more and more radical", Mao was initially influenced by Peter Kropotkin's anarchism, which was the most prominent radical doctrine of the day. Chinese anarchists, such as Cai Yuanpei, Chancellor of Peking University, called for complete social revolution in social relations, family structure, and women's equality, rather than the simple change in the form of government called for by earlier revolutionaries. He joined Li's Study Group and "developed rapidly toward Marxism" during the winter of 1919.[51] Paid a low wage, Mao lived in a cramped room with seven other Hunanese students, but believed that Beijing's beauty offered "vivid and living compensation".[52] A number of his friends took advantage of the anarchist-organised Mouvement Travail-Études to study in France, but Mao declined, perhaps because of an inability to learn languages.[53]

At the university, Mao was snubbed by other students due to his rural Hunanese accent and lowly position. He joined the university's Philosophy and Journalism Societies and attended lectures and seminars by the likes of Chen Duxiu, Hu Shih, and Qian Xuantong.[54] Mao's time in Beijing ended in the spring of 1919, when he travelled to Shanghai with friends who were preparing to leave for France.[55] He did not return to Shaoshan, where his mother was terminally ill. She died in October 1919 and her husband died in January 1920.[56]

New Culture and political protests: 1919–1920

On 4 May 1919, students in Beijing gathered at the Tiananmen to protest the Chinese government's weak resistance to Japanese expansion in China. Patriots were outraged at the influence given to Japan in the Twenty-One Demands in 1915, the complicity of Duan Qirui's Beiyang Government, and the betrayal of China in the Treaty of Versailles, wherein Japan was allowed to receive territories in Shandong which had been surrendered by Germany. These demonstrations ignited the nationwide May Fourth Movement and fuelled the New Culture Movement which blamed China's diplomatic defeats on social and cultural backwardness.[57]

In Changsha, Mao had begun teaching history at the Xiuye Primary School[58] and organising protests against the pro-Duan Governor of Hunan Province, Zhang Jingyao, popularly known as "Zhang the Venomous" due to his corrupt and violent rule.[59] In late May, Mao co-founded the Hunanese Student Association with He Shuheng and Deng Zhongxia, organising a student strike for June and in July 1919 began production of a weekly radical magazine, Xiang River Review. Using vernacular language that would be understandable to the majority of China's populace, he advocated the need for a "Great Union of the Popular Masses", strengthened trade unions able to wage non-violent revolution.[clarification needed] His ideas were not Marxist, but heavily influenced by Kropotkin's concept of mutual aid.[60]

 
Students in Beijing rallying during the May Fourth Movement

Zhang banned the Student Association, but Mao continued publishing after assuming editorship of the liberal magazine New Hunan (Xin Hunan) and offered articles in popular local newspaper Ta Kung Pao. Several of these advocated feminist views, calling for the liberation of women in Chinese society; Mao was influenced by his forced arranged-marriage.[61] In December 1919, Mao helped organise a general strike in Hunan, securing some concessions, but Mao and other student leaders felt threatened by Zhang, and Mao returned to Beijing, visiting the terminally ill Yang Changji.[62] Mao found that his articles had achieved a level of fame among the revolutionary movement, and set about soliciting support in overthrowing Zhang.[63] Coming across newly translated Marxist literature by Thomas Kirkup, Karl Kautsky, and Marx and Engels—notably The Communist Manifesto—he came under their increasing influence, but was still eclectic in his views.[64]

Mao visited Tianjin, Jinan, and Qufu,[65] before moving to Shanghai, where he worked as a laundryman and met Chen Duxiu, noting that Chen's adoption of Marxism "deeply impressed me at what was probably a critical period in my life". In Shanghai, Mao met an old teacher of his, Yi Peiji, a revolutionary and member of the Kuomintang (KMT), or Chinese Nationalist Party, which was gaining increasing support and influence. Yi introduced Mao to General Tan Yankai, a senior KMT member who held the loyalty of troops stationed along the Hunanese border with Guangdong. Tan was plotting to overthrow Zhang, and Mao aided him by organising the Changsha students. In June 1920, Tan led his troops into Changsha, and Zhang fled. In the subsequent reorganisation of the provincial administration, Mao was appointed headmaster of the junior section of the First Normal School. Now receiving a large income, he married Yang Kaihui, daughter of Yang Changji, in the winter of 1920.[66][67]

Founding the Chinese Communist Party: 1921–1922

 
Location of the first Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in July 1921, in Xintiandi, former French Concession, Shanghai

The Chinese Communist Party was founded by Chen Duxiu and Li Dazhao in the French concession of Shanghai in 1921 as a study society and informal network. Mao set up a Changsha branch, also establishing a branch of the Socialist Youth Corps and a Cultural Book Society which opened a bookstore to propagate revolutionary literature throughout Hunan.[68] He was involved in the movement for Hunan autonomy, in the hope that a Hunanese constitution would increase civil liberties and make his revolutionary activity easier. When the movement was successful in establishing provincial autonomy under a new warlord, Mao forgot his involvement.[69] By 1921, small Marxist groups existed in Shanghai, Beijing, Changsha, Wuhan, Guangzhou, and Jinan; it was decided to hold a central meeting, which began in Shanghai on 23 July 1921. The first session of the National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party was attended by 13 delegates, Mao included. After the authorities sent a police spy to the congress, the delegates moved to a boat on South Lake near Jiaxing, in Zhejiang, to escape detection. Although Soviet and Comintern delegates attended, the first congress ignored Lenin's advice to accept a temporary alliance between the Communists and the "bourgeois democrats" who also advocated national revolution; instead they stuck to the orthodox Marxist belief that only the urban proletariat could lead a socialist revolution.[70]

Mao was now party secretary for Hunan stationed in Changsha, and to build the party there he followed a variety of tactics.[71] In August 1921, he founded the Self-Study University, through which readers could gain access to revolutionary literature, housed in the premises of the Society for the Study of Wang Fuzhi, a Qing dynasty Hunanese philosopher who had resisted the Manchus.[71] He joined the YMCA Mass Education Movement to fight illiteracy, though he edited the textbooks to include radical sentiments.[72] He continued organising workers to strike against the administration of Hunan Governor Zhao Hengti.[73] Yet labour issues remained central. The successful and famous Anyuan coal mines strikes [zh] (contrary to later Party historians) depended on both "proletarian" and "bourgeois" strategies. Liu Shaoqi and Li Lisan and Mao not only mobilised the miners, but formed schools and cooperatives and engaged local intellectuals, gentry, military officers, merchants, Red Gang dragon heads and even church clergy.[74] Mao's labour organizing work in the Anyuan mines also involved his wife Yang Kaihui, who worked for women's rights, including literacy and educational issues, in the nearby peasant communities.[75] Although Mao and Yang were not the originators of this political organizing method of combining labor organizing among male workers with a focus on women's rights issues in their communities, they were among the most effective at using this method.[75] Mao's political organizing success in the Anyuan mines resulted in Chen Duxiu inviting him to become a member of the Communist Party's Central Committee.[76]

Mao claimed that he missed the July 1922 Second Congress of the Communist Party in Shanghai because he lost the address. Adopting Lenin's advice, the delegates agreed to an alliance with the "bourgeois democrats" of the KMT for the good of the "national revolution". Communist Party members joined the KMT, hoping to push its politics leftward.[77] Mao enthusiastically agreed with this decision, arguing for an alliance across China's socio-economic classes, and eventually rose to become propaganda chief of the KMT.[67] Mao was a vocal anti-imperialist and in his writings he lambasted the governments of Japan, the UK and US, describing the latter as "the most murderous of hangmen".[78]

Collaboration with the Kuomintang: 1922–1927

Mao giving speeches to the masses (no audio)

At the Third Congress of the Communist Party in Shanghai in June 1923, the delegates reaffirmed their commitment to working with the KMT. Supporting this position, Mao was elected to the Party Committee, taking up residence in Shanghai.[79] At the First KMT Congress, held in Guangzhou in early 1924, Mao was elected an alternate member of the KMT Central Executive Committee, and put forward four resolutions to decentralise power to urban and rural bureaus. His enthusiastic support for the KMT earned him the suspicion of Li Li-san, his Hunan comrade.[80]

In late 1924, Mao returned to Shaoshan, perhaps to recuperate from an illness. He found that the peasantry were increasingly restless and some had seized land from wealthy landowners to found communes. This convinced him of the revolutionary potential of the peasantry, an idea advocated by the KMT leftists but not the Communists.[81] In the winter of 1925, Mao fled to Guangzhou after his revolutionary activities attracted the attention of Zhao's regional authorities.[82] There, he ran the 6th term of the KMT's Peasant Movement Training Institute from May to September 1926.[83][84] The Peasant Movement Training Institute under Mao trained cadre and prepared them for militant activity, taking them through military training exercises and getting them to study basic left-wing texts.[85]

 
Mao Zedong around the time of his work at Guangzhou's PMTI in 1925

When party leader Sun Yat-sen died in May 1925, he was succeeded by Chiang Kai-shek, who moved to marginalise the left-KMT and the Communists.[86] Mao nevertheless supported Chiang's National Revolutionary Army, who embarked on the Northern Expedition attack in 1926 on warlords.[87] In the wake of this expedition, peasants rose up, appropriating the land of the wealthy landowners, who were in many cases killed. Such uprisings angered senior KMT figures, who were themselves landowners, emphasising the growing class and ideological divide within the revolutionary movement.[88]

 
Third Plenum of the KMT Central Executive Committee in March 1927. Mao is third from the right in the second row.

In March 1927, Mao appeared at the Third Plenum of the KMT Central Executive Committee in Wuhan, which sought to strip General Chiang of his power by appointing Wang Jingwei leader. There, Mao played an active role in the discussions regarding the peasant issue, defending a set of "Regulations for the Repression of Local Bullies and Bad Gentry", which advocated the death penalty or life imprisonment for anyone found guilty of counter-revolutionary activity, arguing that in a revolutionary situation, "peaceful methods cannot suffice".[89][90] In April 1927, Mao was appointed to the KMT's five-member Central Land Committee, urging peasants to refuse to pay rent. Mao led another group to put together a "Draft Resolution on the Land Question", which called for the confiscation of land belonging to "local bullies and bad gentry, corrupt officials, militarists and all counter-revolutionary elements in the villages". Proceeding to carry out a "Land Survey", he stated that anyone owning over 30 mou (four and a half acres), constituting 13% of the population, were uniformly counter-revolutionary. He accepted that there was great variation in revolutionary enthusiasm across the country, and that a flexible policy of land redistribution was necessary.[91] Presenting his conclusions at the Enlarged Land Committee meeting, many expressed reservations, some believing that it went too far, and others not far enough. Ultimately, his suggestions were only partially implemented.[92]

Civil War

Nanchang and Autumn Harvest Uprisings: 1927

Fresh from the success of the Northern Expedition against the warlords, Chiang turned on the Communists, who by now numbered in the tens of thousands across China. Chiang ignored the orders of the Wuhan-based left KMT government and marched on Shanghai, a city controlled by Communist militias. As the Communists awaited Chiang's arrival, he loosed the White Terror, massacring 5000 with the aid of the Green Gang.[90][93] In Beijing, 19 leading Communists were killed by Zhang Zuolin.[94][95] That May, tens of thousands of Communists and those suspected of being communists were killed, and the CCP lost approximately 15,000 of its 25,000 members.[95]

The CCP continued supporting the Wuhan KMT government, a position Mao initially supported,[95] but by the time of the CCP's Fifth Congress he had changed his mind, deciding to stake all hope on the peasant militia.[96] The question was rendered moot when the Wuhan government expelled all Communists from the KMT on 15 July.[96] The CCP founded the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army of China, better known as the "Red Army", to battle Chiang. A battalion led by General Zhu De was ordered to take the city of Nanchang on 1 August 1927, in what became known as the Nanchang Uprising. They were initially successful, but were forced into retreat after five days, marching south to Shantou, and from there they were driven into the wilderness of Fujian.[96] Mao was appointed commander-in-chief of the Red Army and led four regiments against Changsha in the Autumn Harvest Uprising, in the hope of sparking peasant uprisings across Hunan. On the eve of the attack, Mao composed a poem—the earliest of his to survive—titled "Changsha". His plan was to attack the KMT-held city from three directions on 9 September, but the Fourth Regiment deserted to the KMT cause, attacking the Third Regiment. Mao's army made it to Changsha, but could not take it; by 15 September, he accepted defeat and with 1000 survivors marched east to the Jinggang Mountains of Jiangxi.[97][98]

Base in Jinggangshan: 1927–1928

 
Mao in 1927

革命不是請客吃飯,不是做文章,不是繪畫繡花,不能那樣雅緻,那樣從容不迫,文質彬彬,那樣溫良恭讓。革命是暴動,是一個階級推翻一個階級的暴烈的行動。

Revolution is not a dinner party, nor an essay, nor a painting, nor a piece of embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another.

— Mao, February 1927[99]

The CCP Central Committee, hiding in Shanghai, expelled Mao from their ranks and from the Hunan Provincial Committee, as punishment for his "military opportunism", for his focus on rural activity, and for being too lenient with "bad gentry". The more orthodox Communists especially regarded the peasants as backward and ridiculed Mao's idea of mobilizing them.[67] They nevertheless adopted three policies he had long championed: the immediate formation of Workers' councils, the confiscation of all land without exemption, and the rejection of the KMT. Mao's response was to ignore them.[100] He established a base in Jinggangshan City, an area of the Jinggang Mountains, where he united five villages as a self-governing state, and supported the confiscation of land from rich landlords, who were "re-educated" and sometimes executed. He ensured that no massacres took place in the region, and pursued a more lenient approach than that advocated by the Central Committee.[101] In addition to land redistribution, Mao promoted literacy and non-hierarchical organizational relationships in Jinggangshan, transforming the area's social and economic life and attracted many local supporters.[102]

Mao proclaimed that "Even the lame, the deaf and the blind could all come in useful for the revolutionary struggle", he boosted the army's numbers,[103] incorporating two groups of bandits into his army, building a force of around 1,800 troops.[104] He laid down rules for his soldiers: prompt obedience to orders, all confiscations were to be turned over to the government, and nothing was to be confiscated from poorer peasants. In doing so, he moulded his men into a disciplined, efficient fighting force.[103]

敵進我退,
敵駐我騷,
敵疲我打,
敵退我追。


When the enemy advances, we retreat.
When the enemy rests, we harass him.
When the enemy avoids a battle, we attack.
When the enemy retreats, we advance.

— Mao's advice in combating the Kuomintang, 1928[105][106]

 
Chinese Communist revolutionaries in the 1920s

In spring 1928, the Central Committee ordered Mao's troops to southern Hunan, hoping to spark peasant uprisings. Mao was skeptical, but complied. They reached Hunan, where they were attacked by the KMT and fled after heavy losses. Meanwhile, KMT troops had invaded Jinggangshan, leaving them without a base.[107] Wandering the countryside, Mao's forces came across a CCP regiment led by General Zhu De and Lin Biao; they united, and attempted to retake Jinggangshan. They were initially successful, but the KMT counter-attacked, and pushed the CCP back; over the next few weeks, they fought an entrenched guerrilla war in the mountains.[105][108] The Central Committee again ordered Mao to march to south Hunan, but he refused, and remained at his base. Contrastingly, Zhu complied, and led his armies away. Mao's troops fended the KMT off for 25 days while he left the camp at night to find reinforcements. He reunited with the decimated Zhu's army, and together they returned to Jinggangshan and retook the base. There they were joined by a defecting KMT regiment and Peng Dehuai's Fifth Red Army. In the mountainous area they were unable to grow enough crops to feed everyone, leading to food shortages throughout the winter.[109][110]

In 1928, Mao met and married He Zizhen, an 18-year-old revolutionary who would bear him six children.[111][112]

Jiangxi Soviet Republic of China: 1929–1934

 
Mao in Yan'an

In January 1929, Mao and Zhu evacuated the base with 2,000 men and a further 800 provided by Peng, and took their armies south, to the area around Tonggu and Xinfeng in Jiangxi.[113] The evacuation led to a drop in morale, and many troops became disobedient and began thieving; this worried Li Lisan and the Central Committee, who saw Mao's army as lumpenproletariat, that were unable to share in proletariat class consciousness.[114][115] In keeping with orthodox Marxist thought, Li believed that only the urban proletariat could lead a successful revolution, and saw little need for Mao's peasant guerrillas; he ordered Mao to disband his army into units to be sent out to spread the revolutionary message. Mao replied that while he concurred with Li's theoretical position, he would not disband his army nor abandon his base.[115][116] Both Li and Mao saw the Chinese revolution as the key to world revolution, believing that a CCP victory would spark the overthrow of global imperialism and capitalism. In this, they disagreed with the official line of the Soviet government and Comintern. Officials in Moscow desired greater control over the CCP and removed Li from power by calling him to Russia for an inquest into his errors.[117][118][119] They replaced him with Soviet-educated Chinese Communists, known as the "28 Bolsheviks", two of whom, Bo Gu and Zhang Wentian, took control of the Central Committee. Mao disagreed with the new leadership, believing they grasped little of the Chinese situation, and he soon emerged as their key rival.[118][120]

 
Military parade on the occasion of the founding of a Chinese Soviet Republic in 1931

In February 1930, Mao created the Southwest Jiangxi Provincial Soviet Government in the region under his control.[121] In November, he suffered emotional trauma after his second wife Yang Kaihui and sister were captured and beheaded by KMT general He Jian.[110][118][122] Facing internal problems, members of the Jiangxi Soviet accused him of being too moderate, and hence anti-revolutionary. In December, they tried to overthrow Mao, resulting in the Futian incident, during which Mao's loyalists tortured many and executed between 2000 and 3000 dissenters.[123][124][125] The CCP Central Committee moved to Jiangxi which it saw as a secure area. In November, it proclaimed Jiangxi to be the Soviet Republic of China, an independent Communist-governed state. Although he was proclaimed Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars, Mao's power was diminished, as his control of the Red Army was allocated to Zhou Enlai. Meanwhile, Mao recovered from tuberculosis.[126][127]

The KMT armies adopted a policy of encirclement and annihilation of the Red armies. Outnumbered, Mao responded with guerrilla tactics influenced by the works of ancient military strategists like Sun Tzu, but Zhou and the new leadership followed a policy of open confrontation and conventional warfare. In doing so, the Red Army successfully defeated the first and second encirclements.[128][129] Angered at his armies' failure, Chiang Kai-shek personally arrived to lead the operation. He too faced setbacks and retreated to deal with the further Japanese incursions into China.[126][130] As a result of the KMT's change of focus to the defence of China against Japanese expansionism, the Red Army was able to expand its area of control, eventually encompassing a population of 3 million.[129] Mao proceeded with his land reform program. In November 1931 he announced the start of a "land verification project" which was expanded in June 1933. He also orchestrated education programs and implemented measures to increase female political participation.[131] Chiang viewed the Communists as a greater threat than the Japanese and returned to Jiangxi, where he initiated the fifth encirclement campaign, which involved the construction of a concrete and barbed wire "wall of fire" around the state, which was accompanied by aerial bombardment, to which Zhou's tactics proved ineffective. Trapped inside, morale among the Red Army dropped as food and medicine became scarce. The leadership decided to evacuate.[132]

Long March: 1934–1935

 
An overview map of the Long March

On 14 October 1934, the Red Army broke through the KMT line on the Jiangxi Soviet's south-west corner at Xinfeng with 85,000 soldiers and 15,000 party cadres and embarked on the "Long March". In order to make the escape, many of the wounded and the ill, as well as women and children, were left behind, defended by a group of guerrilla fighters whom the KMT massacred.[133][134] The 100,000 who escaped headed to southern Hunan, first crossing the Xiang River after heavy fighting,[134][135] and then the Wu River, in Guizhou where they took Zunyi in January 1935. Temporarily resting in the city, they held a conference; here, Mao was elected to a position of leadership, becoming Chairman of the Politburo, and de facto leader of both Party and Red Army, in part because his candidacy was supported by Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin. Insisting that they operate as a guerrilla force, he laid out a destination: the Shenshi Soviet in Shaanxi, Northern China, from where the Communists could focus on fighting the Japanese. Mao believed that in focusing on the anti-imperialist struggle, the Communists would earn the trust of the Chinese people, who in turn would renounce the KMT.[136]

From Zunyi, Mao led his troops to Loushan Pass, where they faced armed opposition but successfully crossed the river. Chiang flew into the area to lead his armies against Mao, but the Communists outmanoeuvred him and crossed the Jinsha River.[137] Faced with the more difficult task of crossing the Tatu River, they managed it by fighting a battle over the Luding Bridge in May, taking Luding.[138] Marching through the mountain ranges around Ma'anshan,[139] in Moukung, Western Sichuan, they encountered the 50,000-strong CCP Fourth Front Army of Zhang Guotao, and together proceeded to Maoerhkai and then Gansu. Zhang and Mao disagreed over what to do; the latter wished to proceed to Shaanxi, while Zhang wanted to retreat east to Tibet or Sikkim, far from the KMT threat. It was agreed that they would go their separate ways, with Zhu De joining Zhang.[140] Mao's forces proceeded north, through hundreds of kilometres of Grasslands, an area of quagmire where they were attacked by Manchu tribesman and where many soldiers succumbed to famine and disease.[141][142] Finally reaching Shaanxi, they fought off both the KMT and an Islamic cavalry militia before crossing the Min Mountains and Mount Liupan and reaching the Shenshi Soviet; only 7,000–8000 had survived.[142][143] The Long March cemented Mao's status as the dominant figure in the party. In November 1935, he was named chairman of the Military Commission. From this point onward, Mao was the Communist Party's undisputed leader, even though he would not become party chairman until 1943.[144]

Alliance with the Kuomintang: 1935–1940

 
Zhang Guotao (left) and Mao Zedong in Yan'an, 1937

Mao's troops arrived at the Yan'an Soviet during October 1935 and settled in Pao An, until spring 1936. While there, they developed links with local communities, redistributed and farmed the land, offered medical treatment, and began literacy programs.[142][145][146] Mao now commanded 15,000 soldiers, boosted by the arrival of He Long's men from Hunan and the armies of Zhu De and Zhang Guotao returned from Tibet.[145] In February 1936, they established the North West Anti-Japanese Red Army University in Yan'an, through which they trained increasing numbers of new recruits.[147] In January 1937, they began the "anti-Japanese expedition", that sent groups of guerrilla fighters into Japanese-controlled territory to undertake sporadic attacks.[148][149] In May 1937, a Communist Conference was held in Yan'an to discuss the situation.[150] Western reporters also arrived in the "Border Region" (as the Soviet had been renamed); most notable were Edgar Snow, who used his experiences as a basis for Red Star Over China, and Agnes Smedley, whose accounts brought international attention to Mao's cause.[151]

 
In an effort to defeat the Japanese, Mao (left) agreed to collaborate with Chiang (right).
 
Mao in 1938, writing On Protracted War

On the Long March, Mao's wife He Zizen had been injured by a shrapnel wound to the head. She travelled to Moscow for medical treatment; Mao proceeded to divorce her and marry an actress, Jiang Qing.[152][153] He Zizhen was reportedly "dispatched to a mental asylum in Moscow to make room" for Qing.[154] Mao moved into a cave-house and spent much of his time reading, tending his garden and theorising.[155] He came to believe that the Red Army alone was unable to defeat the Japanese, and that a Communist-led "government of national defence" should be formed with the KMT and other "bourgeois nationalist" elements to achieve this goal.[156] Although despising Chiang Kai-shek as a "traitor to the nation",[157] on 5 May, he telegrammed the Military Council of the Nanking National Government proposing a military alliance, a course of action advocated by Stalin.[158] Although Chiang intended to ignore Mao's message and continue the civil war, he was arrested by one of his own generals, Zhang Xueliang, in Xi'an, leading to the Xi'an Incident; Zhang forced Chiang to discuss the issue with the Communists, resulting in the formation of a United Front with concessions on both sides on 25 December 1937.[159]

The Japanese had taken both Shanghai and Nanking (Nanjing)—resulting in the Nanking Massacre, an atrocity Mao never spoke of all his life—and was pushing the Kuomintang government inland to Chungking.[160] The Japanese's brutality led to increasing numbers of Chinese joining the fight, and the Red Army grew from 50,000 to 500,000.[161][162] In August 1938, the Red Army formed the New Fourth Army and the Eighth Route Army, which were nominally under the command of Chiang's National Revolutionary Army.[163] In August 1940, the Red Army initiated the Hundred Regiments Campaign, in which 400,000 troops attacked the Japanese simultaneously in five provinces. It was a military success that resulted in the death of 20,000 Japanese, the disruption of railways and the loss of a coal mine.[162][164] From his base in Yan'an, Mao authored several texts for his troops, including Philosophy of Revolution, which offered an introduction to the Marxist theory of knowledge; Protracted Warfare, which dealt with guerrilla and mobile military tactics; and New Democracy, which laid forward ideas for China's future.[165]

 
Mao with Kang Sheng in Yan'an, 1945

Resuming civil war: 1940–1949

In 1944, the U.S. sent a special diplomatic envoy, called the Dixie Mission, to the Chinese Communist Party. The American soldiers who were sent to the mission were favourably impressed. The party seemed less corrupt, more unified, and more vigorous in its resistance to Japan than the Kuomintang. The soldiers confirmed to their superiors that the party was both strong and popular over a broad area.[166] In the end of the mission, the contacts which the U.S. developed with the Chinese Communist Party led to very little.[166] After the end of World War II, the U.S. continued their diplomatic and military assistance to Chiang Kai-shek and his KMT government forces against the People's Liberation Army (PLA) led by Mao Zedong during the civil war and abandoned the idea of a coalition government which would include the CCP.[167] Likewise, the Soviet Union gave support to Mao by occupying north-eastern China, and secretly giving it to the Chinese communists in March 1946.[168]

 
PLA troops, supported by captured M5 Stuart light tanks, attacking the Nationalist lines in 1948

In 1948, under direct orders from Mao, the People's Liberation Army starved out the Kuomintang forces occupying the city of Changchun. At least 160,000 civilians are believed to have perished during the siege, which lasted from June until October. PLA lieutenant colonel Zhang Zhenglu, who documented the siege in his book White Snow, Red Blood, compared it to Hiroshima: "The casualties were about the same. Hiroshima took nine seconds; Changchun took five months."[169] On 21 January 1949, Kuomintang forces suffered great losses in decisive battles against Mao's forces.[170] In the early morning of 10 December 1949, PLA troops laid siege to Chongqing and Chengdu on mainland China, and Chiang Kai-shek fled from the mainland to Formosa (Taiwan).[170][171]

Leadership of China

 
Mao Zedong declares the founding of the modern People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949

Mao proclaimed the establishment of The People's Republic of China from the Gate of Heavenly Peace (Tian'anmen) on 1 October 1949, and later that week declared "The Chinese people have stood up" (中国人民从此站起来了).[172] Mao went to Moscow for long talks in the winter of 1949–50. Mao initiated the talks which focused on the political and economic revolution in China, foreign policy, railways, naval bases, and Soviet economic and technical aid. The resulting treaty reflected Stalin's dominance and his willingness to help Mao.[173][174]

 
Mao with his fourth wife, Jiang Qing, called "Madame Mao", 1946

Mao pushed the Party to organise campaigns to reform society and extend control. These campaigns were given urgency in October 1950, when Mao made the decision to send the People's Volunteer Army, a special unit of the People's Liberation Army, into the Korean War and fight as well as to reinforce the armed forces of North Korea, the Korean People's Army, which had been in full retreat. The United States placed a trade embargo on the People's Republic as a result of its involvement in the Korean War, lasting until Richard Nixon's improvements of relations. At least 180 thousand Chinese troops died during the war.[175]

Mao directed operations to the minutest detail. As the Chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), he was also the Supreme Commander in Chief of the PLA and the People's Republic and Chairman of the Party. Chinese troops in Korea were under the overall command of then newly installed Premier Zhou Enlai, with General Peng Dehuai as field commander and political commissar.[176]

During the land reform campaigns, large numbers of landlords and rich peasants were beaten to death at mass meetings organised by the Communist Party as land was taken from them and given to poorer peasants, which significantly reduced economic inequality.[177][178] The Campaign to Suppress Counter-revolutionaries[179] targeted bureaucratic burgeoisie, such as compradores, merchants and Kuomintang officials who were seen by the party as economic parasites or political enemies.[180] In 1976, the U.S. State department estimated as many as a million were killed in the land reform, and 800,000 killed in the counter-revolutionary campaign.[181]

Mao himself claimed that a total of 700,000 people were killed in attacks on "counter-revolutionaries" during the years 1950–1952.[182] Because there was a policy to select "at least one landlord, and usually several, in virtually every village for public execution",[183] the number of deaths range between 2 million[183][184][179] and 5 million.[185][186] In addition, at least 1.5 million people,[187] perhaps as many as 4 to 6 million,[188] were sent to "reform through labour" camps where many perished.[188] Mao played a personal role in organising the mass repressions and established a system of execution quotas,[189] which were often exceeded.[179] He defended these killings as necessary for the securing of power.[190]

 
Mao at Joseph Stalin's 70th birthday celebration in Moscow, December 1949

The Mao government is credited with eradicating both consumption and production of opium during the 1950s using unrestrained repression and social reform.[7][191] Ten million addicts were forced into compulsory treatment, dealers were executed, and opium-producing regions were planted with new crops. Remaining opium production shifted south of the Chinese border into the Golden Triangle region.[191]

Starting in 1951, Mao initiated two successive movements in an effort to rid urban areas of corruption by targeting wealthy capitalists and political opponents, known as the three-anti/five-anti campaigns. Whereas the three-anti campaign was a focused purge of government, industrial and party officials, the five-anti campaign set its sights slightly broader, targeting capitalist elements in general.[192] Workers denounced their bosses, spouses turned on their spouses, and children informed on their parents; the victims were often humiliated at struggle sessions, where a targeted person would be verbally and physically abused until they confessed to crimes. Mao insisted that minor offenders be criticised and reformed or sent to labour camps, "while the worst among them should be shot". These campaigns took several hundred thousand additional lives, the vast majority via suicide.[193]

 
Mao and Zhou Enlai meeting with Dalai Lama (right) and Panchen Lama (left) to celebrate Tibetan New Year, Beijing, 1955

In Shanghai, suicide by jumping from tall buildings became so commonplace that residents avoided walking on the pavement near skyscrapers for fear that suicides might land on them.[194] Some biographers have pointed out that driving those perceived as enemies to suicide was a common tactic during the Mao-era. In his biography of Mao, Philip Short notes that Mao gave explicit instructions in the Yan'an Rectification Movement that "no cadre is to be killed" but in practice allowed security chief Kang Sheng to drive opponents to suicide and that "this pattern was repeated throughout his leadership of the People's Republic".[195]

 
Photo of Mao Zedong sitting, published in "Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung", ca. 1955

Following the consolidation of power, Mao launched the First Five-Year Plan (1953–1958), which emphasised rapid industrial development. Within industry, iron and steel, electric power, coal, heavy engineering, building materials, and basic chemicals were prioritised with the aim of constructing large and highly capital-intensive plants. Many of these plants were built with Soviet assistance and heavy industry grew rapidly.[196] Agriculture, industry and trade was organised on a collective basis (socialist cooperatives).[197] This period marked the beginning of China's rapid industrialisation and it resulted in an enormous success.[198]

Programs pursued during this time include the Hundred Flowers Campaign, in which Mao indicated his supposed willingness to consider different opinions about how China should be governed. Given the freedom to express themselves, liberal and intellectual Chinese began opposing the Communist Party and questioning its leadership. This was initially tolerated and encouraged. After a few months, Mao's government reversed its policy and persecuted those who had criticised the party, totalling perhaps 500,000,[199] as well as those who were merely alleged to have been critical, in what is called the Anti-Rightist Movement.

Li Zhisui, Mao's physician, suggested that Mao had initially seen the policy as a way of weakening opposition to him within the party and that he was surprised by the extent of criticism and the fact that it came to be directed at his own leadership.[200]

Great Leap Forward

 
Mao with Nikita Khrushchev, Ho Chi Minh, and Soong Ching-ling during a state dinner in Beijing, 1959

In January 1958, Mao launched the second Five-Year Plan, known as the Great Leap Forward, a plan intended to turn China from an agrarian nation to an industrialised one[201] and as an alternative model for economic growth to the Soviet model focusing on heavy industry that was advocated by others in the party. Under this economic program, the relatively small agricultural collectives that had been formed to date were rapidly merged into far larger people's communes, and many of the peasants were ordered to work on massive infrastructure projects and on the production of iron and steel. Some private food production was banned, and livestock and farm implements were brought under collective ownership.[202][page needed]

Under the Great Leap Forward, Mao and other party leaders ordered the implementation of a variety of unproven and unscientific new agricultural techniques by the new communes. The combined effect of the diversion of labour to steel production and infrastructure projects, and cyclical natural disasters led to an approximately 15% drop in grain production in 1959 followed by a further 10% decline in 1960 and no recovery in 1961.[203]

In an effort to win favour with their superiors and avoid being purged, each layer in the party exaggerated the amount of grain produced under them. Based upon the falsely reported success, party cadres were ordered to requisition a disproportionately high amount of that fictitious harvest for state use, primarily for use in the cities and urban areas but also for export. The result, compounded in some areas by drought and in others by floods, was that farmers were left with little food for themselves and many millions starved to death in the Great Chinese Famine. The people of urban areas in China were given food stamps each month, but the people of rural areas were expected to grow their own crops and give some of the crops back to the government. The death count in rural parts of China surpassed the deaths in the urban centers. Additionally, the Chinese government continued to export food that could have been allocated to the country's starving citizens.[204] The famine was a direct cause of the death of some 30 million Chinese peasants between 1959 and 1962.[205] Furthermore, many children who became malnourished during years of hardship died after the Great Leap Forward came to an end in 1962.[203]

In late autumn 1958, Mao condemned the practices that were being used during Great Leap Forward such as forcing peasants to do exhausting labour without enough food or rest which resulted in epidemics and starvation. He also acknowledged that anti-rightist campaigns were a major cause of "production at the expense of livelihood." He refused to abandon the Great Leap Forward to solve these difficulties, but he did demand that they be confronted. After the July 1959 clash at Lushan Conference with Peng Dehuai, Mao launched a new anti-rightist campaign along with the radical policies that he previously abandoned. It wasn't until the spring of 1960, that Mao would again express concern about abnormal deaths and other abuses, but he did not move to stop them. Bernstein concludes that the Chairman "wilfully ignored the lessons of the first radical phase for the sake of achieving extreme ideological and developmental goals".[206]

Jasper Becker notes that Mao was dismissive of reports he received of food shortages in the countryside and refused to change course, believing that peasants were lying and that rightists and kulaks were hoarding grain. He refused to open state granaries,[207] and instead launched a series of "anti-grain concealment" drives that resulted in numerous purges and suicides.[208] Other violent campaigns followed in which party leaders went from village to village in search of hidden food reserves, and not only grain, as Mao issued quotas for pigs, chickens, ducks and eggs. Many peasants accused of hiding food were tortured and beaten to death.[209]

The extent of Mao's knowledge of the severity of the situation has been disputed. Mao's personal physician, Li Zhisui, said that Mao may have been unaware of the extent of the famine, partly due to a reluctance of local officials to criticise his policies, and the willingness of his staff to exaggerate or outright fake reports.[210] Li writes that upon learning of the extent of the starvation, Mao vowed to stop eating meat, an action followed by his staff.[211]

Mao stepped down as President of China on 27 April 1959; however, he retained other top positions such as Chairman of the Communist Party and of the Central Military Commission.[212] The Presidency was transferred to Liu Shaoqi.[212] He was eventually forced to abandon the policy in 1962, and he lost political power to Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping.[213]

The Great Leap Forward was a tragedy for the vast majority of the Chinese. Although the steel quotas were officially reached, almost all of the supposed steel made in the countryside was iron, as it had been made from assorted scrap metal in home-made furnaces with no reliable source of fuel such as coal. This meant that proper smelting conditions could not be achieved. According to Zhang Rongmei, a geometry teacher in rural Shanghai during the Great Leap Forward: "We took all the furniture, pots, and pans we had in our house, and all our neighbours did likewise. We put everything in a big fire and melted down all the metal".[citation needed] The worst of the famine was steered towards enemies of the state.[214] Jasper Becker explains: "The most vulnerable section of China's population, around five percent, were those whom Mao called 'enemies of the people'. Anyone who had in previous campaigns of repression been labeled a 'black element' was given the lowest priority in the allocation of food. Landlords, rich peasants, former members of the nationalist regime, religious leaders, rightists, counter-revolutionaries and the families of such individuals died in the greatest numbers."[215]

According to official Chinese statistics for Second Five-Year Plan (1958–1962):"industrial output value value had doubled; the gross value of agricultural products increased by 35 percent; steel production in 1962 was between 10.6 million tons or 12 million tons; investment in capital construction rose to 40 percent from 35 percent in the First Five-Year Plan period; the investment in capital construction was doubled; and the average income of workers and farmers increased by up to 30 percent."[216]

At a large Communist Party conference in Beijing in January 1962, dubbed the "Seven Thousand Cadres Conference", State Chairman Liu Shaoqi denounced the Great Leap Forward, attributing the project to widespread famine in China.[217] The overwhelming majority of delegates expressed agreement, but Defense Minister Lin Biao staunchly defended Mao.[217] A brief period of liberalisation followed while Mao and Lin plotted a comeback.[217] Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping rescued the economy by disbanding the people's communes, introducing elements of private control of peasant smallholdings and importing grain from Canada and Australia to mitigate the worst effects of famine.[218]

Consequences

 
Mao with Henry Kissinger and Zhou Enlai, Beijing, 1972

At the Lushan Conference in July/August 1959, several ministers expressed concern that the Great Leap Forward had not proved as successful as planned. The most direct of these was Minister of Defence and Korean War veteran General Peng Dehuai. Following Peng's criticism of the Great Leap Forward, Mao orchestrated a purge of Peng and his supporters, stifling criticism of the Great Leap policies. Senior officials who reported the truth of the famine to Mao were branded as "right opportunists."[219] A campaign against right-wing opportunism was launched and resulted in party members and ordinary peasants being sent to prison labour camps where many would subsequently die in the famine. Years later the CCP would conclude that as many as six million people were wrongly punished in the campaign.[220]

The number of deaths by starvation during the Great Leap Forward is deeply controversial. Until the mid-1980s, when official census figures were finally published by the Chinese Government, little was known about the scale of the disaster in the Chinese countryside, as the handful of Western observers allowed access during this time had been restricted to model villages where they were deceived into believing that the Great Leap Forward had been a great success. There was also an assumption that the flow of individual reports of starvation that had been reaching the West, primarily through Hong Kong and Taiwan, must have been localised or exaggerated as China was continuing to claim record harvests and was a net exporter of grain through the period. Because Mao wanted to pay back early to the Soviets debts totalling 1.973 billion yuan from 1960 to 1962,[221] exports increased by 50%, and fellow Communist regimes in North Korea, North Vietnam and Albania were provided grain free of charge.[207]

Censuses were carried out in China in 1953, 1964 and 1982. The first attempt to analyse this data to estimate the number of famine deaths was carried out by American demographer Dr. Judith Banister and published in 1984. Given the lengthy gaps between the censuses and doubts over the reliability of the data, an accurate figure is difficult to ascertain. Nevertheless, Banister concluded that the official data implied that around 15 million excess deaths incurred in China during 1958–61, and that based on her modelling of Chinese demographics during the period and taking account of assumed under-reporting during the famine years, the figure was around 30 million. Hu Yaobang, a high-ranking official of the CCP, states that 20 million people died according to official government statistics.[222] Yang Jisheng, a former Xinhua News Agency reporter who had privileged access and connections available to no other scholars, estimates a death toll of 36 million.[221] Frank Dikötter estimates that there were at least 45 million premature deaths attributable to the Great Leap Forward from 1958 to 1962.[223] Various other sources have put the figure at between 20 and 46 million.[224][225][226]

Split from Soviet Union

 
U.S. President Gerald Ford watches as Henry Kissinger shakes hands with Mao during their visit to China, 2 December 1975

On the international front, the period was dominated by the further isolation of China. The Sino-Soviet split resulted in Nikita Khrushchev's withdrawal of all Soviet technical experts and aid from the country. The split concerned the leadership of world communism. The USSR had a network of Communist parties it supported; China now created its own rival network to battle it out for local control of the left in numerous countries.[227] Lorenz M. Lüthi writes: "The Sino-Soviet split was one of the key events of the Cold War, equal in importance to the construction of the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Second Vietnam War, and Sino-American rapprochement. The split helped to determine the framework of the Second Cold War in general, and influenced the course of the Second Vietnam War in particular."[228]

The split resulted from Khrushchev's more moderate Soviet leadership after the death of Stalin in March 1953. Only Albania openly sided with China, thereby forming an alliance between the two countries which would last until after Mao's death in 1976. Warned that the Soviets had nuclear weapons, Mao minimised the threat. Becker says that "Mao believed that the bomb was a 'paper tiger', declaring to Khrushchev that it would not matter if China lost 300 million people in a nuclear war: the other half of the population would survive to ensure victory".[229] Struggle against Soviet revisionism and U.S. imperialism was an important aspect of Mao's attempt to direct the revolution in the right direction.[230]

Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution

 
A public appearance of Chairman Mao and Lin Biao among Red Guards, in Beijing, during the Cultural Revolution (November 1966)

During the early 1960s, Mao became concerned with the nature of post-1959 China. He saw that the revolution and Great Leap Forward had replaced the old ruling elite with a new one. He was concerned that those in power were becoming estranged from the people they were to serve. Mao believed that a revolution of culture would unseat and unsettle the "ruling class" and keep China in a state of "continuous revolution" that, theoretically, would serve the interests of the majority, rather than a tiny and privileged elite.[231] State Chairman Liu Shaoqi and General Secretary Deng Xiaoping favoured the idea that Mao be removed from actual power as China's head of state and government but maintain his ceremonial and symbolic role as Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, with the party upholding all of his positive contributions to the revolution. They attempted to marginalise Mao by taking control of economic policy and asserting themselves politically as well. Many claim that Mao responded to Liu and Deng's movements by launching the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in 1966. Some scholars, such as Mobo Gao, claim the case for this is overstated.[232] Others, such as Frank Dikötter, hold that Mao launched the Cultural Revolution to wreak revenge on those who had dared to challenge him over the Great Leap Forward.[233]

The Cultural Revolution led to the destruction of much of China's traditional cultural heritage and the imprisonment of a huge number of Chinese citizens, as well as the creation of general economic and social chaos in the country. Millions of lives were ruined during this period, as the Cultural Revolution pierced into every part of Chinese life, depicted by such Chinese films as To Live, The Blue Kite and Farewell My Concubine. It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps millions, perished in the violence of the Cultural Revolution.[226] This included prominent figures such as Liu Shaoqi.[234][235][236]

When Mao was informed of such losses, particularly that people had been driven to suicide, he is alleged to have commented: "People who try to commit suicide—don't attempt to save them! ... China is such a populous nation, it is not as if we cannot do without a few people."[237] The authorities allowed the Red Guards to abuse and kill opponents of the regime. Said Xie Fuzhi, national police chief: "Don't say it is wrong of them to beat up bad persons: if in anger they beat someone to death, then so be it."[238] In August and September 1966, there were a reported 1,772 people murdered by the Red Guards in Beijing alone.[239]

It was during this period that Mao chose Lin Biao, who seemed to echo all of Mao's ideas, to become his successor. Lin was later officially named as Mao's successor. By 1971, a divide between the two men had become apparent. Official history in China states that Lin was planning a military coup or an assassination attempt on Mao. Lin Biao died on 13 September 1971, in a plane crash over the air space of Mongolia, presumably as he fled China, probably anticipating his arrest. The CCP declared that Lin was planning to depose Mao and posthumously expelled Lin from the party. At this time, Mao lost trust in many of the top CCP figures. The highest-ranking Soviet Bloc intelligence defector, Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed he had a conversation with Nicolae Ceaușescu, who told him about a plot to kill Mao Zedong with the help of Lin Biao organised by the KGB.[240]

Despite being considered a feminist figure by some and a supporter of women's rights, documents released by the US Department of State in 2008 show that Mao declared women to be a "nonsense" in 1973, in conversation with Henry Kissinger, joking that "China is a very poor country. We don't have much. What we have in excess is women. ... Let them go to your place. They will create disasters. That way you can lessen our burdens."[241] When Mao offered 10 million women, Kissinger replied by saying that Mao was "improving his offer".[242] Mao and Kissinger then agreed that their comments on women be removed from public records, prompted by a Chinese official who feared that Mao's comments might incur public anger if released.[243]

In 1969, Mao declared the Cultural Revolution to be over, although various historians in and outside of China mark the end of the Cultural Revolution—as a whole or in part—in 1976, following Mao's death and the arrest of the Gang of Four.[244] The Central Committee in 1981 officially declared the Cultural Revolution a "severe setback" for the PRC.[245] It is often looked at in all scholarly circles as a greatly disruptive period for China.[246] Despite the pro-poor rhetoric of Mao's regime, his economic policies led to substantial poverty.[247] Some scholars, such as Lee Feigon and Mobo Gao, claim there were many great advances, and in some sectors the Chinese economy continued to outperform the West.[248]

Estimates of the death toll during the Cultural Revolution, including civilians and Red Guards, vary greatly. An estimate of around 400,000 deaths is a widely accepted minimum figure, according to Maurice Meisner.[249] MacFarquhar and Schoenhals assert that in rural China alone some 36 million people were persecuted, of whom between 750,000 and 1.5 million were killed, with roughly the same number permanently injured.[250]

Historian Daniel Leese writes that in the 1950s Mao's personality was hardening: "The impression of Mao's personality that emerges from the literature is disturbing. It reveals a certain temporal development from a down-to-earth leader, who was amicable when uncontested and occasionally reflected on the limits of his power, to an increasingly ruthless and self-indulgent dictator. Mao's preparedness to accept criticism decreased continuously."[251]

State visits

Country Date Host
  Soviet Union 16 December 1949 Joseph Stalin
  Soviet Union 2–19 November 1957 Nikita Khrushchev

During his leadership, Mao travelled outside China on only two occasions, both state visits to the Soviet Union. His first visit abroad was to celebrate the 70th birthday of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, which was also attended by East German Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Walter Ulbricht and Mongolian communist General Secretary Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal.[252] The second visit to Moscow was a two-week state visit of which the highlights included Mao's attendance at the 40th anniversary (Ruby Jubilee) celebrations of the October Revolution (he attended the annual military parade of the Moscow Garrison on Red Square as well as a banquet in the Moscow Kremlin) and the International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties, where he met with other communist leaders such as North Korea's Kim Il-Sung[253] and Albania's Enver Hoxha. When Mao stepped down as head of state on 27 April 1959, further diplomatic state visits and travels abroad were undertaken by President Liu Shaoqi, Premier Zhou Enlai and Deputy Premier Deng Xiaoping rather than Mao personally.[citation needed]

Death and aftermath

Mao's health declined in his last years, probably aggravated by his chain-smoking.[254] It became a state secret that he suffered from multiple lung and heart ailments during his later years.[255] There are unconfirmed reports that he possibly had Parkinson's disease[256] in addition to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.[257] His final public appearance—and the last known photograph of him alive—had been on 27 May 1976, when he met the visiting Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.[258] He suffered two major heart attacks, one in March and another in July, then a third on 5 September, rendering him an invalid. He died nearly four days later, at 00:10 on 9 September 1976, at the age of 82. The Communist Party delayed the announcement of his death until 16:00, when a national radio broadcast announced the news and appealed for party unity.[259]

Mao's embalmed body, draped in the CCP flag, lay in state at the Great Hall of the People for one week.[260] One million Chinese filed past to pay their final respects, many crying openly or displaying sadness, while foreigners watched on television.[261][262] Mao's official portrait hung on the wall with a banner reading: "Carry on the cause left by Chairman Mao and carry on the cause of proletarian revolution to the end".[260] On 17 September the body was taken in a minibus to the 305 Hospital, where his internal organs were preserved in formaldehyde.[260]

On 18 September, guns, sirens, whistles and horns across China were simultaneously blown and a mandatory three-minute silence was observed.[263] Tiananmen Square was packed with millions of people and a military band played "The Internationale". Hua Guofeng concluded the service with a 20-minute-long eulogy atop Tiananmen Gate.[264] Despite Mao's request to be cremated, his body was later permanently put on display in the Mausoleum of Mao Zedong, in order for the Chinese nation to pay its respects.[265]

Legacy

 
A large portrait of Mao at Tiananmen

The simple facts of Mao's career seem incredible: in a vast land of 400 million people, at age 28, with a dozen others, to found a party and in the next fifty years to win power, organize, and remold the people and reshape the land—history records no greater achievement. Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, all the kings of Europe, Napoleon, Bismarck, Lenin—no predecessor can equal Mao Tse-tung's scope of accomplishment, for no other country was ever so ancient and so big as China.

John King Fairbank, American historian[266]

Eternal rebel, refusing to be bound by the laws of God or man, nature or Marxism, he led his people for three decades in pursuit of a vision initially noble, which turned increasingly into a mirage, and then into a nightmare. Was he a Faust or Prometheus, attempting the impossible for the sake of humanity, or a despot of unbridled ambition, drunk with his own power and his own cleverness?

Stuart R. Schram, The Thought of Mao Tse-Tung (1989)[267]

Mao remains a controversial figure and there is little agreement over his legacy both in China and abroad. He is regarded as one of the most important and influential individuals in the twentieth century.[268][269] He is also known as a political intellect, theorist, military strategist, poet, and visionary.[270] He was credited and praised for driving imperialism out of China,[271] having unified China and for ending the previous decades of civil war. He is also credited with having improved the status of women in China and for improving literacy and education. In December 2013, a poll from the state-run Global Times indicated that roughly 85% of the 1,045 respondents surveyed felt that Mao's achievements outweighed his mistakes.[272]

His policies resulted in the deaths of tens of millions of people in China during his 27-year reign, more than any other 20th-century leader; estimates of the number of people who died under his regime range from 40 million to as many as 80 million,[273][274] done through starvation, persecution, prison labour in laogai, and mass executions.[195][273] Mao rarely gave direct instruction for peoples' physical elimination.[b][195] According to biographer Philip Short, the overwhelming majority of those killed by Mao's policies were unintended casualties of famine, while the other three or four million, in Mao's view, were the necessary victim's in the struggle to transform China.[275] Many sources describe Mao's China as an autocratic and totalitarian regime responsible for mass repression, as well as the destruction of religious and cultural artifacts and sites (particularly during the Cultural Revolution).[276]

China's population grew from around 550 million to over 900 million under his rule while the government did not strictly enforce its family planning policy, leading his successors such as Deng Xiaoping to take a strict one-child policy to cope with human overpopulation.[277][278] Mao's revolutionary tactics continue to be used by insurgents, and his political ideology continues to be embraced by many Communist organisations around the world.[279]

Had Mao died in 1956, his achievements would have been immortal. Had he died in 1966, he would still have been a great man but flawed. But he died in 1976. Alas, what can one say?

Chen Yun, a leading Chinese Communist Party official under Mao and Deng Xiaoping[280]

 
Mao Zedong Square at Saoshan

In mainland China, Mao is revered by many members and supporters of the Chinese Communist Party and respected by a great number of the general population. Mobo Gao, in his 2008 book The Battle for China's Past: Mao and the Cultural Revolution, credits him for raising the average life expectancy from 35 in 1949 to 63 by 1975, bringing "unity and stability to a country that had been plagued by civil wars and foreign invasions", and laying the foundation for China to "become the equal of the great global powers".[281] Gao also lauds him for carrying out massive land reform, promoting the status of women, improving popular literacy, and positively "transform(ing) Chinese society beyond recognition."[281] Mao is credited for boosting literacy (only 20% of the population could read in 1949, compared to 65.5% thirty years later), doubling life expectancy, a near doubling of the population, and developing China's industry and infrastructure, paving the way for its position as a world power.[282][9][10]

Mao also has Chinese critics. Opposition to him can lead to censorship or professional repercussions in mainland China,[283] and is often done in private settings such as the Internet.[284] When a video of Bi Fujian insulting him at a private dinner in 2015 went viral, Bi garnered the support of Weibo users, with 80% of them saying in a poll that Bi should not apologize amidst backlash from state affiliates.[285][286] In the West, Mao has a bad reputation. He is known for the deaths during the Great Leap Forward and for persecutions during the Cultural Revolution. Chinese citizens are aware of Mao's mistakes, but nonetheless, many see Mao as a national hero. He is seen as someone who successfully liberated the country from Japanese occupation and from Western imperialist exploitation dating back to the Opium Wars.[287] A 2019 study showed that a sizeable amount of the Chinese population, when asked about the Maoist era, described a world of purity and simplicity, where life had clear meaning, people trusted and helped one another and inequality was minimal.[287] According to the study, older people felt some degree of nostalgia for the past and expressed support for Mao even while acknowledging negative experiences.[287]

 

Though the Chinese Communist Party, which Mao led to power, has rejected in practice the economic fundamentals of much of Mao's ideology, it retains for itself many of the powers established under Mao's reign: it controls the Chinese army, police, courts and media and does not permit multi-party elections at the national or local level, except in Hong Kong and Macau. Thus it is difficult to gauge the true extent of support for the Chinese Communist Party and Mao's legacy within mainland China. For its part, the Chinese government continues to officially regard Mao as a national hero. On 25 December 2008, China opened the Mao Zedong Square to visitors in his home town of central Hunan Province to mark the 115th anniversary of his birth.[288]

A talented Chinese politician, an historian, a poet and philosopher, an all-powerful dictator and energetic organizer, a skillful diplomat and utopian socialist, the head of the most populous state, resting on his laurels, but at the same time an indefatigable revolutionary who sincerely attempted to refashion the way of life and consciousness of millions of people, a hero of national revolution and a bloody social reformer—this is how Mao goes down in history. The scale of his life was too grand to be reduced to a single meaning.

— Alexander V. Pantsov and Steven I. Levine, Mao: The Real Story (2012)[289]

There continue to be disagreements on Mao's legacy. Former party official Su Shachi has opined that "he was a great historical criminal, but he was also a great force for good."[290] In a similar vein, journalist Liu Binyan has described Mao as "both monster and a genius."[290] Some historians argue that Mao was "one of the great tyrants of the twentieth century", and a dictator comparable to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin,[291][292] with a death toll surpassing both.[195][273] In The Black Book of Communism, Jean Louis Margolin writes that "Mao Zedong was so powerful that he was often known as the Red Emperor. ... the violence he erected into a whole system far exceeds any national tradition of violence that we might find in China."[293] Mao was frequently likened to the First Emperor of a unified China, Qin Shi Huang, and personally enjoyed the comparison.[294] During a speech to party cadre in 1958, Mao said he had far outdone Qin Shi Huang in his policy against intellectuals: "What did he amount to? He only buried alive 460 scholars, while we buried 46,000. In our suppression of the counter-revolutionaries, did we not kill some counter-revolutionary intellectuals? I once debated with the democratic people: You accuse us of acting like Ch'in-shih-huang, but you are wrong; we surpass him 100 times."[295][296] As a result of such tactics, critics have compared it to Nazi Germany.[292][c]

External video
  Booknotes interview with Philip Short on Mao: A Life, April 2, 2000, C-SPAN

Others, such as Philip Short in Mao: A Life, reject comparisons by saying that whereas the deaths caused by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia were largely systematic and deliberate, the overwhelming majority of the deaths under Mao were unintended consequences of famine.[275] Short stated that landlord class were not exterminated as a people due to Mao's belief in redemption through thought reform,[275] and compared Mao with 19th-century Chinese reformers who challenged China's traditional beliefs in the era of China's clashes with Western colonial powers. Short writes that "Mao's tragedy and his grandeur were that he remained to the end in thrall to his own revolutionary dreams. ... He freed China from the straitjacket of its Confucian past, but the bright Red future he promised turned out to be a sterile purgatory.[275] In their 2013 biography, Mao: The Real Story, Alexander V. Pantsov and Steven I. Levine assert that Mao was both "a successful creator and ultimately an evil destroyer" but also argue that he was a complicated figure who should not be lionised as a saint or reduced to a demon, as he "indeed tried his best to bring about prosperity and gain international respect for his country."[297]

 
In 1978, the classroom of a kindergarten in Shanghai putting up portraits of then- Chairman Hua Guofeng and former Chairman Mao Zedong

Mao's way of thinking and governing was terrifying. He put no value on human life. The deaths of others meant nothing to him.

Li Rui, Mao's personal secretary and Communist Party comrade[298]

Mao's English interpreter Sidney Rittenberg wrote in his memoir The Man Who Stayed Behind that whilst Mao "was a great leader in history", he was also "a great criminal because, not that he wanted to, not that he intended to, but in fact, his wild fantasies led to the deaths of tens of millions of people."[299] Dikötter argues that CCP leaders "glorified violence and were inured to massive loss of life. And all of them shared an ideology in which the end justified the means. In 1962, having lost millions of people in his province, Li Jingquan compared the Great Leap Forward to the Long March in which only one in ten had made it to the end: 'We are not weak, we are stronger, we have kept the backbone.'"[300] Regarding the large-scale irrigation projects, Dikötter stresses that, in spite of Mao being in a good position to see the human cost, they continued unabated for several years, and ultimately claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of exhausted villagers. He also writes: "In a chilling precursor of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, villagers in Qingshui and Gansu called these projects the 'killing fields.'"[301]

 
Mao greets U.S. President Richard Nixon during his visit to China in 1972.

The United States placed a trade embargo on the People's Republic as a result of its involvement in the Korean War, lasting until Richard Nixon decided that developing relations with the PRC would be useful in dealing with the Soviet Union.[302] The television series Biography stated: "[Mao] turned China from a feudal backwater into one of the most powerful countries in the World. ... The Chinese system he overthrew was backward and corrupt; few would argue the fact that he dragged China into the 20th century. But at a cost in human lives that is staggering."[290] In the book China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know published in 2010, Professor Jeffrey Wasserstrom of the University of California, Irvine compares China's relationship to Mao to Americans' remembrance of Andrew Jackson; both countries regard the leaders in a positive light, despite their respective roles in devastating policies. Jackson forcibly moved Native Americans through the Trail of Tears, resulting in thousands of deaths, while Mao was at the helm during the violent years of the Cultural Revolution and the Great Leap Forward.[303][d]

 
Statue of Mao in Lijiang

I should remind you that Chairman Mao dedicated most of his life to China, that he saved the party and the revolution in their most critical moments, that, in short, his contribution was so great that, without him, the Chinese people would have had a much harder time finding the right path out of the darkness. We also shouldn't forget that it was Chairman Mao who combined the teachings of Marx and Lenin with the realities of Chinese history—that it was he who applied those principles, creatively, not only to politics but to philosophy, art, literature, and military strategy.

Deng Xiaoping[304]

The ideology of Maoism has influenced many Communists, mainly in the Third World, including revolutionary movements such as Cambodia's Khmer Rouge,[305] Peru's Shining Path, and the Nepalese revolutionary movement. Under the influence of Mao's agrarian socialism and Cultural Revolution, Cambodia's Pol Pot conceived of his disastrous Year Zero policies which purged the nation of its teachers, artists and intellectuals and emptied its cities, resulting in the Cambodian genocide.[306] The Revolutionary Communist Party, USA, also claims Marxism–Leninism-Maoism as its ideology, as do other Communist Parties around the world which are part of the Revolutionary Internationalist Movement. China itself has moved sharply away from Maoism since Mao's death, and most people outside of China who describe themselves as Maoist regard the Deng Xiaoping reforms to be a betrayal of Maoism, in line with Mao's view of "Capitalist roaders" within the Communist Party.[307] As the Chinese government instituted free market economic reforms starting in the late 1970s and as later Chinese leaders took power, less recognition was given to the status of Mao. This accompanied a decline in state recognition of Mao in later years in contrast to previous years when the state organised numerous events and seminars commemorating Mao's 100th birthday. Nevertheless, the Chinese government has never officially repudiated the tactics of Mao. Deng Xiaoping, who was opposed to the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution, stated that "when we write about his mistakes we should not exaggerate, for otherwise we shall be discrediting Chairman Mao Zedong and this would mean discrediting our party and state."[308]

Mao's military writings continue to have a large amount of influence both among those who seek to create an insurgency and those who seek to crush one, especially in manners of guerrilla warfare, at which Mao is popularly regarded as a genius.[309] The Nepali Maoists were highly influenced by Mao's views on protracted war, new democracy, support of masses, permanency of revolution and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution.[310] Mao's major contribution to the military science is his theory of People's War, with not only guerrilla warfare but more importantly, Mobile Warfare methodologies. Mao had successfully applied Mobile Warfare in the Korean War, and was able to encircle, push back and then halt the UN forces in Korea, despite the clear superiority of UN firepower.[citation needed] In 1957, Mao also gave the impression that he might even welcome a nuclear war.[311][e]

Mao's poems and writings are frequently cited by both Chinese and non-Chinese. The official Chinese translation of President Barack Obama's inauguration speech used a famous line from one of Mao's poems.[315] In the mid-1990s, Mao's picture began to appear on all new renminbi currency from the People's Republic of China. This was officially instituted as an anti-counterfeiting measure as Mao's face is widely recognised in contrast to the generic figures that appear in older currency. On 13 March 2006, a story in the People's Daily reported that a proposal had been made to print the portraits of Sun Yat-sen and Deng Xiaoping.[316]

Public image

Mao gave contradicting statements on the subject of personality cults. In 1955, as a response to the Khrushchev Report that criticised Joseph Stalin, Mao stated that personality cults are "poisonous ideological survivals of the old society", and reaffirmed China's commitment to collective leadership.[317] At the 1958 party congress in Chengdu, Mao expressed support for the personality cults of people whom he labelled as genuinely worthy figures, not those that expressed "blind worship".[318]

In 1962, Mao proposed the Socialist Education Movement (SEM) in an attempt to educate the peasants to resist the "temptations" of feudalism and the sprouts of capitalism that he saw re-emerging in the countryside from Liu's economic reforms.[319] Large quantities of politicised art were produced and circulated—with Mao at the centre. Numerous posters, badges, and musical compositions referenced Mao in the phrase "Chairman Mao is the red sun in our hearts" (毛主席是我們心中的紅太陽; Máo Zhǔxí Shì Wǒmen Xīnzhōng De Hóng Tàiyáng)[320] and a "Savior of the people" (人民的大救星; Rénmín De Dà Jiùxīng).[320]

In October 1966, Mao's Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, known as the Little Red Book, was published. Party members were encouraged to carry a copy with them, and possession was almost mandatory as a criterion for membership. According to Mao: The Unknown Story by Jun Yang, the mass publication and sale of this text contributed to making Mao the only millionaire created in 1950s China (332). Over the years, Mao's image became displayed almost everywhere, present in homes, offices and shops. His quotations were typographically emphasised by putting them in boldface or red type in even the most obscure writings. Music from the period emphasised Mao's stature, as did children's rhymes. The phrase "Long Live Chairman Mao for ten thousand years" was commonly heard during the era.[321]

 
Visitors wait in line to enter the Mao Zedong Mausoleum.

Mao also has a presence in China and around the world in popular culture, where his face adorns everything from T-shirts to coffee cups. Mao's granddaughter, Kong Dongmei, defended the phenomenon, stating that "it shows his influence, that he exists in people's consciousness and has influenced several generations of Chinese people's way of life. Just like Che Guevara's image, his has become a symbol of revolutionary culture."[299] Since 1950, over 40 million people have visited Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan.[322]

A 2016 survey by YouGov survey found that 42% of American millennials have never heard of Mao.[323][324] According to the CIS poll, in 2019 only 21% of Australian millennials were familiar with Mao Zedong.[325] In 2020s China, members of Generation Z are embracing Mao's revolutionary ideas, including violence against the capitalist class, amid rising social inequality, long working hours, and decreasing economic opportunities.[326]

Genealogy

Ancestors

Mao's ancestors were:

  • Máo Yíchāng (毛貽昌, born Xiangtan 1870, died Shaoshan 1920), father, courtesy name Máo Shùnshēng (毛順生) or also known as Mao Jen-sheng
  • Wén Qīmèi (文七妹, born Xiangxiang 1867, died 1919), mother. She was illiterate and a devout Buddhist. She was a descendant of Wen Tianxiang.
  • Máo Ēnpǔ (毛恩普, born 1846, died 1904), paternal grandfather
  • Liú (劉/刘, given name not recorded, born 1847, died 1884),[327] paternal grandmother
  • Máo Zǔrén (毛祖人), paternal great-grandfather

Wives

 
Mao with Jiang Qing and daughter Li Na in the 1940s

Mao had four wives who gave birth to a total of 10 children, among them:

  1. Luo Yixiu (1889–1910) of Shaoshan: married 1907 to 1910
  2. Yang Kaihui (1901–1930) of Changsha: married 1921 to 1927, executed by the KMT in 1930; mother to Mao Anying, Mao Anqing, and Mao Anlong
  3. He Zizhen (1910–1984) of Jiangxi: married May 1928 to 1937; mother to 6 children
  4. Jiang Qing (1914–1991), married 1939 until Mao's death; mother to Li Na

Siblings

Mao had several siblings:

  • Mao Zemin (1895–1943), younger brother, executed by a warlord
  • Mao Zetan (1905–1935), younger brother, executed by the KMT
  • Mao Zejian (1905–1929), adopted sister, executed by the KMT

Mao's parents altogether had five sons and two daughters. Two of the sons and both daughters died young, leaving the three brothers Mao Zedong, Mao Zemin, and Mao Zetan. Like all three of Mao Zedong's wives, Mao Zemin and Mao Zetan were communists. Like Yang Kaihui, both Mao Zemin and Mao Zetan were killed in warfare during Mao Zedong's lifetime. Note that the character () appears in all of the siblings' given names; this is a common Chinese naming convention.

From the next generation, Mao Zemin's son Mao Yuanxin was raised by Mao Zedong's family, and he became Mao Zedong's liaison with the Politburo in 1975. In Li Zhisui's The Private Life of Chairman Mao, Mao Yuanxin played a role in the final power-struggles.[328]

Children

Mao had a total of ten children,[329] including:

  • Mao Anying (1922–1950): son to Yang, married to Liú Sīqí (劉思齊), killed in action during the Korean War
  • Mao Anqing (1923–2007): son to Yang, married to Shao Hua, son Mao Xinyu, grandson Mao Dongdong
  • Mao Anlong (1927–1931): son to Yang, died during the Chinese Civil War
  • Mao Anhong: son to He, left to Mao's younger brother Zetan and then to one of Zetan's guards when he went off to war, was never heard of again
  • Li Min (b. 1936): daughter to He, married to Kǒng Lìnghuá (孔令華), son Kǒng Jìníng (孔繼寧), daughter Kǒng Dōngméi (孔冬梅)
  • Li Na (b. 1940): daughter to Jiang (whose birth surname was Lǐ, a name also used by Mao while evading the KMT), married to Wáng Jǐngqīng (王景清), son Wáng Xiàozhī (王效芝)

Mao's first and second daughters were left to local villagers because it was too dangerous to raise them while fighting the Kuomintang and later the Japanese. Their youngest daughter (born in early 1938 in Moscow after Mao separated) and one other child (born 1933) died in infancy. Two English researchers who retraced the entire Long March route in 2002–2003[330] located a woman whom they believe might well be one of the missing children abandoned by Mao to peasants in 1935. Ed Jocelyn and Andrew McEwen hope a member of the Mao family will respond to requests for a DNA test.[331]

Through his ten children, Mao became grandfather to twelve grandchildren, many of whom he never knew. He has many great-grandchildren alive today. One of his granddaughters is businesswoman Kong Dongmei, one of the richest people in China.[332] His grandson Mao Xinyu is a general in the Chinese army.[333] Both he and Kong have written books about their grandfather.[334]

Personal life

 
Mao and Zhang Yufeng in 1964

Mao's private life was kept very secret at the time of his rule. After Mao's death, Li Zhisui, his personal physician, published The Private Life of Chairman Mao, a memoir which mentions some aspects of Mao's private life, such as chain-smoking cigarettes, addiction to powerful sleeping pills and large number of sexual partners.[335] Some scholars and others who knew Mao personally have disputed the accuracy of these characterisations.[336]

Having grown up in Hunan, Mao spoke Mandarin with a marked Hunanese accent.[337] Ross Terrill wrote Mao was a "son of the soil ... rural and unsophisticated" in origins,[338] while Clare Hollingworth said that Mao was proud of his "peasant ways and manners", having a strong Hunanese accent and providing "earthy" comments on sexual matters.[337] Lee Feigon said that Mao's "earthiness" meant that he remained connected to "everyday Chinese life."[339]

Sinologist Stuart Schram emphasised Mao's ruthlessness but also noted that he showed no sign of taking pleasure in torture or killing in the revolutionary cause.[122] Lee Feigon considered Mao "draconian and authoritarian" when threatened but opined that he was not the "kind of villain that his mentor Stalin was".[340] Alexander Pantsov and Steven I. Levine wrote that Mao was a "man of complex moods", who "tried his best to bring about prosperity and gain international respect" for China, being "neither a saint nor a demon."[341] They noted that in early life, he strove to be "a strong, wilful, and purposeful hero, not bound by any moral chains", and that he "passionately desired fame and power".[342]

Mao learned to speak some English, particularly through Zhang Hanzhi, his English teacher, interpreter and diplomat who later married Qiao Guanhua, Foreign Minister of China and the head of China's UN delegation.[343] His spoken English was limited to a few single words, phrases, and some short sentences. He first chose to systematically learn English in the 1950s, which was very unusual as the main foreign language first taught in Chinese schools at that time was Russian.[344]

Writings and calligraphy

 
Mao's calligraphy: a bronze plaque of a poem by Li Bai. (Chinese: 白帝城毛澤東手書李白詩銅匾 )

鷹擊長空,
魚翔淺底,
萬類霜天競自由。
悵寥廓,
問蒼茫大地,
誰主沉浮


Eagles cleave the air,
Fish glide in the limpid deep;
Under freezing skies a million creatures contend in freedom.
Brooding over this immensity,
I ask, on this boundless land
Who rules over man's destiny?

—Excerpt from Mao's poem "Changsha", September 1927[97]

Mao was a prolific writer of political and philosophical literature.[345] The main repository of his pre-1949 writings is the Selected Works of Mao Zedong, published in four volumes by the People's Publishing House since 1951. A fifth volume, which brought the timeline up to 1957, was briefly issued during the leadership of Hua Guofeng, but subsequently withdrawn from circulation for its perceived ideological errors. There has never been an official "Complete Works of Mao Zedong" collecting all his known publications.[346] Mao is the attributed author of Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, known in the West as the "Little Red Book" and in Cultural Revolution China as the "Red Treasure Book" (紅寶書). First published in January 1964, this is a collection of short extracts from his many speeches and articles (most found in the Selected Works), edited by Lin Biao, and ordered topically. The Little Red Book contains some of Mao's most widely known quotes.[f]

Mao wrote prolifically on political strategy, commentary, and philosophy both before and after he assumed power.[g] Mao was also a skilled Chinese calligrapher with a highly personal style. In China, Mao was considered a master calligrapher during his lifetime.[347] His calligraphy can be seen today throughout mainland China.[348] His work gave rise to a new form of Chinese calligraphy called "Mao-style" or Maoti, which has gained increasing popularity since his death. There exist various competitions specialising in Mao-style calligraphy.[349]

Literary works

As did most Chinese intellectuals of his generation, Mao's education began with Chinese classical literature. Mao told Edgar Snow in 1936 that he had started the study of the Confucian Analects and the Four Books at a village school when he was eight, but that the books he most enjoyed reading were Water Margin, Journey to the West, the Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Dream of the Red Chamber.[350] Mao published poems in classical forms starting in his youth and his abilities as a poet contributed to his image in China after he came to power in 1949. His style was influenced by the great Tang dynasty poets Li Bai and Li He.[351]

Some of his most well-known poems are "Changsha" (1925), "The Double Ninth" (October 1929), "Loushan Pass" (1935), "The Long March" (1935), "Snow" (February 1936), "The PLA Captures Nanjing" (1949), "Reply to Li Shuyi" (11 May 1957), and "Ode to the Plum Blossom" (December 1961).

Portrayal in film and television

Mao has been portrayed in film and television numerous times. Some notable actors include: Han Shi, the first actor ever to have portrayed Mao, in a 1978 drama Dielianhua and later again in a 1980 film Cross the Dadu River;[352] Gu Yue, who had portrayed Mao 84 times on screen throughout his 27-year career and had won the Best Actor title at the Hundred Flowers Awards in 1990 and 1993;[353][354] Liu Ye, who played a young Mao in The Founding of a Party (2011);[355] Tang Guoqiang, who has frequently portrayed Mao in more recent times, in the films The Long March (1996) and The Founding of a Republic (2009), and the television series Huang Yanpei (2010), among others.[356] Mao is a principal character in American composer John Adams' opera Nixon in China (1987). The Beatles' song "Revolution" refers to Mao in the verse "but if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao you ain't going to make it with anyone anyhow...";[357] John Lennon expressed regret over including these lines in the song in 1972.[358]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ /ˈm (t)səˈtʊŋ/;[1] Chinese: 毛泽东; pinyin: Máo Zédōng pronounced [mǎʊ tsɤ̌.tʊ́ŋ]; also romanised traditionally as Mao Tse-tung. In this Chinese name, the family name is Mao and Ze is a generation name.
  2. ^ Mao's only direct involvement of hunting down political opponents was limited to the period from 1930–1931, during the Chinese Civil War in the Jiangxi base area.[275]
  3. ^ "The People's Republic of China under Mao exhibited the oppressive tendencies that were discernible in all the major absolutist regimes of the twentieth century. There are obvious parallels between Mao's China, Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Each of these regimes witnessed deliberately ordered mass 'cleansing' and extermination."[292]
  4. ^ "Though admittedly far from perfect, the comparison is based on the fact that Jackson is remembered both as someone who played a significant role in the development of a political organisation (the Democratic Party) that still has many partisans, and as someone responsible for brutal policies toward Native Americans that are now referred to as genocidal. Both men are thought of as having done terrible things yet this does not necessarily prevent them from being used as positive symbols. And Jackson still appears on $20 bills, even though Americans tend to view as heinous the institution of slavery (of which he was a passionate defender) and the early 19th-century military campaigns against Native Americans (in which he took part). At times Jackson, for all his flaws, is invoked as representing an egalitarian strain within the American democratic tradition, a self-made man of the people who rose to power via straight talk and was not allied with moneyed interests. Mao stands for something roughly similar."[303]
  5. ^ The often-cited evidence quote as proof is as follows: "Let us imagine how many people would die if war breaks out. There are 2.7 billion people in the world, and a third could be lost. If it is a little higher, it could be half. ... I say that if the worst came to the worst and one-half dies, there will still be one-half left, but imperialism would be razed to the ground and the whole world would become socialist. After a few years there would be 2.7 billion people again."[312][313] Historians dispute the sincerity of Mao's words. Robert Service says that Mao "was deadly serious",[314] while Frank Dikötter claims that Mao "was bluffing ... the sabre-rattling was to show that he, not Khrushchev, was the more determined revolutionary."[312]
  6. ^ Among them are:

    "War is the highest form of struggle for resolving contradictions, when they have developed to a certain stage, between classes, nations, states, or political groups, and it has existed ever since the emergence of private property and of classes."

    — "Problems of Strategy in China's Revolutionary War" (December 1936), Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, I, p. 180.

    "Every communist must grasp the truth, 'Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.'"

    — 1938, Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, II, pp. 224–225.

    "Taken as a whole, the Chinese revolutionary movement led by the Communist Party embraces two stages, i.e., the democratic and the socialist revolutions, which are two essentially different revolutionary processes, and the second process can be carried through only after the first has been completed. The democratic revolution is the necessary preparation for the socialist revolution, and the socialist revolution is the inevitable sequel to the democratic revolution. The ultimate aim for which all communists strive is to bring about a socialist and communist society."

    — "The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party" (December 1939), Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, 'II, pp. 330–331.

    "All reactionaries are paper tigers. In appearance, the reactionaries are terrifying, but in reality they are not so powerful. From a long-term point of view, it is not the reactionaries but the people who are really powerful."

    — Mao Zedong (July 1956), "U.S. Imperialism Is a Paper Tiger".
  7. ^ The most influential of these include:

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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Anita M. Andrew; John A. Rapp (2000). Autocracy and China's Rebel Founding Emperors: Comparing Chairman Mao and Ming Taizu. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 110–. ISBN 978-0847695805.
  • Davin, Delia (2013). Mao: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford UP. ISBN 978-0191654039.
  • Keith, Schoppa R. (2004). Twentieth Century in China: A History in Documents. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199732005.
  • Schaik, Sam (2011). Tibet: A History. New Haven: Yale University Press Publications. ISBN 978-0300154047.

External links

General

  • "Foundations of Chinese Foreign Policy online documents in English from the Wilson Center in Washington
  • ChineseMao.com: Extensive resources about Mao Zedong 6 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • CNN profile
  • Collected Works of Mao Tse-tung (1917–1949) Joint Publications Research Service
  • Mao quotations
  • Mao Zedong Reference Archive at marxists.org
  • Oxford Companion to World Politics: Mao Zedong

Commentary

  • What Maoism Has Contributed by Samir Amin (21 September 2006)
  • China must confront dark past, says Mao confidant
  • Mao was cruel – but also laid the ground for today's China
  • On the Role of Mao Zedong by William Hinton. Monthly Review Foundation 2004 Volume 56, Issue 04 (September)
  • Propaganda paintings showing Mao as the great leader of China
  • Remembering Mao's Victims
  • Mao's Great Leap to Famine
  • Finding the Facts About Mao's Victims
  • Remembering China's Great Helmsman
  • Did Mao Really Kill Millions in the Great Leap Forward? 11 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mao Tse Tung: China's Peasant Emperor
Party political offices
Communist Party of China
Preceded by Chairman of the CPC Central Military Commission
1936–1949
Succeeded by
Himself
as Post re-established
Preceded by President of the CPC Central Party School
1943–1947
Succeeded by
zedong, series, series, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, december, 1893, september, 1976, also, known, chairman, chinese, communist, revolutionary, founder, people, republic, china, which, chairman, chinese, communist, party, from, establishment, . For the TV series see Mao Zedong TV series Mao redirects here For other uses see Mao disambiguation Mao Zedong a 26 December 1893 9 September 1976 also known as Chairman Mao was a Chinese communist revolutionary who was the founder of the People s Republic of China PRC which he led as the chairman of the Chinese Communist Party from the establishment of the PRC in 1949 until his death in 1976 Ideologically a Marxist Leninist his theories military strategies and political policies are collectively known as Maoism Mao Zedong毛泽东Mao in 1959Chairman of the Communist Party of ChinaIn office 20 March 1943 9 September 1976DeputyLiu ShaoqiLin BiaoZhou EnlaiHua GuofengPreceded byZhang Wentian as General Secretary Succeeded byHua Guofeng1st Chairman of the People s Republic of ChinaIn office 27 September 1954 27 April 1959PremierZhou EnlaiDeputyZhu DeSucceeded byLiu ShaoqiChairman of the Central Military CommissionIn office 8 September 1954 9 September 1976DeputyZhu DeLin BiaoYe JianyingSucceeded byHua GuofengChairman of the Central People s GovernmentIn office 1 October 1949 27 September 1954PremierZhou EnlaiPersonal detailsBorn 1893 12 26 26 December 1893Shaoshan Hunan Qing DynastyDied9 September 1976 1976 09 09 aged 82 Beijing People s Republic of ChinaResting placeChairman Mao Memorial HallPolitical partyCommunist Party of China 1921 1976 Other politicalaffiliationsKuomintang 1925 1926 SpousesLuo Yixiu m 1907 died 1910 wbr Yang Kaihui m 1920 died 1930 wbr He Zizhen m 1928 div 1937 wbr Jiang Qing m 1938 wbr Children10 including Mao AnyingMao AnqingMao AnlongYang YuehuaLi MinLi NaParentsMao Yichang father Wen Qimei mother Alma materHunan First Normal UniversitySignatureChinese nameSimplified Chinese毛泽东Traditional Chinese毛澤東TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinMao ZedōngBopomofoㄇㄠˊ ㄗㄜˊ ㄉㄨㄥGwoyeu RomatzyhMau TzerdongWade GilesMao Tse tung IPA ma ʊ tsɤ tʊ ŋ listen WuSuzhouneseMau Zeh tonHakkaRomanizationMo Chhe t tungYue CantoneseYale RomanizationMouh Jaahk dungJyutpingMou4 Zaak6 dung1IPA mo u tsa ːk to ŋ Southern MinHokkien POJMo Te k tongTai loMoo Ti k tangCourtesy nameSimplified Chinese润之Traditional Chinese潤之TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinRunzhiWade GilesJun4 chih1Yue CantoneseJyutpingJeon6 zi1Southern MinHokkien POJLun chiCentral institution membership 1964 1976 Member National People s Congress1954 1959 Member National People s Congress1938 1976 Member 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th Politburo1938 1976 Member 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th Central Committee Other offices held 1954 1959 Chairman of the People s Republic of China1954 1976 Chairman CPC Central Military Commission1954 1959 President and Chairman National Defence Council1954 1976 Honorary Chairman CPPCC National Committee1949 1954 Chairman Central People s Revolutionary Military Commission1949 1954 Chairman CPPCC National Committee1949 1954 Chairman PRC Central People s Government1943 1956 Chairman CPC Central Secretariat1936 1949 Chairman CPC Central Military Commission Paramount Leader of the People s Republic of China Inaugural holder Hua Guofeng Mao was the son of a prosperous peasant in Shaoshan Hunan He supported Chinese nationalism and had an anti imperialist outlook early in his life and was particularly influenced by the events of the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 and May Fourth Movement of 1919 He later adopted Marxism Leninism while working at Peking University as a librarian and became a founding member of the Chinese Communist Party CCP leading the Autumn Harvest Uprising in 1927 During the Chinese Civil War between the Kuomintang KMT and the CCP Mao helped to found the Chinese Workers and Peasants Red Army led the Jiangxi Soviet s radical land reform policies and ultimately became head of the CCP during the Long March Although the CCP temporarily allied with the KMT under the Second United Front during the Second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 China s civil war resumed after Japan s surrender and Mao s forces defeated the Nationalist government which withdrew to Taiwan in 1949 On 1 October 1949 Mao proclaimed the foundation of the PRC a Marxist Leninist single party state controlled by the CCP In the following years he solidified his control through the Chinese Land Reform against landlords the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries the Three anti and Five anti Campaigns and through a psychological victory in the Korean War which altogether resulted in the deaths of several million Chinese From 1953 to 1958 Mao played an important role in enforcing planned economy in China constructing the first Constitution of the PRC launching the industrialisation program and initiating military projects such as the Two Bombs One Satellite project and Project 523 His foreign policies during this time were dominated by the Sino Soviet split which drove a wedge between China and the Soviet Union In 1955 Mao launched the Sufan movement and in 1957 he launched the Anti Rightist Campaign in which at least 550 000 people mostly intellectuals and dissidents were persecuted 2 In 1958 he launched the Great Leap Forward that aimed to rapidly transform China s economy from agrarian to industrial which led to the deadliest famine in history and the deaths of 15 55 million people between 1958 and 1962 In 1963 Mao launched the Socialist Education Movement and in 1966 he initiated the Cultural Revolution a program to remove counter revolutionary elements in Chinese society which lasted 10 years and was marked by violent class struggle widespread destruction of cultural artifacts and an unprecedented elevation of Mao s cult of personality Tens of millions of people were persecuted during the Revolution while the estimated number of deaths ranges from hundreds of thousands to millions After years of ill health Mao suffered a series of heart attacks in 1976 and died at the age of 82 During Mao s era China s population grew from around 550 million to over 900 million while the government did not strictly enforce its family planning policy A controversial figure within and outside China Mao is still regarded as one of the most influential figures of the twentieth century Beyond politics Mao is also known as a theorist military strategist and poet During the Mao era China was heavily involved with other southeast Asian communist conflicts such as the Korean War the Vietnam War and the Cambodian Civil War which brought the Khmer Rouge to power The government during Mao s rule was responsible for vast numbers of deaths with estimates ranging from 40 to 80 million victims through starvation persecution prison labour and mass executions 3 4 5 6 Mao has been praised for transforming China from a semi colony to a leading world power with greatly advanced literacy women s rights basic healthcare primary education and life expectancy 7 8 9 10 Contents 1 English romanisation of name 2 Early life 2 1 Youth and the Xinhai Revolution 1893 1911 2 2 Fourth Normal School of Changsha 1912 1919 3 Early revolutionary activity 3 1 Beijing anarchism and Marxism 1917 1919 3 2 New Culture and political protests 1919 1920 3 3 Founding the Chinese Communist Party 1921 1922 3 4 Collaboration with the Kuomintang 1922 1927 4 Civil War 4 1 Nanchang and Autumn Harvest Uprisings 1927 4 2 Base in Jinggangshan 1927 1928 4 3 Jiangxi Soviet Republic of China 1929 1934 4 4 Long March 1934 1935 4 5 Alliance with the Kuomintang 1935 1940 4 6 Resuming civil war 1940 1949 5 Leadership of China 5 1 Great Leap Forward 5 2 Consequences 5 3 Split from Soviet Union 5 4 Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution 6 State visits 7 Death and aftermath 8 Legacy 8 1 Public image 9 Genealogy 9 1 Ancestors 9 2 Wives 9 3 Siblings 9 4 Children 10 Personal life 11 Writings and calligraphy 11 1 Literary works 12 Portrayal in film and television 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External links 18 1 General 18 2 CommentaryEnglish romanisation of nameDuring Mao s lifetime the English language media universally rendered his name as Mao Tse tung using the Wade Giles system of transliteration for Standard Chinese though with the circumflex accent in the syllable Tse dropped Due to its recognizability the spelling was used widely even by the Foreign Ministry of the PRC after Hanyu Pinyin became the PRC s official romanisation system for Mandarin Chinese in 1958 the well known booklet of Mao s political statements The Little Red Book was officially entitled Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse tung in English translations While the pinyin derived spelling Mao Zedong is increasingly common the Wade Giles derived spelling Mao Tse tung continues to be used in modern publications to some extent 11 Early lifeMain article Early life of Mao Zedong Youth and the Xinhai Revolution 1893 1911 Mao Zedong was born on 26 December 1893 in Shaoshan village Hunan 12 His father Mao Yichang was a formerly impoverished peasant who had become one of the wealthiest farmers in Shaoshan Growing up in rural Hunan Mao described his father as a stern disciplinarian who would beat him and his three siblings the boys Zemin and Zetan as well as an adopted girl Zejian 13 Mao s mother Wen Qimei was a devout Buddhist who tried to temper her husband s strict attitude 14 Mao too became a Buddhist but abandoned this faith in his mid teenage years 14 At age 8 Mao was sent to Shaoshan Primary School Learning the value systems of Confucianism he later admitted that he did not enjoy the classical Chinese texts preaching Confucian morals instead favouring classic novels like Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Water Margin 15 At age 13 Mao finished primary education and his father united him in an arranged marriage to the 17 year old Luo Yixiu thereby uniting their land owning families Mao refused to recognise her as his wife becoming a fierce critic of arranged marriage and temporarily moving away Luo was locally disgraced and died in 1910 at only 21 years old 16 Mao Zedong s childhood home in Shaoshan in 2010 by which time it had become a tourist destination While working on his father s farm Mao read voraciously 17 and developed a political consciousness from Zheng Guanying s booklet which lamented the deterioration of Chinese power and argued for the adoption of representative democracy 18 Interested in history Mao was inspired by the military prowess and nationalistic fervour of George Washington and Napoleon Bonaparte 19 His political views were shaped by Gelaohui led protests which erupted following a famine in Changsha the capital of Hunan Mao supported the protesters demands but the armed forces suppressed the dissenters and executed their leaders 20 The famine spread to Shaoshan where starving peasants seized his father s grain He disapproved of their actions as morally wrong but claimed sympathy for their situation 21 At age 16 Mao moved to a higher primary school in nearby Dongshan 22 where he was bullied for his peasant background 23 In 1911 Mao began middle school in Changsha 24 Revolutionary sentiment was strong in the city where there was widespread animosity towards Emperor Puyi s absolute monarchy and many were advocating republicanism The republicans figurehead was Sun Yat sen an American educated Christian who led the Tongmenghui society 25 In Changsha Mao was influenced by Sun s newspaper The People s Independence Minli bao 26 and called for Sun to become president in a school essay 27 As a symbol of rebellion against the Manchu monarch Mao and a friend cut off their queue pigtails a sign of subservience to the emperor 28 Inspired by Sun s republicanism the army rose up across southern China sparking the Xinhai Revolution Changsha s governor fled leaving the city in republican control 29 Supporting the revolution Mao joined the rebel army as a private soldier but was not involved in fighting The northern provinces remained loyal to the emperor and hoping to avoid a civil war Sun proclaimed provisional president by his supporters compromised with the monarchist general Yuan Shikai The monarchy was abolished creating the Republic of China but the monarchist Yuan became president The revolution over Mao resigned from the army in 1912 after six months as a soldier 30 Around this time Mao discovered socialism from a newspaper article proceeding to read pamphlets by Jiang Kanghu the student founder of the Chinese Socialist Party Mao remained interested yet unconvinced by the idea 31 Fourth Normal School of Changsha 1912 1919 Over the next few years Mao Zedong enrolled and dropped out of a police academy a soap production school a law school an economics school and the government run Changsha Middle School 32 Studying independently he spent much time in Changsha s library reading core works of classical liberalism such as Adam Smith s The Wealth of Nations and Montesquieu s The Spirit of the Laws as well as the works of western scientists and philosophers such as Darwin Mill Rousseau and Spencer 33 Viewing himself as an intellectual years later he admitted that at this time he thought himself better than working people 34 He was inspired by Friedrich Paulsen a neo Kantian philosopher and educator whose emphasis on the achievement of a carefully defined goal as the highest value led Mao to believe that strong individuals were not bound by moral codes but should strive for a great goal 35 His father saw no use in his son s intellectual pursuits cut off his allowance and forced him to move into a hostel for the destitute 36 Mao in 1913 Mao desired to become a teacher and enrolled at the Fourth Normal School of Changsha which soon merged with the First Normal School of Hunan widely seen as the best in Hunan 37 Befriending Mao professor Yang Changji urged him to read a radical newspaper New Youth Xin qingnian the creation of his friend Chen Duxiu a dean at Peking University Although he was a supporter of Chinese nationalism Chen argued that China must look to the west to cleanse itself of superstition and autocracy 38 In his first school year Mao befriended an older student Xiao Zisheng together they went on a walking tour of Hunan begging and writing literary couplets to obtain food 39 A popular student in 1915 Mao was elected secretary of the Students Society He organised the Association for Student Self Government and led protests against school rules 40 Mao published his first article in New Youth in April 1917 instructing readers to increase their physical strength to serve the revolution 41 He joined the Society for the Study of Wang Fuzhi Chuan shan Hsueh she a revolutionary group founded by Changsha literati who wished to emulate the philosopher Wang Fuzhi 42 In spring 1917 he was elected to command the students volunteer army set up to defend the school from marauding soldiers 43 Increasingly interested in the techniques of war he took a keen interest in World War I and also began to develop a sense of solidarity with workers 44 Mao undertook feats of physical endurance with Xiao Zisheng and Cai Hesen and with other young revolutionaries they formed the Renovation of the People Study Society in April 1918 to debate Chen Duxiu s ideas Desiring personal and societal transformation the Society gained 70 80 members many of whom would later join the Communist Party 45 Mao graduated in June 1919 ranked third in the year 46 Early revolutionary activityBeijing anarchism and Marxism 1917 1919 Mao moved to Beijing where his mentor Yang Changji had taken a job at Peking University 47 Yang thought Mao exceptionally intelligent and handsome 48 securing him a job as assistant to the university librarian Li Dazhao who would become an early Chinese Communist 49 Li authored a series of New Youth articles on the October Revolution in Russia during which the Communist Bolshevik Party under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin had seized power Lenin was an advocate of the socio political theory of Marxism first developed by the German sociologists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and Li s articles added Marxism to the doctrines in Chinese revolutionary movement 50 Becoming more and more radical Mao was initially influenced by Peter Kropotkin s anarchism which was the most prominent radical doctrine of the day Chinese anarchists such as Cai Yuanpei Chancellor of Peking University called for complete social revolution in social relations family structure and women s equality rather than the simple change in the form of government called for by earlier revolutionaries He joined Li s Study Group and developed rapidly toward Marxism during the winter of 1919 51 Paid a low wage Mao lived in a cramped room with seven other Hunanese students but believed that Beijing s beauty offered vivid and living compensation 52 A number of his friends took advantage of the anarchist organised Mouvement Travail Etudes to study in France but Mao declined perhaps because of an inability to learn languages 53 At the university Mao was snubbed by other students due to his rural Hunanese accent and lowly position He joined the university s Philosophy and Journalism Societies and attended lectures and seminars by the likes of Chen Duxiu Hu Shih and Qian Xuantong 54 Mao s time in Beijing ended in the spring of 1919 when he travelled to Shanghai with friends who were preparing to leave for France 55 He did not return to Shaoshan where his mother was terminally ill She died in October 1919 and her husband died in January 1920 56 New Culture and political protests 1919 1920 On 4 May 1919 students in Beijing gathered at the Tiananmen to protest the Chinese government s weak resistance to Japanese expansion in China Patriots were outraged at the influence given to Japan in the Twenty One Demands in 1915 the complicity of Duan Qirui s Beiyang Government and the betrayal of China in the Treaty of Versailles wherein Japan was allowed to receive territories in Shandong which had been surrendered by Germany These demonstrations ignited the nationwide May Fourth Movement and fuelled the New Culture Movement which blamed China s diplomatic defeats on social and cultural backwardness 57 In Changsha Mao had begun teaching history at the Xiuye Primary School 58 and organising protests against the pro Duan Governor of Hunan Province Zhang Jingyao popularly known as Zhang the Venomous due to his corrupt and violent rule 59 In late May Mao co founded the Hunanese Student Association with He Shuheng and Deng Zhongxia organising a student strike for June and in July 1919 began production of a weekly radical magazine Xiang River Review Using vernacular language that would be understandable to the majority of China s populace he advocated the need for a Great Union of the Popular Masses strengthened trade unions able to wage non violent revolution clarification needed His ideas were not Marxist but heavily influenced by Kropotkin s concept of mutual aid 60 Students in Beijing rallying during the May Fourth Movement Zhang banned the Student Association but Mao continued publishing after assuming editorship of the liberal magazine New Hunan Xin Hunan and offered articles in popular local newspaper Ta Kung Pao Several of these advocated feminist views calling for the liberation of women in Chinese society Mao was influenced by his forced arranged marriage 61 In December 1919 Mao helped organise a general strike in Hunan securing some concessions but Mao and other student leaders felt threatened by Zhang and Mao returned to Beijing visiting the terminally ill Yang Changji 62 Mao found that his articles had achieved a level of fame among the revolutionary movement and set about soliciting support in overthrowing Zhang 63 Coming across newly translated Marxist literature by Thomas Kirkup Karl Kautsky and Marx and Engels notably The Communist Manifesto he came under their increasing influence but was still eclectic in his views 64 Mao visited Tianjin Jinan and Qufu 65 before moving to Shanghai where he worked as a laundryman and met Chen Duxiu noting that Chen s adoption of Marxism deeply impressed me at what was probably a critical period in my life In Shanghai Mao met an old teacher of his Yi Peiji a revolutionary and member of the Kuomintang KMT or Chinese Nationalist Party which was gaining increasing support and influence Yi introduced Mao to General Tan Yankai a senior KMT member who held the loyalty of troops stationed along the Hunanese border with Guangdong Tan was plotting to overthrow Zhang and Mao aided him by organising the Changsha students In June 1920 Tan led his troops into Changsha and Zhang fled In the subsequent reorganisation of the provincial administration Mao was appointed headmaster of the junior section of the First Normal School Now receiving a large income he married Yang Kaihui daughter of Yang Changji in the winter of 1920 66 67 Founding the Chinese Communist Party 1921 1922 Location of the first Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in July 1921 in Xintiandi former French Concession Shanghai The Chinese Communist Party was founded by Chen Duxiu and Li Dazhao in the French concession of Shanghai in 1921 as a study society and informal network Mao set up a Changsha branch also establishing a branch of the Socialist Youth Corps and a Cultural Book Society which opened a bookstore to propagate revolutionary literature throughout Hunan 68 He was involved in the movement for Hunan autonomy in the hope that a Hunanese constitution would increase civil liberties and make his revolutionary activity easier When the movement was successful in establishing provincial autonomy under a new warlord Mao forgot his involvement 69 By 1921 small Marxist groups existed in Shanghai Beijing Changsha Wuhan Guangzhou and Jinan it was decided to hold a central meeting which began in Shanghai on 23 July 1921 The first session of the National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party was attended by 13 delegates Mao included After the authorities sent a police spy to the congress the delegates moved to a boat on South Lake near Jiaxing in Zhejiang to escape detection Although Soviet and Comintern delegates attended the first congress ignored Lenin s advice to accept a temporary alliance between the Communists and the bourgeois democrats who also advocated national revolution instead they stuck to the orthodox Marxist belief that only the urban proletariat could lead a socialist revolution 70 Mao was now party secretary for Hunan stationed in Changsha and to build the party there he followed a variety of tactics 71 In August 1921 he founded the Self Study University through which readers could gain access to revolutionary literature housed in the premises of the Society for the Study of Wang Fuzhi a Qing dynasty Hunanese philosopher who had resisted the Manchus 71 He joined the YMCA Mass Education Movement to fight illiteracy though he edited the textbooks to include radical sentiments 72 He continued organising workers to strike against the administration of Hunan Governor Zhao Hengti 73 Yet labour issues remained central The successful and famous Anyuan coal mines strikes zh contrary to later Party historians depended on both proletarian and bourgeois strategies Liu Shaoqi and Li Lisan and Mao not only mobilised the miners but formed schools and cooperatives and engaged local intellectuals gentry military officers merchants Red Gang dragon heads and even church clergy 74 Mao s labour organizing work in the Anyuan mines also involved his wife Yang Kaihui who worked for women s rights including literacy and educational issues in the nearby peasant communities 75 Although Mao and Yang were not the originators of this political organizing method of combining labor organizing among male workers with a focus on women s rights issues in their communities they were among the most effective at using this method 75 Mao s political organizing success in the Anyuan mines resulted in Chen Duxiu inviting him to become a member of the Communist Party s Central Committee 76 Mao claimed that he missed the July 1922 Second Congress of the Communist Party in Shanghai because he lost the address Adopting Lenin s advice the delegates agreed to an alliance with the bourgeois democrats of the KMT for the good of the national revolution Communist Party members joined the KMT hoping to push its politics leftward 77 Mao enthusiastically agreed with this decision arguing for an alliance across China s socio economic classes and eventually rose to become propaganda chief of the KMT 67 Mao was a vocal anti imperialist and in his writings he lambasted the governments of Japan the UK and US describing the latter as the most murderous of hangmen 78 Collaboration with the Kuomintang 1922 1927 source source source source source source source source Mao giving speeches to the masses no audio At the Third Congress of the Communist Party in Shanghai in June 1923 the delegates reaffirmed their commitment to working with the KMT Supporting this position Mao was elected to the Party Committee taking up residence in Shanghai 79 At the First KMT Congress held in Guangzhou in early 1924 Mao was elected an alternate member of the KMT Central Executive Committee and put forward four resolutions to decentralise power to urban and rural bureaus His enthusiastic support for the KMT earned him the suspicion of Li Li san his Hunan comrade 80 In late 1924 Mao returned to Shaoshan perhaps to recuperate from an illness He found that the peasantry were increasingly restless and some had seized land from wealthy landowners to found communes This convinced him of the revolutionary potential of the peasantry an idea advocated by the KMT leftists but not the Communists 81 In the winter of 1925 Mao fled to Guangzhou after his revolutionary activities attracted the attention of Zhao s regional authorities 82 There he ran the 6th term of the KMT s Peasant Movement Training Institute from May to September 1926 83 84 The Peasant Movement Training Institute under Mao trained cadre and prepared them for militant activity taking them through military training exercises and getting them to study basic left wing texts 85 Mao Zedong around the time of his work at Guangzhou s PMTI in 1925 When party leader Sun Yat sen died in May 1925 he was succeeded by Chiang Kai shek who moved to marginalise the left KMT and the Communists 86 Mao nevertheless supported Chiang s National Revolutionary Army who embarked on the Northern Expedition attack in 1926 on warlords 87 In the wake of this expedition peasants rose up appropriating the land of the wealthy landowners who were in many cases killed Such uprisings angered senior KMT figures who were themselves landowners emphasising the growing class and ideological divide within the revolutionary movement 88 Third Plenum of the KMT Central Executive Committee in March 1927 Mao is third from the right in the second row In March 1927 Mao appeared at the Third Plenum of the KMT Central Executive Committee in Wuhan which sought to strip General Chiang of his power by appointing Wang Jingwei leader There Mao played an active role in the discussions regarding the peasant issue defending a set of Regulations for the Repression of Local Bullies and Bad Gentry which advocated the death penalty or life imprisonment for anyone found guilty of counter revolutionary activity arguing that in a revolutionary situation peaceful methods cannot suffice 89 90 In April 1927 Mao was appointed to the KMT s five member Central Land Committee urging peasants to refuse to pay rent Mao led another group to put together a Draft Resolution on the Land Question which called for the confiscation of land belonging to local bullies and bad gentry corrupt officials militarists and all counter revolutionary elements in the villages Proceeding to carry out a Land Survey he stated that anyone owning over 30 mou four and a half acres constituting 13 of the population were uniformly counter revolutionary He accepted that there was great variation in revolutionary enthusiasm across the country and that a flexible policy of land redistribution was necessary 91 Presenting his conclusions at the Enlarged Land Committee meeting many expressed reservations some believing that it went too far and others not far enough Ultimately his suggestions were only partially implemented 92 Civil WarMain articles Chinese Civil War and Chinese Communist Revolution Nanchang and Autumn Harvest Uprisings 1927 Flag of the Chinese Workers and Peasants Red Army Fresh from the success of the Northern Expedition against the warlords Chiang turned on the Communists who by now numbered in the tens of thousands across China Chiang ignored the orders of the Wuhan based left KMT government and marched on Shanghai a city controlled by Communist militias As the Communists awaited Chiang s arrival he loosed the White Terror massacring 5000 with the aid of the Green Gang 90 93 In Beijing 19 leading Communists were killed by Zhang Zuolin 94 95 That May tens of thousands of Communists and those suspected of being communists were killed and the CCP lost approximately 15 000 of its 25 000 members 95 The CCP continued supporting the Wuhan KMT government a position Mao initially supported 95 but by the time of the CCP s Fifth Congress he had changed his mind deciding to stake all hope on the peasant militia 96 The question was rendered moot when the Wuhan government expelled all Communists from the KMT on 15 July 96 The CCP founded the Workers and Peasants Red Army of China better known as the Red Army to battle Chiang A battalion led by General Zhu De was ordered to take the city of Nanchang on 1 August 1927 in what became known as the Nanchang Uprising They were initially successful but were forced into retreat after five days marching south to Shantou and from there they were driven into the wilderness of Fujian 96 Mao was appointed commander in chief of the Red Army and led four regiments against Changsha in the Autumn Harvest Uprising in the hope of sparking peasant uprisings across Hunan On the eve of the attack Mao composed a poem the earliest of his to survive titled Changsha His plan was to attack the KMT held city from three directions on 9 September but the Fourth Regiment deserted to the KMT cause attacking the Third Regiment Mao s army made it to Changsha but could not take it by 15 September he accepted defeat and with 1000 survivors marched east to the Jinggang Mountains of Jiangxi 97 98 Base in Jinggangshan 1927 1928 Mao in 1927 革命不是請客吃飯 不是做文章 不是繪畫繡花 不能那樣雅緻 那樣從容不迫 文質彬彬 那樣溫良恭讓 革命是暴動 是一個階級推翻一個階級的暴烈的行動 Revolution is not a dinner party nor an essay nor a painting nor a piece of embroidery it cannot be so refined so leisurely and gentle so temperate kind courteous restrained and magnanimous A revolution is an insurrection an act of violence by which one class overthrows another Mao February 1927 99 The CCP Central Committee hiding in Shanghai expelled Mao from their ranks and from the Hunan Provincial Committee as punishment for his military opportunism for his focus on rural activity and for being too lenient with bad gentry The more orthodox Communists especially regarded the peasants as backward and ridiculed Mao s idea of mobilizing them 67 They nevertheless adopted three policies he had long championed the immediate formation of Workers councils the confiscation of all land without exemption and the rejection of the KMT Mao s response was to ignore them 100 He established a base in Jinggangshan City an area of the Jinggang Mountains where he united five villages as a self governing state and supported the confiscation of land from rich landlords who were re educated and sometimes executed He ensured that no massacres took place in the region and pursued a more lenient approach than that advocated by the Central Committee 101 In addition to land redistribution Mao promoted literacy and non hierarchical organizational relationships in Jinggangshan transforming the area s social and economic life and attracted many local supporters 102 Mao proclaimed that Even the lame the deaf and the blind could all come in useful for the revolutionary struggle he boosted the army s numbers 103 incorporating two groups of bandits into his army building a force of around 1 800 troops 104 He laid down rules for his soldiers prompt obedience to orders all confiscations were to be turned over to the government and nothing was to be confiscated from poorer peasants In doing so he moulded his men into a disciplined efficient fighting force 103 敵進我退 敵駐我騷 敵疲我打 敵退我追 When the enemy advances we retreat When the enemy rests we harass him When the enemy avoids a battle we attack When the enemy retreats we advance Mao s advice in combating the Kuomintang 1928 105 106 Chinese Communist revolutionaries in the 1920s In spring 1928 the Central Committee ordered Mao s troops to southern Hunan hoping to spark peasant uprisings Mao was skeptical but complied They reached Hunan where they were attacked by the KMT and fled after heavy losses Meanwhile KMT troops had invaded Jinggangshan leaving them without a base 107 Wandering the countryside Mao s forces came across a CCP regiment led by General Zhu De and Lin Biao they united and attempted to retake Jinggangshan They were initially successful but the KMT counter attacked and pushed the CCP back over the next few weeks they fought an entrenched guerrilla war in the mountains 105 108 The Central Committee again ordered Mao to march to south Hunan but he refused and remained at his base Contrastingly Zhu complied and led his armies away Mao s troops fended the KMT off for 25 days while he left the camp at night to find reinforcements He reunited with the decimated Zhu s army and together they returned to Jinggangshan and retook the base There they were joined by a defecting KMT regiment and Peng Dehuai s Fifth Red Army In the mountainous area they were unable to grow enough crops to feed everyone leading to food shortages throughout the winter 109 110 In 1928 Mao met and married He Zizhen an 18 year old revolutionary who would bear him six children 111 112 Jiangxi Soviet Republic of China 1929 1934 Mao in Yan an In January 1929 Mao and Zhu evacuated the base with 2 000 men and a further 800 provided by Peng and took their armies south to the area around Tonggu and Xinfeng in Jiangxi 113 The evacuation led to a drop in morale and many troops became disobedient and began thieving this worried Li Lisan and the Central Committee who saw Mao s army as lumpenproletariat that were unable to share in proletariat class consciousness 114 115 In keeping with orthodox Marxist thought Li believed that only the urban proletariat could lead a successful revolution and saw little need for Mao s peasant guerrillas he ordered Mao to disband his army into units to be sent out to spread the revolutionary message Mao replied that while he concurred with Li s theoretical position he would not disband his army nor abandon his base 115 116 Both Li and Mao saw the Chinese revolution as the key to world revolution believing that a CCP victory would spark the overthrow of global imperialism and capitalism In this they disagreed with the official line of the Soviet government and Comintern Officials in Moscow desired greater control over the CCP and removed Li from power by calling him to Russia for an inquest into his errors 117 118 119 They replaced him with Soviet educated Chinese Communists known as the 28 Bolsheviks two of whom Bo Gu and Zhang Wentian took control of the Central Committee Mao disagreed with the new leadership believing they grasped little of the Chinese situation and he soon emerged as their key rival 118 120 Military parade on the occasion of the founding of a Chinese Soviet Republic in 1931 In February 1930 Mao created the Southwest Jiangxi Provincial Soviet Government in the region under his control 121 In November he suffered emotional trauma after his second wife Yang Kaihui and sister were captured and beheaded by KMT general He Jian 110 118 122 Facing internal problems members of the Jiangxi Soviet accused him of being too moderate and hence anti revolutionary In December they tried to overthrow Mao resulting in the Futian incident during which Mao s loyalists tortured many and executed between 2000 and 3000 dissenters 123 124 125 The CCP Central Committee moved to Jiangxi which it saw as a secure area In November it proclaimed Jiangxi to be the Soviet Republic of China an independent Communist governed state Although he was proclaimed Chairman of the Council of People s Commissars Mao s power was diminished as his control of the Red Army was allocated to Zhou Enlai Meanwhile Mao recovered from tuberculosis 126 127 The KMT armies adopted a policy of encirclement and annihilation of the Red armies Outnumbered Mao responded with guerrilla tactics influenced by the works of ancient military strategists like Sun Tzu but Zhou and the new leadership followed a policy of open confrontation and conventional warfare In doing so the Red Army successfully defeated the first and second encirclements 128 129 Angered at his armies failure Chiang Kai shek personally arrived to lead the operation He too faced setbacks and retreated to deal with the further Japanese incursions into China 126 130 As a result of the KMT s change of focus to the defence of China against Japanese expansionism the Red Army was able to expand its area of control eventually encompassing a population of 3 million 129 Mao proceeded with his land reform program In November 1931 he announced the start of a land verification project which was expanded in June 1933 He also orchestrated education programs and implemented measures to increase female political participation 131 Chiang viewed the Communists as a greater threat than the Japanese and returned to Jiangxi where he initiated the fifth encirclement campaign which involved the construction of a concrete and barbed wire wall of fire around the state which was accompanied by aerial bombardment to which Zhou s tactics proved ineffective Trapped inside morale among the Red Army dropped as food and medicine became scarce The leadership decided to evacuate 132 Long March 1934 1935 An overview map of the Long March On 14 October 1934 the Red Army broke through the KMT line on the Jiangxi Soviet s south west corner at Xinfeng with 85 000 soldiers and 15 000 party cadres and embarked on the Long March In order to make the escape many of the wounded and the ill as well as women and children were left behind defended by a group of guerrilla fighters whom the KMT massacred 133 134 The 100 000 who escaped headed to southern Hunan first crossing the Xiang River after heavy fighting 134 135 and then the Wu River in Guizhou where they took Zunyi in January 1935 Temporarily resting in the city they held a conference here Mao was elected to a position of leadership becoming Chairman of the Politburo and de facto leader of both Party and Red Army in part because his candidacy was supported by Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin Insisting that they operate as a guerrilla force he laid out a destination the Shenshi Soviet in Shaanxi Northern China from where the Communists could focus on fighting the Japanese Mao believed that in focusing on the anti imperialist struggle the Communists would earn the trust of the Chinese people who in turn would renounce the KMT 136 From Zunyi Mao led his troops to Loushan Pass where they faced armed opposition but successfully crossed the river Chiang flew into the area to lead his armies against Mao but the Communists outmanoeuvred him and crossed the Jinsha River 137 Faced with the more difficult task of crossing the Tatu River they managed it by fighting a battle over the Luding Bridge in May taking Luding 138 Marching through the mountain ranges around Ma anshan 139 in Moukung Western Sichuan they encountered the 50 000 strong CCP Fourth Front Army of Zhang Guotao and together proceeded to Maoerhkai and then Gansu Zhang and Mao disagreed over what to do the latter wished to proceed to Shaanxi while Zhang wanted to retreat east to Tibet or Sikkim far from the KMT threat It was agreed that they would go their separate ways with Zhu De joining Zhang 140 Mao s forces proceeded north through hundreds of kilometres of Grasslands an area of quagmire where they were attacked by Manchu tribesman and where many soldiers succumbed to famine and disease 141 142 Finally reaching Shaanxi they fought off both the KMT and an Islamic cavalry militia before crossing the Min Mountains and Mount Liupan and reaching the Shenshi Soviet only 7 000 8000 had survived 142 143 The Long March cemented Mao s status as the dominant figure in the party In November 1935 he was named chairman of the Military Commission From this point onward Mao was the Communist Party s undisputed leader even though he would not become party chairman until 1943 144 Alliance with the Kuomintang 1935 1940 Main article Second Sino Japanese War Zhang Guotao left and Mao Zedong in Yan an 1937 Mao s troops arrived at the Yan an Soviet during October 1935 and settled in Pao An until spring 1936 While there they developed links with local communities redistributed and farmed the land offered medical treatment and began literacy programs 142 145 146 Mao now commanded 15 000 soldiers boosted by the arrival of He Long s men from Hunan and the armies of Zhu De and Zhang Guotao returned from Tibet 145 In February 1936 they established the North West Anti Japanese Red Army University in Yan an through which they trained increasing numbers of new recruits 147 In January 1937 they began the anti Japanese expedition that sent groups of guerrilla fighters into Japanese controlled territory to undertake sporadic attacks 148 149 In May 1937 a Communist Conference was held in Yan an to discuss the situation 150 Western reporters also arrived in the Border Region as the Soviet had been renamed most notable were Edgar Snow who used his experiences as a basis for Red Star Over China and Agnes Smedley whose accounts brought international attention to Mao s cause 151 In an effort to defeat the Japanese Mao left agreed to collaborate with Chiang right Mao in 1938 writing On Protracted War On the Long March Mao s wife He Zizen had been injured by a shrapnel wound to the head She travelled to Moscow for medical treatment Mao proceeded to divorce her and marry an actress Jiang Qing 152 153 He Zizhen was reportedly dispatched to a mental asylum in Moscow to make room for Qing 154 Mao moved into a cave house and spent much of his time reading tending his garden and theorising 155 He came to believe that the Red Army alone was unable to defeat the Japanese and that a Communist led government of national defence should be formed with the KMT and other bourgeois nationalist elements to achieve this goal 156 Although despising Chiang Kai shek as a traitor to the nation 157 on 5 May he telegrammed the Military Council of the Nanking National Government proposing a military alliance a course of action advocated by Stalin 158 Although Chiang intended to ignore Mao s message and continue the civil war he was arrested by one of his own generals Zhang Xueliang in Xi an leading to the Xi an Incident Zhang forced Chiang to discuss the issue with the Communists resulting in the formation of a United Front with concessions on both sides on 25 December 1937 159 The Japanese had taken both Shanghai and Nanking Nanjing resulting in the Nanking Massacre an atrocity Mao never spoke of all his life and was pushing the Kuomintang government inland to Chungking 160 The Japanese s brutality led to increasing numbers of Chinese joining the fight and the Red Army grew from 50 000 to 500 000 161 162 In August 1938 the Red Army formed the New Fourth Army and the Eighth Route Army which were nominally under the command of Chiang s National Revolutionary Army 163 In August 1940 the Red Army initiated the Hundred Regiments Campaign in which 400 000 troops attacked the Japanese simultaneously in five provinces It was a military success that resulted in the death of 20 000 Japanese the disruption of railways and the loss of a coal mine 162 164 From his base in Yan an Mao authored several texts for his troops including Philosophy of Revolution which offered an introduction to the Marxist theory of knowledge Protracted Warfare which dealt with guerrilla and mobile military tactics and New Democracy which laid forward ideas for China s future 165 Mao with Kang Sheng in Yan an 1945 Resuming civil war 1940 1949 In 1944 the U S sent a special diplomatic envoy called the Dixie Mission to the Chinese Communist Party The American soldiers who were sent to the mission were favourably impressed The party seemed less corrupt more unified and more vigorous in its resistance to Japan than the Kuomintang The soldiers confirmed to their superiors that the party was both strong and popular over a broad area 166 In the end of the mission the contacts which the U S developed with the Chinese Communist Party led to very little 166 After the end of World War II the U S continued their diplomatic and military assistance to Chiang Kai shek and his KMT government forces against the People s Liberation Army PLA led by Mao Zedong during the civil war and abandoned the idea of a coalition government which would include the CCP 167 Likewise the Soviet Union gave support to Mao by occupying north eastern China and secretly giving it to the Chinese communists in March 1946 168 PLA troops supported by captured M5 Stuart light tanks attacking the Nationalist lines in 1948 In 1948 under direct orders from Mao the People s Liberation Army starved out the Kuomintang forces occupying the city of Changchun At least 160 000 civilians are believed to have perished during the siege which lasted from June until October PLA lieutenant colonel Zhang Zhenglu who documented the siege in his book White Snow Red Blood compared it to Hiroshima The casualties were about the same Hiroshima took nine seconds Changchun took five months 169 On 21 January 1949 Kuomintang forces suffered great losses in decisive battles against Mao s forces 170 In the early morning of 10 December 1949 PLA troops laid siege to Chongqing and Chengdu on mainland China and Chiang Kai shek fled from the mainland to Formosa Taiwan 170 171 Leadership of China Mao Zedong declares the founding of the modern People s Republic of China on 1 October 1949 Mao proclaimed the establishment of The People s Republic of China from the Gate of Heavenly Peace Tian anmen on 1 October 1949 and later that week declared The Chinese people have stood up 中国人民从此站起来了 172 Mao went to Moscow for long talks in the winter of 1949 50 Mao initiated the talks which focused on the political and economic revolution in China foreign policy railways naval bases and Soviet economic and technical aid The resulting treaty reflected Stalin s dominance and his willingness to help Mao 173 174 Mao with his fourth wife Jiang Qing called Madame Mao 1946 Mao pushed the Party to organise campaigns to reform society and extend control These campaigns were given urgency in October 1950 when Mao made the decision to send the People s Volunteer Army a special unit of the People s Liberation Army into the Korean War and fight as well as to reinforce the armed forces of North Korea the Korean People s Army which had been in full retreat The United States placed a trade embargo on the People s Republic as a result of its involvement in the Korean War lasting until Richard Nixon s improvements of relations At least 180 thousand Chinese troops died during the war 175 Mao directed operations to the minutest detail As the Chairman of the Central Military Commission CMC he was also the Supreme Commander in Chief of the PLA and the People s Republic and Chairman of the Party Chinese troops in Korea were under the overall command of then newly installed Premier Zhou Enlai with General Peng Dehuai as field commander and political commissar 176 During the land reform campaigns large numbers of landlords and rich peasants were beaten to death at mass meetings organised by the Communist Party as land was taken from them and given to poorer peasants which significantly reduced economic inequality 177 178 The Campaign to Suppress Counter revolutionaries 179 targeted bureaucratic burgeoisie such as compradores merchants and Kuomintang officials who were seen by the party as economic parasites or political enemies 180 In 1976 the U S State department estimated as many as a million were killed in the land reform and 800 000 killed in the counter revolutionary campaign 181 Mao himself claimed that a total of 700 000 people were killed in attacks on counter revolutionaries during the years 1950 1952 182 Because there was a policy to select at least one landlord and usually several in virtually every village for public execution 183 the number of deaths range between 2 million 183 184 179 and 5 million 185 186 In addition at least 1 5 million people 187 perhaps as many as 4 to 6 million 188 were sent to reform through labour camps where many perished 188 Mao played a personal role in organising the mass repressions and established a system of execution quotas 189 which were often exceeded 179 He defended these killings as necessary for the securing of power 190 Mao at Joseph Stalin s 70th birthday celebration in Moscow December 1949 The Mao government is credited with eradicating both consumption and production of opium during the 1950s using unrestrained repression and social reform 7 191 Ten million addicts were forced into compulsory treatment dealers were executed and opium producing regions were planted with new crops Remaining opium production shifted south of the Chinese border into the Golden Triangle region 191 Starting in 1951 Mao initiated two successive movements in an effort to rid urban areas of corruption by targeting wealthy capitalists and political opponents known as the three anti five anti campaigns Whereas the three anti campaign was a focused purge of government industrial and party officials the five anti campaign set its sights slightly broader targeting capitalist elements in general 192 Workers denounced their bosses spouses turned on their spouses and children informed on their parents the victims were often humiliated at struggle sessions where a targeted person would be verbally and physically abused until they confessed to crimes Mao insisted that minor offenders be criticised and reformed or sent to labour camps while the worst among them should be shot These campaigns took several hundred thousand additional lives the vast majority via suicide 193 Mao and Zhou Enlai meeting with Dalai Lama right and Panchen Lama left to celebrate Tibetan New Year Beijing 1955 In Shanghai suicide by jumping from tall buildings became so commonplace that residents avoided walking on the pavement near skyscrapers for fear that suicides might land on them 194 Some biographers have pointed out that driving those perceived as enemies to suicide was a common tactic during the Mao era In his biography of Mao Philip Short notes that Mao gave explicit instructions in the Yan an Rectification Movement that no cadre is to be killed but in practice allowed security chief Kang Sheng to drive opponents to suicide and that this pattern was repeated throughout his leadership of the People s Republic 195 Photo of Mao Zedong sitting published in Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse Tung ca 1955 Following the consolidation of power Mao launched the First Five Year Plan 1953 1958 which emphasised rapid industrial development Within industry iron and steel electric power coal heavy engineering building materials and basic chemicals were prioritised with the aim of constructing large and highly capital intensive plants Many of these plants were built with Soviet assistance and heavy industry grew rapidly 196 Agriculture industry and trade was organised on a collective basis socialist cooperatives 197 This period marked the beginning of China s rapid industrialisation and it resulted in an enormous success 198 Programs pursued during this time include the Hundred Flowers Campaign in which Mao indicated his supposed willingness to consider different opinions about how China should be governed Given the freedom to express themselves liberal and intellectual Chinese began opposing the Communist Party and questioning its leadership This was initially tolerated and encouraged After a few months Mao s government reversed its policy and persecuted those who had criticised the party totalling perhaps 500 000 199 as well as those who were merely alleged to have been critical in what is called the Anti Rightist Movement Li Zhisui Mao s physician suggested that Mao had initially seen the policy as a way of weakening opposition to him within the party and that he was surprised by the extent of criticism and the fact that it came to be directed at his own leadership 200 Great Leap Forward Main article Great Leap Forward Mao with Nikita Khrushchev Ho Chi Minh and Soong Ching ling during a state dinner in Beijing 1959 In January 1958 Mao launched the second Five Year Plan known as the Great Leap Forward a plan intended to turn China from an agrarian nation to an industrialised one 201 and as an alternative model for economic growth to the Soviet model focusing on heavy industry that was advocated by others in the party Under this economic program the relatively small agricultural collectives that had been formed to date were rapidly merged into far larger people s communes and many of the peasants were ordered to work on massive infrastructure projects and on the production of iron and steel Some private food production was banned and livestock and farm implements were brought under collective ownership 202 page needed Under the Great Leap Forward Mao and other party leaders ordered the implementation of a variety of unproven and unscientific new agricultural techniques by the new communes The combined effect of the diversion of labour to steel production and infrastructure projects and cyclical natural disasters led to an approximately 15 drop in grain production in 1959 followed by a further 10 decline in 1960 and no recovery in 1961 203 In an effort to win favour with their superiors and avoid being purged each layer in the party exaggerated the amount of grain produced under them Based upon the falsely reported success party cadres were ordered to requisition a disproportionately high amount of that fictitious harvest for state use primarily for use in the cities and urban areas but also for export The result compounded in some areas by drought and in others by floods was that farmers were left with little food for themselves and many millions starved to death in the Great Chinese Famine The people of urban areas in China were given food stamps each month but the people of rural areas were expected to grow their own crops and give some of the crops back to the government The death count in rural parts of China surpassed the deaths in the urban centers Additionally the Chinese government continued to export food that could have been allocated to the country s starving citizens 204 The famine was a direct cause of the death of some 30 million Chinese peasants between 1959 and 1962 205 Furthermore many children who became malnourished during years of hardship died after the Great Leap Forward came to an end in 1962 203 In late autumn 1958 Mao condemned the practices that were being used during Great Leap Forward such as forcing peasants to do exhausting labour without enough food or rest which resulted in epidemics and starvation He also acknowledged that anti rightist campaigns were a major cause of production at the expense of livelihood He refused to abandon the Great Leap Forward to solve these difficulties but he did demand that they be confronted After the July 1959 clash at Lushan Conference with Peng Dehuai Mao launched a new anti rightist campaign along with the radical policies that he previously abandoned It wasn t until the spring of 1960 that Mao would again express concern about abnormal deaths and other abuses but he did not move to stop them Bernstein concludes that the Chairman wilfully ignored the lessons of the first radical phase for the sake of achieving extreme ideological and developmental goals 206 Jasper Becker notes that Mao was dismissive of reports he received of food shortages in the countryside and refused to change course believing that peasants were lying and that rightists and kulaks were hoarding grain He refused to open state granaries 207 and instead launched a series of anti grain concealment drives that resulted in numerous purges and suicides 208 Other violent campaigns followed in which party leaders went from village to village in search of hidden food reserves and not only grain as Mao issued quotas for pigs chickens ducks and eggs Many peasants accused of hiding food were tortured and beaten to death 209 The extent of Mao s knowledge of the severity of the situation has been disputed Mao s personal physician Li Zhisui said that Mao may have been unaware of the extent of the famine partly due to a reluctance of local officials to criticise his policies and the willingness of his staff to exaggerate or outright fake reports 210 Li writes that upon learning of the extent of the starvation Mao vowed to stop eating meat an action followed by his staff 211 Mao stepped down as President of China on 27 April 1959 however he retained other top positions such as Chairman of the Communist Party and of the Central Military Commission 212 The Presidency was transferred to Liu Shaoqi 212 He was eventually forced to abandon the policy in 1962 and he lost political power to Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping 213 The Great Leap Forward was a tragedy for the vast majority of the Chinese Although the steel quotas were officially reached almost all of the supposed steel made in the countryside was iron as it had been made from assorted scrap metal in home made furnaces with no reliable source of fuel such as coal This meant that proper smelting conditions could not be achieved According to Zhang Rongmei a geometry teacher in rural Shanghai during the Great Leap Forward We took all the furniture pots and pans we had in our house and all our neighbours did likewise We put everything in a big fire and melted down all the metal citation needed The worst of the famine was steered towards enemies of the state 214 Jasper Becker explains The most vulnerable section of China s population around five percent were those whom Mao called enemies of the people Anyone who had in previous campaigns of repression been labeled a black element was given the lowest priority in the allocation of food Landlords rich peasants former members of the nationalist regime religious leaders rightists counter revolutionaries and the families of such individuals died in the greatest numbers 215 According to official Chinese statistics for Second Five Year Plan 1958 1962 industrial output value value had doubled the gross value of agricultural products increased by 35 percent steel production in 1962 was between 10 6 million tons or 12 million tons investment in capital construction rose to 40 percent from 35 percent in the First Five Year Plan period the investment in capital construction was doubled and the average income of workers and farmers increased by up to 30 percent 216 At a large Communist Party conference in Beijing in January 1962 dubbed the Seven Thousand Cadres Conference State Chairman Liu Shaoqi denounced the Great Leap Forward attributing the project to widespread famine in China 217 The overwhelming majority of delegates expressed agreement but Defense Minister Lin Biao staunchly defended Mao 217 A brief period of liberalisation followed while Mao and Lin plotted a comeback 217 Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping rescued the economy by disbanding the people s communes introducing elements of private control of peasant smallholdings and importing grain from Canada and Australia to mitigate the worst effects of famine 218 Consequences Mao with Henry Kissinger and Zhou Enlai Beijing 1972 At the Lushan Conference in July August 1959 several ministers expressed concern that the Great Leap Forward had not proved as successful as planned The most direct of these was Minister of Defence and Korean War veteran General Peng Dehuai Following Peng s criticism of the Great Leap Forward Mao orchestrated a purge of Peng and his supporters stifling criticism of the Great Leap policies Senior officials who reported the truth of the famine to Mao were branded as right opportunists 219 A campaign against right wing opportunism was launched and resulted in party members and ordinary peasants being sent to prison labour camps where many would subsequently die in the famine Years later the CCP would conclude that as many as six million people were wrongly punished in the campaign 220 The number of deaths by starvation during the Great Leap Forward is deeply controversial Until the mid 1980s when official census figures were finally published by the Chinese Government little was known about the scale of the disaster in the Chinese countryside as the handful of Western observers allowed access during this time had been restricted to model villages where they were deceived into believing that the Great Leap Forward had been a great success There was also an assumption that the flow of individual reports of starvation that had been reaching the West primarily through Hong Kong and Taiwan must have been localised or exaggerated as China was continuing to claim record harvests and was a net exporter of grain through the period Because Mao wanted to pay back early to the Soviets debts totalling 1 973 billion yuan from 1960 to 1962 221 exports increased by 50 and fellow Communist regimes in North Korea North Vietnam and Albania were provided grain free of charge 207 Censuses were carried out in China in 1953 1964 and 1982 The first attempt to analyse this data to estimate the number of famine deaths was carried out by American demographer Dr Judith Banister and published in 1984 Given the lengthy gaps between the censuses and doubts over the reliability of the data an accurate figure is difficult to ascertain Nevertheless Banister concluded that the official data implied that around 15 million excess deaths incurred in China during 1958 61 and that based on her modelling of Chinese demographics during the period and taking account of assumed under reporting during the famine years the figure was around 30 million Hu Yaobang a high ranking official of the CCP states that 20 million people died according to official government statistics 222 Yang Jisheng a former Xinhua News Agency reporter who had privileged access and connections available to no other scholars estimates a death toll of 36 million 221 Frank Dikotter estimates that there were at least 45 million premature deaths attributable to the Great Leap Forward from 1958 to 1962 223 Various other sources have put the figure at between 20 and 46 million 224 225 226 Split from Soviet Union Main article Sino Soviet split U S President Gerald Ford watches as Henry Kissinger shakes hands with Mao during their visit to China 2 December 1975 On the international front the period was dominated by the further isolation of China The Sino Soviet split resulted in Nikita Khrushchev s withdrawal of all Soviet technical experts and aid from the country The split concerned the leadership of world communism The USSR had a network of Communist parties it supported China now created its own rival network to battle it out for local control of the left in numerous countries 227 Lorenz M Luthi writes The Sino Soviet split was one of the key events of the Cold War equal in importance to the construction of the Berlin Wall the Cuban Missile Crisis the Second Vietnam War and Sino American rapprochement The split helped to determine the framework of the Second Cold War in general and influenced the course of the Second Vietnam War in particular 228 The split resulted from Khrushchev s more moderate Soviet leadership after the death of Stalin in March 1953 Only Albania openly sided with China thereby forming an alliance between the two countries which would last until after Mao s death in 1976 Warned that the Soviets had nuclear weapons Mao minimised the threat Becker says that Mao believed that the bomb was a paper tiger declaring to Khrushchev that it would not matter if China lost 300 million people in a nuclear war the other half of the population would survive to ensure victory 229 Struggle against Soviet revisionism and U S imperialism was an important aspect of Mao s attempt to direct the revolution in the right direction 230 Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution Main article Cultural Revolution A public appearance of Chairman Mao and Lin Biao among Red Guards in Beijing during the Cultural Revolution November 1966 During the early 1960s Mao became concerned with the nature of post 1959 China He saw that the revolution and Great Leap Forward had replaced the old ruling elite with a new one He was concerned that those in power were becoming estranged from the people they were to serve Mao believed that a revolution of culture would unseat and unsettle the ruling class and keep China in a state of continuous revolution that theoretically would serve the interests of the majority rather than a tiny and privileged elite 231 State Chairman Liu Shaoqi and General Secretary Deng Xiaoping favoured the idea that Mao be removed from actual power as China s head of state and government but maintain his ceremonial and symbolic role as Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party with the party upholding all of his positive contributions to the revolution They attempted to marginalise Mao by taking control of economic policy and asserting themselves politically as well Many claim that Mao responded to Liu and Deng s movements by launching the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in 1966 Some scholars such as Mobo Gao claim the case for this is overstated 232 Others such as Frank Dikotter hold that Mao launched the Cultural Revolution to wreak revenge on those who had dared to challenge him over the Great Leap Forward 233 The Cultural Revolution led to the destruction of much of China s traditional cultural heritage and the imprisonment of a huge number of Chinese citizens as well as the creation of general economic and social chaos in the country Millions of lives were ruined during this period as the Cultural Revolution pierced into every part of Chinese life depicted by such Chinese films as To Live The Blue Kite and Farewell My Concubine It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of people perhaps millions perished in the violence of the Cultural Revolution 226 This included prominent figures such as Liu Shaoqi 234 235 236 When Mao was informed of such losses particularly that people had been driven to suicide he is alleged to have commented People who try to commit suicide don t attempt to save them China is such a populous nation it is not as if we cannot do without a few people 237 The authorities allowed the Red Guards to abuse and kill opponents of the regime Said Xie Fuzhi national police chief Don t say it is wrong of them to beat up bad persons if in anger they beat someone to death then so be it 238 In August and September 1966 there were a reported 1 772 people murdered by the Red Guards in Beijing alone 239 It was during this period that Mao chose Lin Biao who seemed to echo all of Mao s ideas to become his successor Lin was later officially named as Mao s successor By 1971 a divide between the two men had become apparent Official history in China states that Lin was planning a military coup or an assassination attempt on Mao Lin Biao died on 13 September 1971 in a plane crash over the air space of Mongolia presumably as he fled China probably anticipating his arrest The CCP declared that Lin was planning to depose Mao and posthumously expelled Lin from the party At this time Mao lost trust in many of the top CCP figures The highest ranking Soviet Bloc intelligence defector Lt Gen Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed he had a conversation with Nicolae Ceaușescu who told him about a plot to kill Mao Zedong with the help of Lin Biao organised by the KGB 240 Despite being considered a feminist figure by some and a supporter of women s rights documents released by the US Department of State in 2008 show that Mao declared women to be a nonsense in 1973 in conversation with Henry Kissinger joking that China is a very poor country We don t have much What we have in excess is women Let them go to your place They will create disasters That way you can lessen our burdens 241 When Mao offered 10 million women Kissinger replied by saying that Mao was improving his offer 242 Mao and Kissinger then agreed that their comments on women be removed from public records prompted by a Chinese official who feared that Mao s comments might incur public anger if released 243 In 1969 Mao declared the Cultural Revolution to be over although various historians in and outside of China mark the end of the Cultural Revolution as a whole or in part in 1976 following Mao s death and the arrest of the Gang of Four 244 The Central Committee in 1981 officially declared the Cultural Revolution a severe setback for the PRC 245 It is often looked at in all scholarly circles as a greatly disruptive period for China 246 Despite the pro poor rhetoric of Mao s regime his economic policies led to substantial poverty 247 Some scholars such as Lee Feigon and Mobo Gao claim there were many great advances and in some sectors the Chinese economy continued to outperform the West 248 Estimates of the death toll during the Cultural Revolution including civilians and Red Guards vary greatly An estimate of around 400 000 deaths is a widely accepted minimum figure according to Maurice Meisner 249 MacFarquhar and Schoenhals assert that in rural China alone some 36 million people were persecuted of whom between 750 000 and 1 5 million were killed with roughly the same number permanently injured 250 Historian Daniel Leese writes that in the 1950s Mao s personality was hardening The impression of Mao s personality that emerges from the literature is disturbing It reveals a certain temporal development from a down to earth leader who was amicable when uncontested and occasionally reflected on the limits of his power to an increasingly ruthless and self indulgent dictator Mao s preparedness to accept criticism decreased continuously 251 State visitsCountry Date Host Soviet Union 16 December 1949 Joseph Stalin Soviet Union 2 19 November 1957 Nikita KhrushchevDuring his leadership Mao travelled outside China on only two occasions both state visits to the Soviet Union His first visit abroad was to celebrate the 70th birthday of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin which was also attended by East German Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Walter Ulbricht and Mongolian communist General Secretary Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal 252 The second visit to Moscow was a two week state visit of which the highlights included Mao s attendance at the 40th anniversary Ruby Jubilee celebrations of the October Revolution he attended the annual military parade of the Moscow Garrison on Red Square as well as a banquet in the Moscow Kremlin and the International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties where he met with other communist leaders such as North Korea s Kim Il Sung 253 and Albania s Enver Hoxha When Mao stepped down as head of state on 27 April 1959 further diplomatic state visits and travels abroad were undertaken by President Liu Shaoqi Premier Zhou Enlai and Deputy Premier Deng Xiaoping rather than Mao personally citation needed Death and aftermathMain article Death and state funeral of Mao Zedong Further information Mausoleum of Mao Zedong Mao s health declined in his last years probably aggravated by his chain smoking 254 It became a state secret that he suffered from multiple lung and heart ailments during his later years 255 There are unconfirmed reports that he possibly had Parkinson s disease 256 in addition to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis also known as Lou Gehrig s disease 257 His final public appearance and the last known photograph of him alive had been on 27 May 1976 when he met the visiting Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto 258 He suffered two major heart attacks one in March and another in July then a third on 5 September rendering him an invalid He died nearly four days later at 00 10 on 9 September 1976 at the age of 82 The Communist Party delayed the announcement of his death until 16 00 when a national radio broadcast announced the news and appealed for party unity 259 Mao s embalmed body draped in the CCP flag lay in state at the Great Hall of the People for one week 260 One million Chinese filed past to pay their final respects many crying openly or displaying sadness while foreigners watched on television 261 262 Mao s official portrait hung on the wall with a banner reading Carry on the cause left by Chairman Mao and carry on the cause of proletarian revolution to the end 260 On 17 September the body was taken in a minibus to the 305 Hospital where his internal organs were preserved in formaldehyde 260 On 18 September guns sirens whistles and horns across China were simultaneously blown and a mandatory three minute silence was observed 263 Tiananmen Square was packed with millions of people and a military band played The Internationale Hua Guofeng concluded the service with a 20 minute long eulogy atop Tiananmen Gate 264 Despite Mao s request to be cremated his body was later permanently put on display in the Mausoleum of Mao Zedong in order for the Chinese nation to pay its respects 265 Legacy A large portrait of Mao at Tiananmen The simple facts of Mao s career seem incredible in a vast land of 400 million people at age 28 with a dozen others to found a party and in the next fifty years to win power organize and remold the people and reshape the land history records no greater achievement Alexander Caesar Charlemagne all the kings of Europe Napoleon Bismarck Lenin no predecessor can equal Mao Tse tung s scope of accomplishment for no other country was ever so ancient and so big as China John King Fairbank American historian 266 Eternal rebel refusing to be bound by the laws of God or man nature or Marxism he led his people for three decades in pursuit of a vision initially noble which turned increasingly into a mirage and then into a nightmare Was he a Faust or Prometheus attempting the impossible for the sake of humanity or a despot of unbridled ambition drunk with his own power and his own cleverness Stuart R Schram The Thought of Mao Tse Tung 1989 267 Mao remains a controversial figure and there is little agreement over his legacy both in China and abroad He is regarded as one of the most important and influential individuals in the twentieth century 268 269 He is also known as a political intellect theorist military strategist poet and visionary 270 He was credited and praised for driving imperialism out of China 271 having unified China and for ending the previous decades of civil war He is also credited with having improved the status of women in China and for improving literacy and education In December 2013 a poll from the state run Global Times indicated that roughly 85 of the 1 045 respondents surveyed felt that Mao s achievements outweighed his mistakes 272 His policies resulted in the deaths of tens of millions of people in China during his 27 year reign more than any other 20th century leader estimates of the number of people who died under his regime range from 40 million to as many as 80 million 273 274 done through starvation persecution prison labour in laogai and mass executions 195 273 Mao rarely gave direct instruction for peoples physical elimination b 195 According to biographer Philip Short the overwhelming majority of those killed by Mao s policies were unintended casualties of famine while the other three or four million in Mao s view were the necessary victim s in the struggle to transform China 275 Many sources describe Mao s China as an autocratic and totalitarian regime responsible for mass repression as well as the destruction of religious and cultural artifacts and sites particularly during the Cultural Revolution 276 China s population grew from around 550 million to over 900 million under his rule while the government did not strictly enforce its family planning policy leading his successors such as Deng Xiaoping to take a strict one child policy to cope with human overpopulation 277 278 Mao s revolutionary tactics continue to be used by insurgents and his political ideology continues to be embraced by many Communist organisations around the world 279 Had Mao died in 1956 his achievements would have been immortal Had he died in 1966 he would still have been a great man but flawed But he died in 1976 Alas what can one say Chen Yun a leading Chinese Communist Party official under Mao and Deng Xiaoping 280 Mao Zedong Square at Saoshan In mainland China Mao is revered by many members and supporters of the Chinese Communist Party and respected by a great number of the general population Mobo Gao in his 2008 book The Battle for China s Past Mao and the Cultural Revolution credits him for raising the average life expectancy from 35 in 1949 to 63 by 1975 bringing unity and stability to a country that had been plagued by civil wars and foreign invasions and laying the foundation for China to become the equal of the great global powers 281 Gao also lauds him for carrying out massive land reform promoting the status of women improving popular literacy and positively transform ing Chinese society beyond recognition 281 Mao is credited for boosting literacy only 20 of the population could read in 1949 compared to 65 5 thirty years later doubling life expectancy a near doubling of the population and developing China s industry and infrastructure paving the way for its position as a world power 282 9 10 Mao also has Chinese critics Opposition to him can lead to censorship or professional repercussions in mainland China 283 and is often done in private settings such as the Internet 284 When a video of Bi Fujian insulting him at a private dinner in 2015 went viral Bi garnered the support of Weibo users with 80 of them saying in a poll that Bi should not apologize amidst backlash from state affiliates 285 286 In the West Mao has a bad reputation He is known for the deaths during the Great Leap Forward and for persecutions during the Cultural Revolution Chinese citizens are aware of Mao s mistakes but nonetheless many see Mao as a national hero He is seen as someone who successfully liberated the country from Japanese occupation and from Western imperialist exploitation dating back to the Opium Wars 287 A 2019 study showed that a sizeable amount of the Chinese population when asked about the Maoist era described a world of purity and simplicity where life had clear meaning people trusted and helped one another and inequality was minimal 287 According to the study older people felt some degree of nostalgia for the past and expressed support for Mao even while acknowledging negative experiences 287 Statue of young Mao in Changsha the capital of Hunan Though the Chinese Communist Party which Mao led to power has rejected in practice the economic fundamentals of much of Mao s ideology it retains for itself many of the powers established under Mao s reign it controls the Chinese army police courts and media and does not permit multi party elections at the national or local level except in Hong Kong and Macau Thus it is difficult to gauge the true extent of support for the Chinese Communist Party and Mao s legacy within mainland China For its part the Chinese government continues to officially regard Mao as a national hero On 25 December 2008 China opened the Mao Zedong Square to visitors in his home town of central Hunan Province to mark the 115th anniversary of his birth 288 A talented Chinese politician an historian a poet and philosopher an all powerful dictator and energetic organizer a skillful diplomat and utopian socialist the head of the most populous state resting on his laurels but at the same time an indefatigable revolutionary who sincerely attempted to refashion the way of life and consciousness of millions of people a hero of national revolution and a bloody social reformer this is how Mao goes down in history The scale of his life was too grand to be reduced to a single meaning Alexander V Pantsov and Steven I Levine Mao The Real Story 2012 289 There continue to be disagreements on Mao s legacy Former party official Su Shachi has opined that he was a great historical criminal but he was also a great force for good 290 In a similar vein journalist Liu Binyan has described Mao as both monster and a genius 290 Some historians argue that Mao was one of the great tyrants of the twentieth century and a dictator comparable to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin 291 292 with a death toll surpassing both 195 273 In The Black Book of Communism Jean Louis Margolin writes that Mao Zedong was so powerful that he was often known as the Red Emperor the violence he erected into a whole system far exceeds any national tradition of violence that we might find in China 293 Mao was frequently likened to the First Emperor of a unified China Qin Shi Huang and personally enjoyed the comparison 294 During a speech to party cadre in 1958 Mao said he had far outdone Qin Shi Huang in his policy against intellectuals What did he amount to He only buried alive 460 scholars while we buried 46 000 In our suppression of the counter revolutionaries did we not kill some counter revolutionary intellectuals I once debated with the democratic people You accuse us of acting like Ch in shih huang but you are wrong we surpass him 100 times 295 296 As a result of such tactics critics have compared it to Nazi Germany 292 c External video Booknotes interview with Philip Short on Mao A Life April 2 2000 C SPANOthers such as Philip Short in Mao A Life reject comparisons by saying that whereas the deaths caused by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia were largely systematic and deliberate the overwhelming majority of the deaths under Mao were unintended consequences of famine 275 Short stated that landlord class were not exterminated as a people due to Mao s belief in redemption through thought reform 275 and compared Mao with 19th century Chinese reformers who challenged China s traditional beliefs in the era of China s clashes with Western colonial powers Short writes that Mao s tragedy and his grandeur were that he remained to the end in thrall to his own revolutionary dreams He freed China from the straitjacket of its Confucian past but the bright Red future he promised turned out to be a sterile purgatory 275 In their 2013 biography Mao The Real Story Alexander V Pantsov and Steven I Levine assert that Mao was both a successful creator and ultimately an evil destroyer but also argue that he was a complicated figure who should not be lionised as a saint or reduced to a demon as he indeed tried his best to bring about prosperity and gain international respect for his country 297 In 1978 the classroom of a kindergarten in Shanghai putting up portraits of then Chairman Hua Guofeng and former Chairman Mao Zedong Mao s way of thinking and governing was terrifying He put no value on human life The deaths of others meant nothing to him Li Rui Mao s personal secretary and Communist Party comrade 298 Mao s English interpreter Sidney Rittenberg wrote in his memoir The Man Who Stayed Behind that whilst Mao was a great leader in history he was also a great criminal because not that he wanted to not that he intended to but in fact his wild fantasies led to the deaths of tens of millions of people 299 Dikotter argues that CCP leaders glorified violence and were inured to massive loss of life And all of them shared an ideology in which the end justified the means In 1962 having lost millions of people in his province Li Jingquan compared the Great Leap Forward to the Long March in which only one in ten had made it to the end We are not weak we are stronger we have kept the backbone 300 Regarding the large scale irrigation projects Dikotter stresses that in spite of Mao being in a good position to see the human cost they continued unabated for several years and ultimately claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of exhausted villagers He also writes In a chilling precursor of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge villagers in Qingshui and Gansu called these projects the killing fields 301 Mao greets U S President Richard Nixon during his visit to China in 1972 The United States placed a trade embargo on the People s Republic as a result of its involvement in the Korean War lasting until Richard Nixon decided that developing relations with the PRC would be useful in dealing with the Soviet Union 302 The television series Biography stated Mao turned China from a feudal backwater into one of the most powerful countries in the World The Chinese system he overthrew was backward and corrupt few would argue the fact that he dragged China into the 20th century But at a cost in human lives that is staggering 290 In the book China in the 21st Century What Everyone Needs to Know published in 2010 Professor Jeffrey Wasserstrom of the University of California Irvine compares China s relationship to Mao to Americans remembrance of Andrew Jackson both countries regard the leaders in a positive light despite their respective roles in devastating policies Jackson forcibly moved Native Americans through the Trail of Tears resulting in thousands of deaths while Mao was at the helm during the violent years of the Cultural Revolution and the Great Leap Forward 303 d Statue of Mao in Lijiang I should remind you that Chairman Mao dedicated most of his life to China that he saved the party and the revolution in their most critical moments that in short his contribution was so great that without him the Chinese people would have had a much harder time finding the right path out of the darkness We also shouldn t forget that it was Chairman Mao who combined the teachings of Marx and Lenin with the realities of Chinese history that it was he who applied those principles creatively not only to politics but to philosophy art literature and military strategy Deng Xiaoping 304 The ideology of Maoism has influenced many Communists mainly in the Third World including revolutionary movements such as Cambodia s Khmer Rouge 305 Peru s Shining Path and the Nepalese revolutionary movement Under the influence of Mao s agrarian socialism and Cultural Revolution Cambodia s Pol Pot conceived of his disastrous Year Zero policies which purged the nation of its teachers artists and intellectuals and emptied its cities resulting in the Cambodian genocide 306 The Revolutionary Communist Party USA also claims Marxism Leninism Maoism as its ideology as do other Communist Parties around the world which are part of the Revolutionary Internationalist Movement China itself has moved sharply away from Maoism since Mao s death and most people outside of China who describe themselves as Maoist regard the Deng Xiaoping reforms to be a betrayal of Maoism in line with Mao s view of Capitalist roaders within the Communist Party 307 As the Chinese government instituted free market economic reforms starting in the late 1970s and as later Chinese leaders took power less recognition was given to the status of Mao This accompanied a decline in state recognition of Mao in later years in contrast to previous years when the state organised numerous events and seminars commemorating Mao s 100th birthday Nevertheless the Chinese government has never officially repudiated the tactics of Mao Deng Xiaoping who was opposed to the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution stated that when we write about his mistakes we should not exaggerate for otherwise we shall be discrediting Chairman Mao Zedong and this would mean discrediting our party and state 308 Mao s military writings continue to have a large amount of influence both among those who seek to create an insurgency and those who seek to crush one especially in manners of guerrilla warfare at which Mao is popularly regarded as a genius 309 The Nepali Maoists were highly influenced by Mao s views on protracted war new democracy support of masses permanency of revolution and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution 310 Mao s major contribution to the military science is his theory of People s War with not only guerrilla warfare but more importantly Mobile Warfare methodologies Mao had successfully applied Mobile Warfare in the Korean War and was able to encircle push back and then halt the UN forces in Korea despite the clear superiority of UN firepower citation needed In 1957 Mao also gave the impression that he might even welcome a nuclear war 311 e Mao s poems and writings are frequently cited by both Chinese and non Chinese The official Chinese translation of President Barack Obama s inauguration speech used a famous line from one of Mao s poems 315 In the mid 1990s Mao s picture began to appear on all new renminbi currency from the People s Republic of China This was officially instituted as an anti counterfeiting measure as Mao s face is widely recognised in contrast to the generic figures that appear in older currency On 13 March 2006 a story in the People s Daily reported that a proposal had been made to print the portraits of Sun Yat sen and Deng Xiaoping 316 Public image Mao gave contradicting statements on the subject of personality cults In 1955 as a response to the Khrushchev Report that criticised Joseph Stalin Mao stated that personality cults are poisonous ideological survivals of the old society and reaffirmed China s commitment to collective leadership 317 At the 1958 party congress in Chengdu Mao expressed support for the personality cults of people whom he labelled as genuinely worthy figures not those that expressed blind worship 318 In 1962 Mao proposed the Socialist Education Movement SEM in an attempt to educate the peasants to resist the temptations of feudalism and the sprouts of capitalism that he saw re emerging in the countryside from Liu s economic reforms 319 Large quantities of politicised art were produced and circulated with Mao at the centre Numerous posters badges and musical compositions referenced Mao in the phrase Chairman Mao is the red sun in our hearts 毛主席是我們心中的紅太陽 Mao Zhǔxi Shi Wǒmen Xinzhōng De Hong Taiyang 320 and a Savior of the people 人民的大救星 Renmin De Da Jiuxing 320 In October 1966 Mao s Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse tung known as the Little Red Book was published Party members were encouraged to carry a copy with them and possession was almost mandatory as a criterion for membership According to Mao The Unknown Story by Jun Yang the mass publication and sale of this text contributed to making Mao the only millionaire created in 1950s China 332 Over the years Mao s image became displayed almost everywhere present in homes offices and shops His quotations were typographically emphasised by putting them in boldface or red type in even the most obscure writings Music from the period emphasised Mao s stature as did children s rhymes The phrase Long Live Chairman Mao for ten thousand years was commonly heard during the era 321 Visitors wait in line to enter the Mao Zedong Mausoleum Mao also has a presence in China and around the world in popular culture where his face adorns everything from T shirts to coffee cups Mao s granddaughter Kong Dongmei defended the phenomenon stating that it shows his influence that he exists in people s consciousness and has influenced several generations of Chinese people s way of life Just like Che Guevara s image his has become a symbol of revolutionary culture 299 Since 1950 over 40 million people have visited Mao s birthplace in Shaoshan Hunan 322 A 2016 survey by YouGov survey found that 42 of American millennials have never heard of Mao 323 324 According to the CIS poll in 2019 only 21 of Australian millennials were familiar with Mao Zedong 325 In 2020s China members of Generation Z are embracing Mao s revolutionary ideas including violence against the capitalist class amid rising social inequality long working hours and decreasing economic opportunities 326 GenealogyAncestors Mao s ancestors were Mao Yichang 毛貽昌 born Xiangtan 1870 died Shaoshan 1920 father courtesy name Mao Shunsheng 毛順生 or also known as Mao Jen sheng Wen Qimei 文七妹 born Xiangxiang 1867 died 1919 mother She was illiterate and a devout Buddhist She was a descendant of Wen Tianxiang Mao Enpǔ 毛恩普 born 1846 died 1904 paternal grandfather Liu 劉 刘 given name not recorded born 1847 died 1884 327 paternal grandmother Mao Zǔren 毛祖人 paternal great grandfatherWives Mao with Jiang Qing and daughter Li Na in the 1940s Mao had four wives who gave birth to a total of 10 children among them Luo Yixiu 1889 1910 of Shaoshan married 1907 to 1910 Yang Kaihui 1901 1930 of Changsha married 1921 to 1927 executed by the KMT in 1930 mother to Mao Anying Mao Anqing and Mao Anlong He Zizhen 1910 1984 of Jiangxi married May 1928 to 1937 mother to 6 children Jiang Qing 1914 1991 married 1939 until Mao s death mother to Li NaSiblings Mao had several siblings Mao Zemin 1895 1943 younger brother executed by a warlord Mao Zetan 1905 1935 younger brother executed by the KMT Mao Zejian 1905 1929 adopted sister executed by the KMTMao s parents altogether had five sons and two daughters Two of the sons and both daughters died young leaving the three brothers Mao Zedong Mao Zemin and Mao Zetan Like all three of Mao Zedong s wives Mao Zemin and Mao Zetan were communists Like Yang Kaihui both Mao Zemin and Mao Zetan were killed in warfare during Mao Zedong s lifetime Note that the character ze 澤 appears in all of the siblings given names this is a common Chinese naming convention From the next generation Mao Zemin s son Mao Yuanxin was raised by Mao Zedong s family and he became Mao Zedong s liaison with the Politburo in 1975 In Li Zhisui s The Private Life of Chairman Mao Mao Yuanxin played a role in the final power struggles 328 Children Mao had a total of ten children 329 including Mao Anying 1922 1950 son to Yang married to Liu Siqi 劉思齊 killed in action during the Korean War Mao Anqing 1923 2007 son to Yang married to Shao Hua son Mao Xinyu grandson Mao Dongdong Mao Anlong 1927 1931 son to Yang died during the Chinese Civil War Mao Anhong son to He left to Mao s younger brother Zetan and then to one of Zetan s guards when he went off to war was never heard of again Li Min b 1936 daughter to He married to Kǒng Linghua 孔令華 son Kǒng Jining 孔繼寧 daughter Kǒng Dōngmei 孔冬梅 Li Na b 1940 daughter to Jiang whose birth surname was Lǐ a name also used by Mao while evading the KMT married to Wang Jǐngqing 王景清 son Wang Xiaozhi 王效芝 Mao s first and second daughters were left to local villagers because it was too dangerous to raise them while fighting the Kuomintang and later the Japanese Their youngest daughter born in early 1938 in Moscow after Mao separated and one other child born 1933 died in infancy Two English researchers who retraced the entire Long March route in 2002 2003 330 located a woman whom they believe might well be one of the missing children abandoned by Mao to peasants in 1935 Ed Jocelyn and Andrew McEwen hope a member of the Mao family will respond to requests for a DNA test 331 Through his ten children Mao became grandfather to twelve grandchildren many of whom he never knew He has many great grandchildren alive today One of his granddaughters is businesswoman Kong Dongmei one of the richest people in China 332 His grandson Mao Xinyu is a general in the Chinese army 333 Both he and Kong have written books about their grandfather 334 Personal life Mao and Zhang Yufeng in 1964 Mao s private life was kept very secret at the time of his rule After Mao s death Li Zhisui his personal physician published The Private Life of Chairman Mao a memoir which mentions some aspects of Mao s private life such as chain smoking cigarettes addiction to powerful sleeping pills and large number of sexual partners 335 Some scholars and others who knew Mao personally have disputed the accuracy of these characterisations 336 Having grown up in Hunan Mao spoke Mandarin with a marked Hunanese accent 337 Ross Terrill wrote Mao was a son of the soil rural and unsophisticated in origins 338 while Clare Hollingworth said that Mao was proud of his peasant ways and manners having a strong Hunanese accent and providing earthy comments on sexual matters 337 Lee Feigon said that Mao s earthiness meant that he remained connected to everyday Chinese life 339 Sinologist Stuart Schram emphasised Mao s ruthlessness but also noted that he showed no sign of taking pleasure in torture or killing in the revolutionary cause 122 Lee Feigon considered Mao draconian and authoritarian when threatened but opined that he was not the kind of villain that his mentor Stalin was 340 Alexander Pantsov and Steven I Levine wrote that Mao was a man of complex moods who tried his best to bring about prosperity and gain international respect for China being neither a saint nor a demon 341 They noted that in early life he strove to be a strong wilful and purposeful hero not bound by any moral chains and that he passionately desired fame and power 342 Mao learned to speak some English particularly through Zhang Hanzhi his English teacher interpreter and diplomat who later married Qiao Guanhua Foreign Minister of China and the head of China s UN delegation 343 His spoken English was limited to a few single words phrases and some short sentences He first chose to systematically learn English in the 1950s which was very unusual as the main foreign language first taught in Chinese schools at that time was Russian 344 Writings and calligraphy Mao s calligraphy a bronze plaque of a poem by Li Bai Chinese 白帝城毛澤東手書李白詩銅匾 鷹擊長空 魚翔淺底 萬類霜天競自由 悵寥廓 問蒼茫大地 誰主沉浮 Eagles cleave the air Fish glide in the limpid deep Under freezing skies a million creatures contend in freedom Brooding over this immensity I ask on this boundless land Who rules over man s destiny Excerpt from Mao s poem Changsha September 1927 97 Mao was a prolific writer of political and philosophical literature 345 The main repository of his pre 1949 writings is the Selected Works of Mao Zedong published in four volumes by the People s Publishing House since 1951 A fifth volume which brought the timeline up to 1957 was briefly issued during the leadership of Hua Guofeng but subsequently withdrawn from circulation for its perceived ideological errors There has never been an official Complete Works of Mao Zedong collecting all his known publications 346 Mao is the attributed author of Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse tung known in the West as the Little Red Book and in Cultural Revolution China as the Red Treasure Book 紅寶書 First published in January 1964 this is a collection of short extracts from his many speeches and articles most found in the Selected Works edited by Lin Biao and ordered topically The Little Red Book contains some of Mao s most widely known quotes f Mao wrote prolifically on political strategy commentary and philosophy both before and after he assumed power g Mao was also a skilled Chinese calligrapher with a highly personal style In China Mao was considered a master calligrapher during his lifetime 347 His calligraphy can be seen today throughout mainland China 348 His work gave rise to a new form of Chinese calligraphy called Mao style or Maoti which has gained increasing popularity since his death There exist various competitions specialising in Mao style calligraphy 349 Literary works Main article Poetry of Mao Zedong As did most Chinese intellectuals of his generation Mao s education began with Chinese classical literature Mao told Edgar Snow in 1936 that he had started the study of the Confucian Analects and the Four Books at a village school when he was eight but that the books he most enjoyed reading were Water Margin Journey to the West the Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Dream of the Red Chamber 350 Mao published poems in classical forms starting in his youth and his abilities as a poet contributed to his image in China after he came to power in 1949 His style was influenced by the great Tang dynasty poets Li Bai and Li He 351 Some of his most well known poems are Changsha 1925 The Double Ninth October 1929 Loushan Pass 1935 The Long March 1935 Snow February 1936 The PLA Captures Nanjing 1949 Reply to Li Shuyi 11 May 1957 and Ode to the Plum Blossom December 1961 Portrayal in film and televisionMao has been portrayed in film and television numerous times Some notable actors include Han Shi the first actor ever to have portrayed Mao in a 1978 drama Dielianhua and later again in a 1980 film Cross the Dadu River 352 Gu Yue who had portrayed Mao 84 times on screen throughout his 27 year career and had won the Best Actor title at the Hundred Flowers Awards in 1990 and 1993 353 354 Liu Ye who played a young Mao in The Founding of a Party 2011 355 Tang Guoqiang who has frequently portrayed Mao in more recent times in the films The Long March 1996 and The Founding of a Republic 2009 and the television series Huang Yanpei 2010 among others 356 Mao is a principal character in American composer John Adams opera Nixon in China 1987 The Beatles song Revolution refers to Mao in the verse but if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao you ain t going to make it with anyone anyhow 357 John Lennon expressed regret over including these lines in the song in 1972 358 See also Biography portal China portal Communism portalChinese tunic suitMao ZedongNotes ˈ m aʊ t s e ˈ t ʊ ŋ 1 Chinese 毛泽东 pinyin Mao Zedōng pronounced ma ʊ tsɤ tʊ ŋ also romanised traditionally as Mao Tse tung In this Chinese name the family name is Mao and Ze is a generation name Mao s only direct involvement of hunting down political opponents was limited to the period from 1930 1931 during the Chinese Civil War in the Jiangxi base area 275 The People s Republic of China under Mao exhibited the oppressive tendencies that were discernible in all the major absolutist regimes of the twentieth century There are obvious parallels between Mao s China Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia Each of these regimes witnessed deliberately ordered mass cleansing and extermination 292 Though admittedly far from perfect the comparison is based on the fact that Jackson is remembered both as someone who played a significant role in the development of a political organisation the Democratic Party that still has many partisans and as someone responsible for brutal policies toward Native Americans that are now referred to as genocidal Both men are thought of as having done terrible things yet this does not necessarily prevent them from being used as positive symbols And Jackson still appears on 20 bills even though Americans tend to view as heinous the institution of slavery of which he was a passionate defender and the early 19th century military campaigns against Native Americans in which he took part At times Jackson for all his flaws is invoked as representing an egalitarian strain within the American democratic tradition a self made man of the people who rose to power via straight talk and was not allied with moneyed interests Mao stands for something roughly similar 303 The often cited evidence quote as proof is as follows Let us imagine how many people would die if war breaks out There are 2 7 billion people in the world and a third could be lost If it is a little higher it could be half I say that if the worst came to the worst and one half dies there will still be one half left but imperialism would be razed to the ground and the whole world would become socialist After a few years there would be 2 7 billion people again 312 313 Historians dispute the sincerity of Mao s words Robert Service says that Mao was deadly serious 314 while Frank Dikotter claims that Mao was bluffing the sabre rattling was to show that he not Khrushchev was the more determined revolutionary 312 Among them are War is the highest form of struggle for resolving contradictions when they have developed to a certain stage between classes nations states or political groups and it has existed ever since the emergence of private property and of classes Problems of Strategy in China s Revolutionary War December 1936 Selected Works of Mao Tse tung I p 180 Every communist must grasp the truth Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun 1938 Selected Works of Mao Tse tung II pp 224 225 Taken as a whole the Chinese revolutionary movement led by the Communist Party embraces two stages i e the democratic and the socialist revolutions which are two essentially different revolutionary processes and the second process can be carried through only after the first has been completed The democratic revolution is the necessary preparation for the socialist revolution and the socialist revolution is the inevitable sequel to the democratic revolution The ultimate aim for which all communists strive is to bring about a socialist and communist society The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party December 1939 Selected Works of Mao Tse tung II pp 330 331 All reactionaries are paper tigers In appearance the reactionaries are terrifying but in reality they are not so powerful From a long term point of view it is not the reactionaries but the people who are really powerful Mao Zedong July 1956 U S Imperialism Is a Paper Tiger The most influential of these include Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan 湖南农民运动考察报告 March 1927 On Guerrilla Warfare 游擊戰 1937 On Practice 實踐論 1937 On Contradiction 矛盾論 1937 On Protracted War 論持久戰 1938 In Memory of Norman Bethune 紀念白求恩 1939 On New Democracy 新民主主義論 1940 Talks at the Yan an Forum on Literature and Art 在延安文藝座談會上的講話 1942 Serve the People 為人民服務 1944 The Foolish Old Man Who Removed the Mountains 愚公移山 1945 On the Correct Handling of the Contradictions Among the People 正確處理人民內部矛盾問題 1957References Definition of Mao Tse tung Dictionary com Retrieved 17 November 2021 MacFarquhar Roderick 13 January 1997 The Politics of China The Eras of Mao and Deng Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58863 8 Johnson Ian 5 February 2018 Who Killed More Hitler Stalin or Mao The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on 5 February 2018 Retrieved 18 July 2020 Fenby Jonathan 2008 Modern China The Fall and Rise of a Great Power 1850 to the Present Penguin Group p 351 ISBN 978 0061661167 Schram Stuart March 2007 Mao The Unknown Story The China Quarterly 189 205 doi 10 1017 s030574100600107x S2CID 154814055 Evangelista Matthew A 2005 Peace Studies Critical Concepts in Political Science Taylor amp Francis p 96 ISBN 978 0415339230 a b Bottelier Pieter 2018 Economic Policy Making In China 1949 2016 The Role of Economists Routledge p 131 ISBN 978 1351393812 We should remember however that Mao also did wonderful things for China apart from reuniting the country he restored a sense of natural pride greatly improved women s rights basic healthcare and primary education ended opium abuse simplified Chinese characters developed pinyin and promoted its use for teaching purposes Pantsov Alexander V Levine Steven I 2013 Mao The Real Story Simon amp Schuster p 574 ISBN 978 1451654486 a b Galtung Marte Kjaer Stenslie Stig 2014 49 Myths about China Rowman amp Littlefield p 189 ISBN 978 1442236226 a b Babiarz Kimberly Singer Eggleston Karen et al 2015 An exploration of China s mortality decline under Mao A provincial analysis 1950 80 Population Studies 69 1 39 56 doi 10 1080 00324728 2014 972432 PMC 4331212 PMID 25495509 China s growth in life expectancy at birth from 35 40 years in 1949 to 65 5 years in 1980 is among the most rapid sustained increases in documented global history Pottinger Jesse 26 August 2019 Explainer Mao Zedong or Mao Tse tung We Have the Answer That s Online Retrieved 24 April 2020 Schram 1966 p 19 Hollingworth 1985 p 15 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 11 Schram 1966 pp 19 20 Terrill 1980 pp 4 5 15 Feigon 2002 pp 13 14 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 13 a b Schram 1966 p 20 Terrill 1980 p 11 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 14 17 Schram 1966 pp 20 21 Terrill 1980 p 8 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 15 20 Terrill 1980 p 12 Feigon 2002 p 23 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 25 28 Feigon 2002 p 15 Terrill 1980 pp 10 11 Schram 1966 p 23 Terrill 1980 pp 12 13 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 21 Schram 1966 p 25 Terrill 1980 pp 20 21 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 29 Schram 1966 p 22 Terrill 1980 p 13 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 17 18 Terrill 1980 p 14 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 18 Schram 1966 p 22 Feigon 2002 p 15 Terrill 1980 p 18 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 28 Schram 1966 p 26 Terrill 1980 p 19 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 28 30 Schram 1966 p 26 Terrill 1980 pp 22 23 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 30 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 32 34 Schram 1966 p 27 Terrill 1980 p 22 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 33 Schram 1966 pp 26 27 Terrill 1980 pp 22 24 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 33 Schram 1966 p 26 Terrill 1980 p 23 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 33 Schram 1966 pp 30 32 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 32 35 Schram 1966 p 34 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 34 35 Schram 1966 pp 34 35 Terrill 1980 pp 23 24 Schram 1966 pp 35 36 Terrill 1980 pp 22 25 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 35 Schram 1966 p 36 Terrill 1980 p 26 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 35 36 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 36 37 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 40 41 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 36 Schram 1966 pp 36 37 Terrill 1980 p 27 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 37 Schram 1966 pp 38 39 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 43 see also Hsiao Yu Xiao Yu alias of Xiao Zisheng Mao Tse Tung and I Were Beggars Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press 1959 Schram 1966 pp 42 43 Terrill 1980 p 32 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 48 Schram 1966 p 41 Terrill 1980 p 32 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 42 Schram 1966 pp 40 41 Terrill 1980 pp 30 31 Schram 1966 p 43 Terrill 1980 p 32 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 49 50 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 49 50 Schram 1966 p 44 Terrill 1980 p 33 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 50 52 Schram 1966 p 45 Terrill 1980 p 34 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 52 Schram 1966 p 48 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 47 56 57 Feigon 2002 p 18 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 39 Schram 1966 p 48 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 59 Schram 1966 p 47 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 59 62 Schram 1966 pp 48 49 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 62 64 Schram 1966 p 48 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 57 58 Schram 1966 p 51 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 53 55 65 Schram 1966 p 48 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 62 66 Schram 1966 pp 50 52 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 66 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 66 67 Schram 1966 pp 51 52 Feigon 2002 pp 21 22 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 69 70 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 68 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 76 Schram 1966 pp 53 54 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 71 76 Schram 1966 p 55 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 76 77 Schram 1966 pp 55 56 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 79 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 80 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 pp 81 83 Pantsov amp Levine 2012 p 84 Schram 1966 pp 56 57 a b c Mair Victor H Sanping Sanping Wood Frances 2013 Chinese Lives The people who made a civilization London Thames amp Hudson p 211 ISBN 978 0500251928 Schram 1966 p 63 Feigon 2002 pp 23 28 Schram 1966 pp 63 64 Feigon 2002 pp 23 24 28 30 Schram 1966 pp 64 66 a b Schram 1966 p 68 Schram 1966 pp 68 69 Schram 1966 p 69 Elizabeth J Perry Anyuan Mining China s Revolutionary Tradition The Asia Pacific Journal 11 1 14 January 2013 reprinting Ch 2 of Elizabeth J Perry Anyuan Mining China s Revolutionary Tradition Berkeley University of California Press 2012 ISBN 978 0520271890 a b Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press pp 22 23 ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press p 23 ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 Schram 1966 pp 69 70 Schram 1966 pp 73 74 Feigon 2002 p 33 Schram 1966 pp 74 76 Schram 1966 pp 76 82 Schram 1966 p 78 Schram 1966 p 83 Mao Zedong 1992 Schram Stuart Reynolds et al eds National Revolution and Social Revolution December 1920 June 1927 Mao s Road to Power Vol II M E Sharpe p 465 Liu Xiaoyuan 2004 Frontier Passages Ethnopolitics and the Rise of Chinese Communism 1921 1945 Stanford Stanford University Press p 66 ISBN 978 0804749602 Schram 1966 pp 82 90 91 Schram 1966 pp 84 89 Schram 1966 pp 87 92 93 Feigon 2002 p 39 Schram 1966 p 95 Schram 1966 p 98 a b Feigon 2002 p 42 Schram 1966 pp 99 100 Schram 1966 p 100 Schram 1966 p 106 Carter 1976 pp 61 62 Schram 1966 pp 106 109 112 113 a b c Carter 1976 p 62 a b c Carter 1976 p 63 a b Carter 1976 p 64 Schram 1966 pp 122 125 Feigon 2002 pp 46 47 Mao Zedong on War and Revolution Quotations from Mao Zedong on War and Revolution Columbia University Retrieved 12 November 2011 Feigon 2002 p 41 Schram 1966 p 125 Carter 1976 p 68 Schram 1966 p 130 Carter 1976 pp 67 68 Feigon 2002 p 48 Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 a b Carter 1976 p 69 Schram 1966 pp 126 127 Carter 1976 pp 66 67 a b Carter 1976 p 70 Schram 1966 p 159 Feigon 2002 p 47 Schram 1966 p 131 Carter 1976 pp 68 69 Schram 1966 pp 128 132 Schram 1966 pp 133 137 Carter 1976 pp 70 71 a b Feigon 2002 p 50 Memorial opened to commemorate Mao s 2nd wife www china org cn 20 November 2007 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Ni Ching ching 27 March 2007 Written at Beijing Death illuminates niche of Mao life Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California Archived from the original on 11 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Schram 1966 p 138 Carter 1976 pp 71 72 Schram 1966 pp 138 141 a b Carter 1976 p 72 Schram 1966 p 139 Schram 1966 pp 146 149 a b c Carter 1976 p 75 Feigon 2002 p 51 Schram 1966 pp 149 151 Schram 1966 p 149 a b Schram 1966 p 153 Schram 1966 p 152 Carter 1976 p 76 Feigon 2002 pp 51 53 a b Carter 1976 p 77 Schram 1966 pp 154 155 Feigon 2002 pp 54 55 Schram 1966 pp 155 161 a b Carter 1976 p 78 Schram 1966 pp 161 165 Feigon 2002 pp 53 54 Schram 1966 pp 166 168 Feigon 2002 p 55 Schram 1966 pp 175 177 Carter 1976 pp 80 81 Feigon 2002 pp 56 57 Schram 1966 p 180 Carter 1976 pp 81 82 a b Feigon 2002 p 57 Schram 1966 pp 180 181 Carter 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0312256265 The phrase is often mistakenly said to have been delivered during the speech from the Gate of Heavenly Peace but was first used on September 21 at the First Plenary Session of the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference then repeated on several occasions Odd Arne Westad Fighting for Friendship Mao Stalin and the Sino Soviet Treaty of 1950 Cold War International History Project Bulletin 8 9 1996 224 236 Robert C North The Sino Soviet Agreements of 1950 Far Eastern Survey 19 13 1950 125 130 online 180 000 Chinese soldiers killed in Korean War china org cn Retrieved 28 November 2019 Burkitt Laurie Scobell Andrew Wortzel Larry M 2003 The lessons of history The Chinese people s Liberation Army at 75 PDF Strategic Studies Institute pp 340 341 ISBN 978 1584871262 Archived from the original PDF on 5 February 2012 Retrieved 14 July 2009 Short 2001 pp 436 437 Scheidel Walter 2017 The Great Leveler Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty First Century Princeton University Press p 226 ISBN 978 0691165028 In Zhangzhuangcun in the more thoroughly reformed north of the country most landlords and rich peasants had lost all their land and often their lives or had fled All formerly landless workers had received land which eliminated this category altogether As a result middling peasants who now accounted for 90 percent of the village population owned 90 8 percent of the land as close to perfect equality as one could possibly hope for a b c Kuisong 2008 Steven W Mosher China Misperceived American Illusions and Chinese Reality Basic Books 1992 ISBN 0465098134 pp 72 73 Stephen Rosskamm Shalom Deaths in China Due to Communism Center for Asian Studies Arizona State University 1984 ISBN 0939252112 p 24 Spence 1999 page needed Mao got this number from a report submitted by Xu Zirong Deputy Public Security Minister which stated 712 000 counter revolutionaries were executed 1 290 000 were imprisoned and another 1 200 000 were subjected to control see Kuisong 2008 a b Twitchett Denis John K Fairbank Roderick MacFarquhar 1987 The Cambridge history of China Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521243360 Retrieved 23 August 2008 Maurice Meisner Mao s China and After A History of the People s Republic Third Edition Free Press 1999 ISBN 0684856352 p 72 the estimate of many relatively impartial observers that there were 2 000 000 people executed during the first three years of the People s Republic is probably as accurate a guess as one can make on the basis of scanty information Steven W Mosher China Misperceived American Illusions and Chinese Reality Basic Books 1992 ISBN 0465098134 p 74 a figure that Fairbank has cited as the upper range of sober estimates Feigon 2002 p 96 By 1952 they had extended land reform throughout the countryside but in the process somewhere between two and five million landlords had been killed Short 2001 p 436 a b Valentino 2004 pp 121 122 Changyu Li Mao s Killing Quotas Human Rights in China HRIC 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2007 Barnstone Willis 1972 rpr Berkeley University of California Press 2008 The Poems of Mao Zedong pp 3 4 ISBN 0520935004 Ng Yong sang 1963 The Poetry of Mao Tse tung The China Quarterly 13 60 73 doi 10 1017 S0305741000009711 Being Mao Zedong Global Times 4 July 2011 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Famous actor playing Mao Zedong dies People s Daily 5 July 2005 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Actor famous for playing Mao Zedong dies of miocardial infarction People s Daily 5 July 2005 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Liu Wei 3 June 2011 The reel Mao China Daily European Weekly Retrieved 15 March 2013 Xiong Qu 26 November 2011 Actors expect prosperity of Chinese culture CCTV News Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Alan Aldridge Beatles 1969 The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 104 ISBN 978 0395594261 Spignesi Stephen J Lewis Michael 2004 Here There and Everywhere The 100 Best Beatles Songs New York Black Dog p 40 ISBN 978 1579123697 BibliographyBecker Jasper 1998 Hungry Ghosts Mao s Secret Famine Holt Paperbacks ISBN 978 0805056686 Carter Peter 1976 Mao London Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192731401 Chang Jung Halliday Jon 2005 Mao The Unknown Story London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0224071260 Chirot Daniel 1996 Modern tyrants the power and prevalence of evil in our age Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691027777 Clisson Tim 2014 Chinese Rules Mao s Dog Deng s Cat and Five Timeless Lessons from the Front Lines in China NY Harper ISBN 978 0062316578 Dikotter Frank 2010 Mao s Great Famine The History of China s Most Devastating Catastrophe 1958 62 London Walker amp Company ISBN 978 0802777683 Feigon Lee 2002 Mao A Reinterpretation Chicago Ivan R Dee ISBN 978 1566634588 Gao Mobo 2008 The Battle for China s Past Mao and the Cultural Revolution London Pluto Press ISBN 978 0745327808 Hollingworth Clare 1985 Mao and the Men Against Him London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0224017602 Kuisong Yang March 2008 Reconsidering the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries The China Quarterly 193 193 102 121 doi 10 1017 S0305741008000064 S2CID 154927374 Li Zhisui 1994 The Private Life of Chairman Mao The Memoirs of Mao s Personal Physician London Random House ISBN 978 0679764434 MacFarquhar Roderick Schoenhals Michael 2006 Mao s Last Revolution Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674027480 Pantsov Alexander V Levine Steven I 2012 Mao The Real Story New York and London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1451654479 Schram Stuart 1966 Mao Tse Tung London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0140208405 Short Philip 2001 Mao A Life Owl Books ISBN 978 0805066388 Spence Jonathan 1999 Mao Zedong Penguin Lives New York Viking Press ISBN 978 0670886692 OCLC 41641238 John F Burns 6 February 2000 Methods of the Great Leader The New York Times Terrill Ross 1980 Mao A Biography Simon and Schuster which is superseded by Ross Terrill Mao A Biography Stanford CA Stanford University Press 1999 ISBN 0804729212 Valentino Benjamin A 2004 Final Solutions Mass Killing and Genocide in the Twentieth Century Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801439650 Further readingAnita M Andrew John A Rapp 2000 Autocracy and China s Rebel Founding Emperors Comparing Chairman Mao and Ming Taizu Rowman amp Littlefield pp 110 ISBN 978 0847695805 Davin Delia 2013 Mao A Very Short Introduction Oxford UP ISBN 978 0191654039 Keith Schoppa R 2004 Twentieth Century in China A History in Documents Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199732005 Schaik Sam 2011 Tibet A History New Haven Yale University Press Publications ISBN 978 0300154047 External linksMao Zedong at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource General Foundations of Chinese Foreign Policy online documents in English from the Wilson Center in Washington Asia Source biography ChineseMao com Extensive resources about Mao Zedong Archived 6 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine CNN profile Collected Works of Mao at the Maoist Internationalist Movement Collected Works of Mao Tse tung 1917 1949 Joint Publications Research Service Mao quotations Mao Zedong Reference Archive at marxists org Oxford Companion to World Politics Mao Zedong Bio of Mao at the official Communist Party of China web siteCommentary Discusses the life military influence and writings of Chairman Mao ZeDong What Maoism Has Contributed by Samir Amin 21 September 2006 China must confront dark past says Mao confidant Mao was cruel but also laid the ground for today s China On the Role of Mao Zedong by William Hinton Monthly Review Foundation 2004 Volume 56 Issue 04 September Propaganda paintings showing Mao as the great leader of China Remembering Mao s Victims Mao s Great Leap to Famine Finding the Facts About Mao s Victims Remembering China s Great Helmsman Did Mao Really Kill Millions in the Great Leap Forward Archived 11 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Mao Tse Tung China s Peasant EmperorParty political officesCommunist Party of ChinaPreceded byZhu De Chairman of the CPC Central Military Commission1936 1949 Succeeded byHimselfas Post re establishedPreceded byDeng Fa President of the CPC Central Party School1943 1947 Succeeded by div, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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