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Northern Expedition

The Northern Expedition was a military campaign launched by the National Revolutionary Army (NRA) of the Kuomintang (KMT), also known as the "Chinese Nationalist Party", against the Beiyang government and other regional warlords in 1926. The purpose of the campaign was to reunify China, which had become fragmented in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1911. The expedition was led by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, and was divided into two phases. The first phase ended in a 1927 political split between two factions of the KMT: the right-leaning Nanjing faction, led by Chiang, and the left-leaning faction in Wuhan, led by Wang Jingwei.[12] The split was partially motivated by Chiang's Shanghai Massacre of Communists within the KMT, which marked the end of the First United Front. In an effort to mend this schism, Chiang Kai-shek stepped down as the commander of the NRA in August 1927, and went into exile in Japan.[13][14]

Northern Expedition
Part of the Warlord Era

Clockwise from top-left: Chiang inspecting soldiers of the National Revolutionary Army; NRA troops marching north; an NRA artillery unit in combat; civilians showing support for the NRA; peasants volunteering to join the expedition; NRA soldiers preparing to launch an attack.
Date9 July 1926 – 29 December 1928 (2 years and 173 days)
Location
Result

NRA victory

Belligerents

Nationalist government

Supported by:
 Soviet Union[2]
Comintern[3]

Beiyang government

Supported by:
 Empire of Japan[4]
Commanders and leaders
Chiang Kai-shek
Feng Yuxiang
Li Zongren
Bai Chongxi
He Yingqin
Yan Xishan
Zhang Fakui
Li Jishen
Tan Yankai
Cheng Qian
Deng Yanda
Zhou Enlai
Ye Ting
Mikhail Borodin[5]
Vasily Blyukher[6]
Zhang Zuolin 
Zhang Xueliang
Zhang Zongchang
Yang Yuting
Wu Peifu
Sun Chuanfang
Strength
c. 100,000 (July 1926)[7]
c. 264,000 (Dec. 1926)[8]
c. 700,000 (spring 1927)[9]
c. 1,000,000 (1928)[10]
c. 700,000–1,000,000 (1926)[10][11]
c. 190,000–250,000 (Dec. 1928)[1]

The second phase of the Expedition began in January 1928, when Chiang resumed command. By April 1928, the nationalist forces had advanced to the Yellow River. With the assistance of allied warlords including Yan Xishan and Feng Yuxiang, nationalist forces secured a series of decisive victories against the Beiyang Army. As they approached Beijing, Zhang Zuolin, leader of the Manchuria-based Fengtian clique, was forced to flee, and was assassinated shortly thereafter by the Japanese. His son, Zhang Xueliang, took over as the leader of the Fengtian clique, and in December 1928, announced that Manchuria would accept the authority of the nationalist government in Nanjing. With the final piece of China under KMT control, the Northern Expedition concluded successfully and China was reunified, heralding the start of the Nanjing decade.[15]

Prelude

 
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, commander-in-chief of the NRA, emerged from the Northern Expedition as the leader of the KMT and China.

In the 1920s, the Beiyang government based in Beijing was internationally recognised as the legitimate Chinese government. Much of the country, however, was not under its control, being ruled by a patchwork of warlords. The Kuomintang (KMT), based in Guangzhou (Canton), aspired to be the party of national liberation. Since the conclusion of the Constitutional Protection Movement in 1922, the KMT had been bolstering its ranks to prepare for an expedition against the northern warlords in Beijing, with the goal of reunifying China.[16] This preparation involved improving both the political and military strength of the KMT. Before his death in March 1925, Sun Yat-sen, the founder of the Republic of China and co-founder of the KMT, was supportive of Sino-Soviet co-operation, which had involved forming the First United Front with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).[17] The military arm of the KMT was the National Revolutionary Army (NRA).[18] Chiang Kai-shek, who had emerged as Sun's protégé as early as 1922, was appointed commandant of the Whampoa Military Academy in 1924, and quickly emerged as a contender for the position of Sun's successor in the aftermath of his death.[19]

On 30 May 1925, Chinese students in Shanghai gathered at the International Settlement, and held demonstrations in opposition to foreign interference in China.[20] Specifically, with the support of the KMT, they called for the boycott of foreign goods and an end to the Settlement, which was governed by the British and Americans. The Shanghai Municipal Police, largely operated by the British, opened fire on the crowd of demonstrators. This incident sparked outrage throughout China, culminating in the Canton–Hong Kong strike, which began on 18 June, and proved a fertile recruiting ground for the CCP.[21] Concerns about the rising power of the leftist faction, and the effect of the strike on the Guangzhou government's ability to raise funds, which was largely dependent on foreign trade, led to increasing tensions within the United Front. Amidst this backdrop, Chiang, who had been vying for the position of KMT leader, began to consolidate power in preparation for an expedition against the northern warlords. On 20 March 1926, he launched a bloodless purge of hardline communists who were opposed to the proposed expedition from the Guangzhou administration and its military, known as the Canton Coup. At the same time, Chiang made conciliatory moves toward the Soviet Union, and attempted to balance the need for Soviet and CCP assistance in the fight against the warlords with his concerns about growing communist influence within the KMT.[22][23] In the aftermath of the coup, Chiang negotiated a compromise whereby hardline members of the rightist faction, such as Wu Tieh-cheng, were removed from their posts in compensation for the purged leftists. By doing so, Chiang was able to prove his usefulness to the CCP and their Soviet sponsor, Joseph Stalin. Soviet aid to the KMT government would continue, as would co-operation with the CCP. A fragile coalition between KMT rightists, centrists led by Chiang, KMT leftists, and the CCP managed to hold together, laying the groundwork for the Northern Expedition.[24][25]

In 1926, there were three major coalition of warlords across China that were hostile to the KMT government in Guangzhou. The forces of Wu Peifu occupied northern Hunan, Hubei, and Henan provinces. The coalition of Sun Chuanfang was in control of Fujian, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Anhui and Jiangxi provinces. The most powerful coalition, led by Zhang Zuolin, then head of the Beiyang government and the Fengtian clique, was in control of Manchuria, Shandong and Zhili.[26] To face the Northern Expedition, Zhang Zuolin eventually assembled the "National Pacification Army" (Chinese: 安國軍; pinyin: Ānguójūn; Wade–Giles: Ankuochün; NPA), an alliance of the warlords of northern China.[18]

First phase (July 1926–April 1927)

Against Wu Peifu (July–September 1926)

Northern Expedition
Traditional Chinese國民革命軍北伐
Simplified Chinese国民革命军北伐
Literal meaningNational Revolutionary Army northern expedition
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinGuómín gémìng jūn běifá
Bopomofoㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄍㄜˊ ㄇㄧㄥˋ ㄐㄩㄣ ㄅㄟˇ ㄈㄚˊ
Wade–GilesKuomin komin chün peifa
Hakka
RomanizationKoet-mìn kiet-min kiûn pet-phat
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingGwok3man4 gaak3ming6 gwan1 bak1fat6
Southern Min
Hokkien POJKok-bîn Kek-bēng-kun Pak-hoa̍t
Tâi-lôKok-bîn Kik-bīng-kun Pak-hua̍t
 
Chiang Kai-shek prepares to leave Guangzhou. Those pictured include Mikhail Borodin, on the far left, Vasily Blyukher in military uniform on the right, and Chiang himself in uniform, to the right of Blyukher.

Amidst heavy fighting along the border between KMT-held territory and that of the recently allied forces of the Fengtian and Zhili cliques, the nationalist government appointed Chiang Kai-shek commander-in-chief of the NRA on 5 June 1926. Chiang would accept this post in a ceremony on 9 July, which marked the formal start of the Northern Expedition, although military clashes had already been ongoing.[27][28] The initial strategy for the KMT's northern advance against the Zhili warlords, which was largely devised by Soviet advisors Mikhail Borodin and Vasily Blyukher, was to focus on defeating Wu Peifu and appeasing Sun Chuanfang, while ignoring Zhang Zuolin of the Fengtian clique.[29][27][28] Having switched from a defensive to offensive posture, KMT forces quickly advanced from their base in Guangdong into Wu-controlled Hunan province, capturing Changsha on 11 July.[30] At the time, most of Wu Peifu's forces were preoccupied with fighting at Nankou Pass, near Beijing, against the Guominjun, a breakaway Zhili faction sympathetic to the KMT.[28] Sun Chuanfang, who the KMT had avoided antagonising, did not intervene as KMT troops advanced further into Wu's territory.[31][32] Whilst the Fengtian clique had offered its support to Wu, he refused their aid, fearing that the northern warlords would undermine his position if he allowed their troops into his territory.[33] At a military conference held in Changsha on 11–12 August, the KMT decided launch a direct assault on Wu's stronghold of Wuchang, bypassing Sun's Nanchang.[27][28] In this manner, they would follow the route taken by the Taiping Rebellion in the 19th century.[34] In an address to his generals at the same conference, Chiang proclaimed:

"The importance of this fight is not only in that it will decide the fate of the warlords. But, whether or not the Chinese nation and race can restore their freedom and independence hangs in the balance. In other words, it is a struggle between the nation and the warlords, between the revolution and the anti-revolutionaries, between the Three People's Principles and imperialism. All are to be decided now in this time of battle … so as to restore independence and freedom to our Chinese race".[35]

 
NRA troops preparing to attack Wuchang
 
NRA forces enter the British concession at Hankou, October 1926

With the capture of the Yangtze port of Yuezhou on 22 August, Hunan came under complete KMT control, paving the way for an advance to Wuchang along the route of the Beijing–Guangzhou railway.[36] As Wu Peifu's forces retreated northward, they breached several Yangtze dikes, slowing the KMT push. By 28 August, the KMT, led by Li Zongren and his Guangxi NRA Seventh Army, had taken Xianning, about 75 kilometres (47 mi) south of Wuchang. Wu Peifu, who had returned south to mount a defence of Wuchang, gathered his forces at Heshengqiao Bridge. On 29 August, he launched a counterattack against KMT forces to the south, compromising his defensive line, and by noon the next day, his forces were in general retreat toward Wuchang. In this short period of time, Wu lost 8,000 troops. At least 5,000 of these were taken prisoner, along with their rifles, providing a boost to KMT forces.[37] By 2 September, the NRA had nearly surrounded Wuchang. Whilst Wu and most of his army fled north to Henan province, his remaining troops in the walled city held out for over a month.[38][39][40] His failure in the face of the NRA, however, left his hold on power and reputation broken. What remained of his army would disintegrate in the following months.[33]

Against Sun Chuanfang (September 1926–February 1927)

With Wu Peifu's forces in retreat, the NRA directed itself toward Sun Chuanfang-controlled Jiangxi province, namely the city of Jiujiang and the provincial capital, Nanchang. Whilst Sun had been offered a non-aggression pact by the Guangzhou government, he was not willing to subordinate his administration to KMT rule. Consequently, whilst the siege in Wuchang was still ongoing, Chiang Kai-shek launched an attack across the Jiangxi border on 4 September.[41] By 19 September, both Jiujiang and Nanchang had come under KMT control, hastened by the defection of Lai Shih-huang, one of Sun's generals.[42][43] Despite these successes, the NRA offensive was forced into retreat as Sun arrived from Nanjing with reinforcements on 21 September. Sun retook most of the territory he had lost, brutally reasserting his authority by killing hundreds of students, teachers, and suspected members of the KMT, whose severed heads he displayed on spikes in public places.[44]

 
Routes of the Northern Expedition

With the Northern Expedition's advance halted, Chiang wired the government in Guangzhou, demanding an end to the still ongoing Canton–Hong Kong strike, which continued to hamper his supply chain.[45] Negotiations with the British began on 23 September, with the strike finally called off on 10 October. This eased access to supplies for the NRA, and freed up manpower, in the form of the strikers, for the continued push north.[45][46] On the same day, Wu Peifu's remaining forces at Wuchang surrendered, completing the NRA's conquest of Hubei province.[38] As bloody fighting continued in Jiangxi, the civil governor of Zhejiang province, Xia Chao, one of Sun's subordinates, defected to the KMT government in Guangzhou. Zhejiang inhabitants had become increasingly dissatisfied with the rule of Sun, who was foreign to the province, and on 16 October, Xia declared its independence.[47][48] Chiang Kai-shek, a native of Zhejiang, was able to convince Xia to side with the KMT. Following his defection, Xia launched an attack on Sun-controlled Shanghai, but was almost immediately forced to withdraw back to Zhejiang; Sun had detected Xia's plans days earlier.[47] Sun's forces subsequently marched on Zhejiang, crushing the rebellion by 23 October. Xia was executed, along with hundreds of his troops, while thousands of civilians were massacred at Xia's former headquarters.[47][40]

Alongside the Zhejiang rebellion, the NRA had continued their offensive in Jiangxi. Adding to the pressure on Sun, the Shantou-based NRA First Army, led by He Yingqin, marched across the Guangdong border, and began a new offensive into Fujian province. NRA troops were welcomed by many locals, including the Hakka, who resented foreign control, and gradually began to infiltrate the Fujian countryside. He's forces moved up the coast, pushing toward the provincial capital, Fuzhou.[49][50] By the end of October, Sun's forces were again in retreat across Jiangxi and Fujian.[51][52] In early November, KMT troops moved to capture the Yangtze ports of Jiujiang and Hukou, and by 9 November retook control of Nanchang. Sun's forces abandoned substantial materiel as they retreated, bolstering the poorly-armed NRA, which suffered 20,000 casualties in the final push on Nanchang alone.[53] Concurrently, Sun himself had left for Tianjin with the aim of seeking aid from the powerful Fengtian clique.[54] Shandong warlord Zhang Zongchang and Manchurian warlord Zhang Zuolin offered assistance, agreeing that it was necessary to contain the NRA, though they demanded payment in return for their help. As the NRA offensive carved its way through Fujian, 60,000 troops from Shandong arrived in Sun-controlled Anhui province on 24 November. These were organised into the "National Pacification Army" (NPA) on 1 December. Zhang Zuolin took the position of commander-in-chief, with Zhang Zongchang and Sun Chuanfang as deputy commanders.[55]

 
Members of the National Pacification military government, from left to right: Pan Fu, Gungsangnorbu, Wu Junsheng, Sun Chuanfang, Zhang Zuoxiang, and Zhang Zongchang

This alliance was hugely unpopular with locals in the regions under Sun's control, with Zhang Zhongchang's northern troops viewed as invaders. The Zhejiang autonomy movement continued, and a meeting of influential provincial figures, nominally loyal to Sun, was held in Shanghai on 8 December.[56] In Fujian, many of Sun's troops had already defected to the NRA, and on 9 December, He Yingqin's army entered Fuzhou unopposed.[54][57] On 11 December, Zhejiang commander Zhou Fengqi announced his defection to the NRA. This started a cascade of defections, leading to Zhejiang's secession from Sun's "United Provinces", after which it was given autonomous status by the Guangzhou government.[58] In response, Sun rallied his army on Zhejiang border, with the NPA protecting his rear, and charged into Zhejiang, retaking most of the province. By 10 January, the majority of the Zhejiang rebel forces had retreated to Quzhou. To relieve the besieged rebels, He Yingqin pushed his Fujian-based forces into Zhejiang, halting Sun's advance. The rebel and KMT forces merged under the command of Bai Chongxi, who launched a counteroffensive on 20 January. By 29 January, the offensive had reached Lanxi and Jinhua, where a fierce battle resulted in a catastrophic defeat for Sun's forces.[59] Following this victory, the NRA launched a pincer attack on provincial capital Hangzhou. Many of Sun's northern troops, demoralised by defeat, broke ranks and streamed north, looting the towns and villages they passed along the way. With his forces in disarray, Sun's commander in the area, Meng Chao-yueh, decided on 17 February to abandon Hangzhou and flee with his 20,000 troops by train to Jiangsu province.[59] By 23 February, Zhejiang was under complete KMT control. In six months, the nationalists had expanded their control to seven provinces, inhabited by a population of about 170 million people.[57] Aided by the defection of numerous warlords and their armies, by this point, the NRA had bolstered its ranks to 700,000.[9]

Shanghai–Nanjing offensive (February–April 1927)

Sun Chuanfang retreated to Nanjing in the aftermath of these setbacks.[60] The Fengtian clique responded to Sun's plea for help by reinforcing Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, while increasing the number of troops in Henan in support of Wu Peifu.[61] Two major Fengtian formations, the Shandong Army of Zhang Zongchang and the Zhili Army of Chu Yupu, crossed the Yangtze River in February 1927 to help Sun defend Nanjing and Shanghai.[62] Following their victory in Zhejiang, Chiang Kai-shek ordered the launch of an offensive on those two cities. The Hangzhou-based eastern NRA, led by Bai Chongxi and He Yingqin, launched a two-pronged attack in mid-March. Bai's forces advanced toward Shanghai, whilst He's forces moved toward Changzhou, with the goal of severing Sun's lifeline, the Shanghai–Nanjing railway.[63] Meanwhile, Cheng Qian's central NRA advanced toward Nanjing through Anhui province, its path opened by the defection of Sun's forces there.[64] The remnants of Sun's forces, supported by the Shandong Army, were forced to withdraw to Shanghai proper in the face of Bai's army.[62] He's forces quickly severed the railway link with Shanghai, while Sun was confronted with the defection of his navy, and a communist general strike in Shanghai.[63][65] Intense fighting took place at Songjiang, just outside the city, but on 22 March, Bai's forces marched into Shanghai victorious.[66][63][9] The Fengtian support operation had proven to be a "costly operational disaster" for the northern warlords, whose armies had suffered heavy casualties, forcing them to retreat north across the Yangtze.[62] Meanwhile, the strike continued until 24 March, when Bai ordered its end. The general disorder caused by the strike is said to have resulted in the deaths of 322 people, with 2,000 wounded, contributing to KMT feelings of unease with its wayward communist allies.[67]

With Shanghai under their control, the NRA turned its attention to Nanjing. He Yingqin advanced from the south-east, whilst Cheng Qian came from the south-west.[63] Zhang Zongchang ordered his Shandong Army to withdraw from Nanjing on 23 March, leaving the city undefended.[68] Cheng arrived on the next day, entering the city with no resistance.[63][69][61] Almost immediately after arrival of the NRA, mass anti-foreigner riots broke out in the city, in an event that came to be known as the Nanjing Incident.[63] British and American naval forces were sent to evacuate their respective citizens, resulting in a naval bombardment that left the city burning and at least forty people dead.[70] He's forces arrived on 25 March, and on the next day, Cheng and He were finally able to put an end to the violence.[67][70]

Chiang Kai-shek's faction accused Lin Boqu of planning the unrest, viewing it as an attempt to turn international opinion against the KMT. Lin, a member of both the CCP and the KMT, had been serving as political commissar of the Sixth Army, part of Cheng Qian's forces.[69] Whoever was responsible, the Nanjing Incident represented the culmination of tensions within the First United Front. The nationalist government had moved from Guangzhou to the new city of Wuhan, which was formed from a merger of Wuchang and two other nearby cities. The Wuhan administration gradually drifted away from Chiang, becoming a centre of leftist, Soviet-backed power within the KMT and constraining his authority. Communist-led trade unions staged near-constant demonstrations in Wuhan itself, and across the nominally KMT-controlled territories, establishing parallel structures of administration in areas liberated by the NRA.[71][72]

In the final success of the first phase of the expedition, the NRA went on to capture Anhui provincial capital Hefei and the smaller city of Bengbu. NRA forces that had already been operating north of the Yangtze continued into northern Jiangsu province. Their advance, however, was hampered by the administrative chaos that followed the Nanjing Incident.[73] Tensions between the leftists in Wuhan and rightists in Nanjing would come to a head, bringing the Northern Expedition to a halt.[71] Meanwhile, in the aftermath of the Shanghai–Nanjing offensive, the aid of the Fengtian armies prevented Sun Chuanfang's army from collapsing completely, and they eventually managed to regroup and strengthen their forces for the next phase of the conflict.[62] Launching a counteroffensive on 3 April, the NPA had been able to force the NRA back more than 161 kilometres (100 mi) to the Yangtze by 11 April.[74]

Anti-communist purge and second phase (April 1927–June 1928)

Internal conflict among the nationalists (April–August 1927)

 
Mikhail Borodin making a speech in Wuhan, 1927

As part of the First United Front, many members of the Chinese Communist Party had joined the KMT, and they exerted significant influence over its left-wing faction. Mikhail Borodin, the official liaison between the KMT and the Soviet government in Moscow, had spent years cultivating this alliance, while covertly encouraging CCP expansion.[75] This Soviet-backed leftist wing of the KMT came to dominate the nationalist government in Wuhan, which increasingly directed its ire at NRA commander-in-chief Chiang Kai-shek. On 1 April, the Wuhan government, advised by Borodin, issued edicts stripping Chiang of his authority in foreign affairs, financial matters, and communications, and ordered that he leave his command post in Shanghai and go to the front. These orders had no effect, as Wuhan had almost no military authority.[76] The government intended to send a small force to Nanjing with the aim of "disarming" Chiang, but put that plan on hold following Wang Jingwei's return from exile in Europe. Wang, who had travelled back to China at the urging of members of the government, was greeted in Shanghai by Chiang, who offered a power-sharing deal. Wang said that he would consider the deal, and boarded a ship for Wuhan on 7 April. He arrived on the 10th, where he was eagerly greeted by the Wuhan leadership. Having heard from Wang about Chiang's offer, the government decided to turn its limited forces toward Beijing instead. Chiang, on the other hand, was already preparing for a purge of communists in Shanghai.[76][77]

Between 12 and 14 April, hundreds of communists in Shanghai were arrested and killed on the orders of Chiang in a disturbance that came to be called the "Shanghai massacre", effectively ending the alliance between the nationalists and the communists.[9][78] The ensuing White Terror devastated the Communists, and only 10,000 out of 60,000 party members survived.[79] The purge was condemned by the Wang Jingwei, now leader of the Wuhan government, formalising the split between the KMT leftists based in Wuhan and the KMT rightists, who subsequently established their own government in Nanjing.[80] The precariousness of the NRA position in Nanjing was clear: at ceremonies held to commemorate the city's elevation to capital of China, warlord Zhang Zongchang's artillery bombarded the city's waterfront from across the Yangtze.[81]

With the Nanjing–Shanghai area under constant threat of attack from the NPA, a series of independent offensives was launched by NRA and NRA-aligned forces in May 1927. Feng Yuxiang and his Guominjun moved first, leaving their base in Shaanxi to march on Luoyang, in Henan.[82] On 10 May, the NRA First and Sixth armies crossed the Yangtze into Anhui, and on 16 May, Li Zongren, based in western Anhui, led the Seventh Army toward Hefei.[83] Concurrently, the Wuhan government launched its own campaign in Henan province led by Tang Shengzhi, whom was appointed to serve as the Wuhan army's commander-in-chief. Aided by the defection of remnants of Wu Peifu's forces, Tang advanced to fight the forces of the "Young Marshal" Zhang Xueliang, Zhang Zuolin's son and political heir, pushing them back to a river at Yancheng.[84]

 
Feng Yuxiang meets with Chiang Kai-shek in Xuzhou on 19 June 1927

By 20 May, Li had captured Bengbu, whilst Chiang unleashed a four-pronged attack through Jiangsu, toward the warlord power base in Shandong.[83][85] He Yingqin led the NRA First Army across the Yangtze at Zhenjiang, and moved to capture Haizhou.[86] On 28 May, Li took Suzhou, while the Guominjun took Luoyang, forcing Zhang Zongchang to withdraw his forces to Shandong, and Zhang Xueliang to fall back north of the Yellow River.[87] Following Xueliang's retreat, Feng Yuxiang moved east from Luoyang to Zhengzhou.[88] Finally, on 2 June, the NRA captured the vital railway junction of Xuzhou.[86] With both the Longhai and Beijing–Hankou railways under NRA or Guominjun control, Feng came into direct contact with the Wuhan and Nanjing factional governments, who both sought his aid.[88] He met with Wang Jingwei and Tang Shengzhi at Zhengzhou on 10–11 June, then travelled to Xuzhou to meet with Chiang Kai-shek on 19 June. On the next day, Feng announced that he would align with the Nanjing faction and purge communists from the areas under his control, crippling the Wuhan government's plan to push north, upon which Tang returned to Wuhan with his troops.[89][90][91] Whilst Chiang intended to push into Shandong, he was thwarted by the arrival of the Japanese Kwantung Army during the course of June, who were ostensibly deployed to protect Japanese citizens in Qingdao.[92] Around this time, Wu Peifu retreated with his remaining forces into Sichuan, where he announced his retirement.[33] On 5 July, NPA general Chen Yi-yen defected to the NRA, but failed to convince his 10,000 soldiers at Qingdao to do likewise.[9]

At Wuhan, Tang Shengzhi began to mobilise his troops for an attack on the Nanjing government. Aware of this threat, Chiang recalled troops from the Shandong border in an effort to block Tang. In turn, the NPA launched an attack on Chiang in early July, reclaiming much of the territory they had lost.[93] By 24 July, the NPA had retaken Xuzhou.[94] In the face of mounting losses inflicted by the warlords, the Wuhan and Nanjing factions began reconciliation talks.[91] The Wuhan government purged communists from its ranks and expelled Soviet advisors, facilitating a rapprochement between the two factions, but also sparking the communist Nanchang uprising, which weakened its authority.[95] In the meantime, however, the NPA counter-offensive continued, reaching Bengbu on 9 August, and forcing Chiang to withdraw his troops south of the Yangtze. In return for his co-operation, Wang Jingwei demanded that Chiang resign from his post of commander-in-chief, and relinquish all political titles. Accordingly, Chiang resigned from his post on 12 August, though this did not immediately reunify the Wuhan and Nanjing factions.[96][97]

Without Chiang Kai-shek (August 1927–January 1928)

 
Shanxi warlord Yan Xishan started to fight the NPA in October 1927, strengthening the KMT military position

As the two sides attempted to reconcile their political differences, Sun Chuanfang's forces continued to bombard Nanjing from across the Yangtze. Sensing the NRA's continual disarray, Sun moved to try and recapture Shanghai, contrary to the wishes of NPA leader Zhang Zuolin.[98] On 25 August, NPA landing parties were dispatched to cross the Yangtze at Longtan, near Nanjing. In the early morning of 26 August, thousands of Sun's troops crossed the river, rallying at the Longtan station of the Shanghai–Nanjing railway. Li Zongren's NRA Seventh Army managed to drive the NPA away from the railway briefly, but thousands more of Sun's troops, including White Russian mercenary units, crossed the river the next day and retook the station, cutting off contact between Nanjing and Shanghai.[99] The reeling NRA sent missives to all factions within the revolutionary movement, calling for unity in the face of Sun's advancing troops. Accordingly, in an attempt to put pressure on Sun, Feng Yuxiang and his Guominjun launched an attack into Shandong on 28 August, while Wuhan sent its troops north, trying to flank Sun, and He Yingqin approached from Shanghai. With its forces encircled, and unable to continue to move troops across the river, the NPA was forced to abandon Longtan railway station on 30 August. In a desperate attempt at resistance, Sun rallied his 40,000 remaining troops and launched a counter-offensive on 31 August, only to be crushed in a hard-fought battle that left more than 10,000 of those troops dead. While Sun was able to escape to Shandong, his surviving troops were forced to surrender to NRA.[99][100]

 
Beiyang warlord soldiers retreating by railway

With victory in hand, reconciliation talks restarted on 7 September, and on 15 September, the Wuhan government was dissolved, with a new joint government established in Nanjing, under the leadership of Guangxi clique generals. Wang Jingwei refused to join the new government, as did Tang Shengzi, who became an independent warlord in his own right, controlling Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, and parts of Anhui.[101] On the other hand, Shanxi warlord Yan Xishan, theretofore independent, aligned his province with the Nanjing government, adding 100,000 troops to NRA ranks and increasing the pressure on Zhang Zuolin.[102][103] In the subsequent fighting neither the Shanxi nor Fengtian forces managed to gain the upper hand. Yan's troops successfully withstood a massive siege at Zhuozhou, but went on to suffer a heavy defeat at Baoding on 15 October.[104] The threat from Tang's forces, however, prejudiced any further northward advance by the NRA, and so in October it moved to quash his rebellion. Tang was defeated in early November, and left for exile in Japan shortly afterwards.[105] With Tang dealt with, the push north resumed, reaching Bengbu by 9 November. Continuing their advance, the NRA and Feng Yuxiang's Guominjun moved toward Xuzhou. The NPA attempted a counter-offensive on 12 December, led by armoured trains, but was quickly forced back by the combined NRA and Guominjun forces, which took Xuzhou on 16 December. The NPA retreated once more to Shandong.[106][107]

Meanwhile, in Guangzhou, a communist uprising broke out on 11 December.[104][108] The violent rebellion was quickly put down, and on 13 December, Chiang Kai-shek called for the ending of all remaining relations with the Soviet Union. The Nanjing government agreed, and also aired its suspicions over the allegiances of Wang Jingwei, who had been based in Guangzhou after the end of the Wuhan government. Wang left for exile in France on 17 December, paving the way for Chiang's return as commander-in-chief.[108] With the military success of Chiang's Whampoa troops, the various KMT factions agreed to recognise the legitimacy of Chiang's leadership. Consequently, Chiang was officially invited to resume command of the NRA on 1 January 1928.[109][110]

Regrouping and Jinan incident (January–May 1928)

With the frigid winter of northern China prohibiting any further advance, Chiang used the months following his reappointment to consolidate his control and restore the integrity of the Nanjing administration.[111] On 18 February, Chiang was granted the title "Commander-in-Chief of the Northern Expeditionary Forces", whilst He Yingqin was made NRA chief-of-staff. The NRA was reorganised into four "collective armies". The First Collective Army was made up largely of the original NRA forces from Guangzhou, now based in the Nanjing–Shanghai area. The Second Collective Army consisted of Feng's Guominjun, the Third of Yan's Shanxi forces, and the Fourth of Li Zongren's Guangxi clique army.[112] By this point, the NRA was made up of one million soldiers, most of them part of ex-warlord armies.[113][114] Preparing for a resumption of the expedition in March, Chiang ordered his foreign ministry to negotiate with the Japanese, in order to try to prevent their further intervention in Shandong.[115]

By 1 April, Feng's NRA Second Collective Army (Guominjun) and Yan's NRA Third Collective Army had started to fight the NPA on the Henan–Shandong border and along the Beijing–Suiyuan railway. The resumption of the Northern Expedition was officially launched by Chiang Kai-shek on 7 April. With the NPA line softened by Feng and Yan's attacks, the NRA First Collective Army rushed into Shandong along the Tianjin–Pukou railway, capturing Tengzhou by 16 April.[111] Meanwhile, Feng's forces advanced into Shandong from the west, capturing Jiaxiang on the 15th. Sun Chuanfang decided to attempt a two-pronged counter-offensive against the NRA First and Second armies, managing to push the First back to the Longhai railway. His attack against the Second Army failed, and by the 21st, the combined NRA had forced him to withdraw from Jining to the provincial capital Jinan.[116][117][118] According to an American account Sun's retreat, the "great majority of the troops in this retreat literally walked the soles off their shoes, and this, combined with the scarcity of food and total lack of shelter left the vast horde without any idea of further resistance".[119] The Japanese, meanwhile, having heard of Sun's defeat, began to move Kwantung Army troops by train from Qingdao to Jinan.[120]

While the NRA Second Collective Army advanced northeast to Jinan along the southern bank of the Yellow River, the First Collective Army diverged east from the Tianjin–Pukou railway at Tai'an, crossing the Taishan mountains to attack Jinan from the west via the Qingdao–Jinan railway. This strategy was successful, and by 29 April, the NRA had nearly encircled Jinan. The beleaguered NPA retreated to the north bank of the Yellow River, amidst looting and outbreaks of violence. At this point, there were already 3,000 Japanese troops in Jinan, guarding the 2,000 Japanese civilians in the city.[121] On the next day, NRA troops entered Jinan.[119] Chiang Kai-shek arrived on 2 May, and attempted to negotiate a Japanese withdrawal from Jinan, issuing safety guarantees for Japanese civilians to local Kwantung Army commander Hikosuke Fukuda. Fukuda agreed, and his troops prepared to leave that night.[122] Early the next morning, conflict broke out between the Chinese and Japanese troops, starting what came to be called the "Jinan incident". What began as a minor armed altercation escalated on 8 May into a full-scale Japanese attack on the city.[122] During the course of the incident, the Japanese killed KMT foreign affairs commissioner Cai Gongshi, several diplomats, and about five thousand Chinese civilians.[123][124]

Final offensive and capture of Beijing (May–December 1928)

 
When Zhang Xueliang (right) decided to make peace with the nationalist government, his former subordinates Zhang Zongchang (middle) and Chu Yupu (left) unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow him.

Deciding to avoid further confrontation with the Japanese, the NRA First Army continued its march north by going around Jinan to capture Dezhou on 13 May, while the NRA Second Army moved north along the Beijing–Hankou railway. Meanwhile, Yan Xishan's NRA Third Army proceeded toward Beijing from its base in Shanxi.[102][125] The Second and Third armies met at Baoding on the North China Plain. While the Second Army besieged that city, the Third Army went north toward Zhangjiakou, gateway to Beijing.[126] On 17 May, however, the forces of Zhang Zuolin launched a 200,000-man counter-offensive, forcing the First Army back and the Second Army 48 kilometres (30 mi) south of Baoding.[127] As fighting grew closer to Beijing, the Japanese sent a communique to both the NRA and Zhang, warning that any fighting in Manchuria would result in a Japanese intervention in that region. Zhang, weary of KMT propaganda that linked him with the Japanese massacre at Jinan, responded that he would "not recognize Japan's interest in Manchuria", compromising his position.[128] With his troops demoralised, the momentum of the NPA counter-offensive fizzled out by 25 May, and the Third Army was able to capture Zhangjiakou on that day, and Nankou Pass on the next.[126] With pressure growing on his vital railway links, Zhang gradually began to withdraw his troops from the North China Plain on 30 May. In the face of the NRA onslaught, and under pressure from the Japanese, Zhang decided to evacuate to Manchuria by train, leaving with his staff on 3 June.[129] Early the next morning, a bomb planted by the Japanese Kwantung Army exploded under the train, killing Zhang in the so-called "Huanggutun incident".[15] His remaining forces, even further demoralised, crumpled under the pressure of the NRA advance. Sun Chuanfang unleashed the final blow to the NPA when he withdrew his troops from the defensive line and fled to Japanese-controlled Dairen on 4 June. On 6 June, the NRA Third Collective Army marched into Beijing, ending the Beiyang government.[129] The other NRA armies would arrive in the Beijing area over the next few days. Zhang Zongchang subordinate Xu Yuanquan subsequently surrendered Tianjin to the NRA First Collective Army on 11 June.[130]

Zhang Xueliang succeeded Zhang Zuolin as leader of the Fengtian clique, and decided to end the war and to co-operate with the nationalists. The Shandong–Zhili Army led by Zhang Zongchang and Chu Yupu refused to surrender, and despite the defeats it had suffered still numbered about 60,000–70,000 soldiers, as well as at least three armoured trains manned by White Russian mercenaries under General Konstantin Nechaev. As Zhang Xueliang had sided with the nationalists, Zhang Zongchang declared war on the Fengtian clique.[131][132] Supported by Japan, the Shandong–Zhili Army moved from its base at Tangshan on 2 August,[132] crossed the Luan River, and invaded Manchuria.[131] After six days of fighting,[132] however, the defiant warlord army was trapped by KMT and Zhang Xueliang-aligned forces; many of Zhang Zongchang's troops (including the White Russian mercenaries) defected or deserted, and those who refused to surrender were killed.[131] Zhang Xueliang officially declared his allegiance to the nationalist government in Nanjing on 29 December 1928, marking the formal end of the Northern Expedition, and the reunification of China.[133]

Aftermath

 
The leaders of the Northern Expedition gather on 6 July 1928 at Sun Yat-sen's mausoleum in the Temple of Azure Clouds, Beijing, to commemorate the completion of their mission.

Following the capture of Beijing, Chiang and his administration moved quickly to reorganise the government for peacetime. In July, he and the leaders of the four collective armies met at Beijing to discuss the demobilisation and disarmament of the roughly 2.2 million troops that had come to be part of the NRA.[134][135] Chiang desired to reduce the size of the army by half, so as to free up government monies for domestic development. The lack of unity in the new administration quickly became apparent, and on 14 July, Feng Yuxiang left Beijing.[135] A general meeting of the KMT was held in Nanjing from 8–14 August. At this meeting, also attended by non-KMT members Feng and Yan Xishan, the primary topic discussion was that of centralisation. Chiang desired to take the power that had been executed through various provincial entities and concentrate it in the central government, in an effort to curtail the provincialist tendencies of the warlord era.[136] Minister of Finance T. V. Soong called for all revenues to be centralised in the national treasury.[137] In the end, though, it was recognised that real centralisation could only occur if the various commanders, the former warlords, relinquished their financial and military power to the national government. While these principles were nominally agreed to by the KMT membership, their exercise in practice was far from assured.[138]

The new peacetime Nanjing government was launched on 10 October 1928, the seventeenth anniversary of the start of the Xinhai Revolution, with Chiang at its head. The country, however, remained de facto divided into five realms controlled by military leaders.[139][133] The Nanjing faction controlled the area around Nanjing and Shanghai, while the Guangxi clique controlled Hubei, Hunan, and Guangxi. Feng Yuxiang's Guominjun continued to control Shaanxi, Henan, and parts of Shantung and Zhili, while Yan Xishan controlled Shanxi, Beijing, and the area around Tianjin.[139] Zhang Xueliang continued to control Manchuria as a quasi-independent state, and local warlords in Sichuan, Yunnan, and Guizhou remained as they were before the Northern Expedition.[139][140]

Defeated warlord Zhang Zongchang would return to his former territory of Shandong in 1929, where he launched a rebellion against his former subordinate Liu Zhennian, who had defected to the nationalists during the Northern Expedition. While the rebellion was put down swiftly, it demonstrated the Nanjing government's shaky hold on China's vast territory.[141] As Chiang attempted to cut back the military and centralise the power of the nationalist government in Nanjing, the regional warlords, with their military forces largely intact, began to renounce their allegiance to Chiang and form an alliance against the KMT.[133] This struggle for supremacy broke into armed conflict in the Central Plains War of 1929–30.[142] Although Chiang was ultimately victorious in that war which ensured his status as the singular leader of all China, regionalism and warlordism would continue, weakening the country and laying the groundwork for the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War.[143]

In the Soviet Union

The Northern Expedition became a point of contention between Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky in the Soviet Union. Stalin encouraged the CCP to co-operate with the KMT on multiple occasions, as he believed the KMT was more capable of completing the Chinese revolution. Trotsky was against collaboration with the KMT, as he believed that it was opposed to the concept of proletarian revolution. The Comintern backed Stalin's decision to financially support the KMT.[144] Stalin, who in his China strategy prohibited the arming of workers and peasants, and encouraged co-operation with the bourgeoisie, was considered vulnerable in the aftermath of the failure of the first United Front. This failure crystallised his move away from international revolution and toward "Socialism in One Country".[145] Stalin would never again trust the Chinese Communist Party, which he would later refer to as "margarine communists" who deviated from Marxist orthodoxy in their drive for peasant-based (land reform), rather than worker-based, revolution.[146]

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Further reading

  • Eastman, Lloyd E. (1986). The Nationalist Era in China, 1927–1949. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521385916.
  • Koga, Yukiko (2016). Inheritance of Loss: China, Japan, and the Political Economy of Redemption After Empire. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226412139.
  • Lary, Diana (2015). China's Civil War. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107054677.

External links

  •   Media related to Northern Expedition at Wikimedia Commons

northern, expedition, other, uses, disambiguation, military, campaign, launched, national, revolutionary, army, kuomintang, also, known, chinese, nationalist, party, against, beiyang, government, other, regional, warlords, 1926, purpose, campaign, reunify, chi. For other uses see Northern Expeditions disambiguation The Northern Expedition was a military campaign launched by the National Revolutionary Army NRA of the Kuomintang KMT also known as the Chinese Nationalist Party against the Beiyang government and other regional warlords in 1926 The purpose of the campaign was to reunify China which had become fragmented in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1911 The expedition was led by Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek and was divided into two phases The first phase ended in a 1927 political split between two factions of the KMT the right leaning Nanjing faction led by Chiang and the left leaning faction in Wuhan led by Wang Jingwei 12 The split was partially motivated by Chiang s Shanghai Massacre of Communists within the KMT which marked the end of the First United Front In an effort to mend this schism Chiang Kai shek stepped down as the commander of the NRA in August 1927 and went into exile in Japan 13 14 Northern ExpeditionPart of the Warlord EraClockwise from top left Chiang inspecting soldiers of the National Revolutionary Army NRA troops marching north an NRA artillery unit in combat civilians showing support for the NRA peasants volunteering to join the expedition NRA soldiers preparing to launch an attack Date9 July 1926 29 December 1928 2 years and 173 days LocationSouthern to Northern ChinaResultNRA victory Nationalist government rules over the entirety of China Overthrow of the Beiyang government Nanjing Wuhan split Beginning of the Chinese Civil WarBelligerentsNationalist government United Front until April 1927 NRA KMT CCP until 1927 Allied warlord armies Guominjun Guangxi Shanxi army others 1 Supported by Soviet Union 2 Comintern 3 Beiyang government NPA Fengtian clique Zhili cliqueSupported by Empire of Japan 4 Commanders and leadersChiang Kai shek Feng Yuxiang Li Zongren Bai Chongxi He Yingqin Yan Xishan Zhang Fakui Li Jishen Tan Yankai Cheng Qian Deng Yanda Zhou Enlai Ye Ting Mikhail Borodin 5 Vasily Blyukher 6 Zhang Zuolin Zhang Xueliang Zhang Zongchang Yang Yuting Wu Peifu Sun ChuanfangStrengthc 100 000 July 1926 7 c 264 000 Dec 1926 8 c 700 000 spring 1927 9 c 1 000 000 1928 10 c 700 000 1 000 000 1926 10 11 c 190 000 250 000 Dec 1928 1 The second phase of the Expedition began in January 1928 when Chiang resumed command By April 1928 the nationalist forces had advanced to the Yellow River With the assistance of allied warlords including Yan Xishan and Feng Yuxiang nationalist forces secured a series of decisive victories against the Beiyang Army As they approached Beijing Zhang Zuolin leader of the Manchuria based Fengtian clique was forced to flee and was assassinated shortly thereafter by the Japanese His son Zhang Xueliang took over as the leader of the Fengtian clique and in December 1928 announced that Manchuria would accept the authority of the nationalist government in Nanjing With the final piece of China under KMT control the Northern Expedition concluded successfully and China was reunified heralding the start of the Nanjing decade 15 Contents 1 Prelude 2 First phase July 1926 April 1927 2 1 Against Wu Peifu July September 1926 2 2 Against Sun Chuanfang September 1926 February 1927 2 3 Shanghai Nanjing offensive February April 1927 3 Anti communist purge and second phase April 1927 June 1928 3 1 Internal conflict among the nationalists April August 1927 3 2 Without Chiang Kai shek August 1927 January 1928 3 3 Regrouping and Jinan incident January May 1928 3 4 Final offensive and capture of Beijing May December 1928 4 Aftermath 4 1 In the Soviet Union 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksPrelude Edit Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek commander in chief of the NRA emerged from the Northern Expedition as the leader of the KMT and China In the 1920s the Beiyang government based in Beijing was internationally recognised as the legitimate Chinese government Much of the country however was not under its control being ruled by a patchwork of warlords The Kuomintang KMT based in Guangzhou Canton aspired to be the party of national liberation Since the conclusion of the Constitutional Protection Movement in 1922 the KMT had been bolstering its ranks to prepare for an expedition against the northern warlords in Beijing with the goal of reunifying China 16 This preparation involved improving both the political and military strength of the KMT Before his death in March 1925 Sun Yat sen the founder of the Republic of China and co founder of the KMT was supportive of Sino Soviet co operation which had involved forming the First United Front with the Chinese Communist Party CCP 17 The military arm of the KMT was the National Revolutionary Army NRA 18 Chiang Kai shek who had emerged as Sun s protege as early as 1922 was appointed commandant of the Whampoa Military Academy in 1924 and quickly emerged as a contender for the position of Sun s successor in the aftermath of his death 19 On 30 May 1925 Chinese students in Shanghai gathered at the International Settlement and held demonstrations in opposition to foreign interference in China 20 Specifically with the support of the KMT they called for the boycott of foreign goods and an end to the Settlement which was governed by the British and Americans The Shanghai Municipal Police largely operated by the British opened fire on the crowd of demonstrators This incident sparked outrage throughout China culminating in the Canton Hong Kong strike which began on 18 June and proved a fertile recruiting ground for the CCP 21 Concerns about the rising power of the leftist faction and the effect of the strike on the Guangzhou government s ability to raise funds which was largely dependent on foreign trade led to increasing tensions within the United Front Amidst this backdrop Chiang who had been vying for the position of KMT leader began to consolidate power in preparation for an expedition against the northern warlords On 20 March 1926 he launched a bloodless purge of hardline communists who were opposed to the proposed expedition from the Guangzhou administration and its military known as the Canton Coup At the same time Chiang made conciliatory moves toward the Soviet Union and attempted to balance the need for Soviet and CCP assistance in the fight against the warlords with his concerns about growing communist influence within the KMT 22 23 In the aftermath of the coup Chiang negotiated a compromise whereby hardline members of the rightist faction such as Wu Tieh cheng were removed from their posts in compensation for the purged leftists By doing so Chiang was able to prove his usefulness to the CCP and their Soviet sponsor Joseph Stalin Soviet aid to the KMT government would continue as would co operation with the CCP A fragile coalition between KMT rightists centrists led by Chiang KMT leftists and the CCP managed to hold together laying the groundwork for the Northern Expedition 24 25 In 1926 there were three major coalition of warlords across China that were hostile to the KMT government in Guangzhou The forces of Wu Peifu occupied northern Hunan Hubei and Henan provinces The coalition of Sun Chuanfang was in control of Fujian Zhejiang Jiangsu Anhui and Jiangxi provinces The most powerful coalition led by Zhang Zuolin then head of the Beiyang government and the Fengtian clique was in control of Manchuria Shandong and Zhili 26 To face the Northern Expedition Zhang Zuolin eventually assembled the National Pacification Army Chinese 安國軍 pinyin Anguojun Wade Giles Ankuochun NPA an alliance of the warlords of northern China 18 First phase July 1926 April 1927 EditAgainst Wu Peifu July September 1926 Edit Northern ExpeditionTraditional Chinese國民革命軍北伐Simplified Chinese国民革命军北伐Literal meaningNational Revolutionary Army northern expeditionTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinGuomin geming jun beifaBopomofoㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄍㄜˊ ㄇㄧㄥˋ ㄐㄩㄣ ㄅㄟˇ ㄈㄚˊWade GilesKuomin komin chun peifaHakkaRomanizationKoet min kiet min kiun pet phatYue CantoneseJyutpingGwok3man4 gaak3ming6 gwan1 bak1fat6Southern MinHokkien POJKok bin Kek beng kun Pak hoa tTai loKok bin Kik bing kun Pak hua t Chiang Kai shek prepares to leave Guangzhou Those pictured include Mikhail Borodin on the far left Vasily Blyukher in military uniform on the right and Chiang himself in uniform to the right of Blyukher Amidst heavy fighting along the border between KMT held territory and that of the recently allied forces of the Fengtian and Zhili cliques the nationalist government appointed Chiang Kai shek commander in chief of the NRA on 5 June 1926 Chiang would accept this post in a ceremony on 9 July which marked the formal start of the Northern Expedition although military clashes had already been ongoing 27 28 The initial strategy for the KMT s northern advance against the Zhili warlords which was largely devised by Soviet advisors Mikhail Borodin and Vasily Blyukher was to focus on defeating Wu Peifu and appeasing Sun Chuanfang while ignoring Zhang Zuolin of the Fengtian clique 29 27 28 Having switched from a defensive to offensive posture KMT forces quickly advanced from their base in Guangdong into Wu controlled Hunan province capturing Changsha on 11 July 30 At the time most of Wu Peifu s forces were preoccupied with fighting at Nankou Pass near Beijing against the Guominjun a breakaway Zhili faction sympathetic to the KMT 28 Sun Chuanfang who the KMT had avoided antagonising did not intervene as KMT troops advanced further into Wu s territory 31 32 Whilst the Fengtian clique had offered its support to Wu he refused their aid fearing that the northern warlords would undermine his position if he allowed their troops into his territory 33 At a military conference held in Changsha on 11 12 August the KMT decided launch a direct assault on Wu s stronghold of Wuchang bypassing Sun s Nanchang 27 28 In this manner they would follow the route taken by the Taiping Rebellion in the 19th century 34 In an address to his generals at the same conference Chiang proclaimed The importance of this fight is not only in that it will decide the fate of the warlords But whether or not the Chinese nation and race can restore their freedom and independence hangs in the balance In other words it is a struggle between the nation and the warlords between the revolution and the anti revolutionaries between the Three People s Principles and imperialism All are to be decided now in this time of battle so as to restore independence and freedom to our Chinese race 35 NRA troops preparing to attack Wuchang NRA forces enter the British concession at Hankou October 1926 With the capture of the Yangtze port of Yuezhou on 22 August Hunan came under complete KMT control paving the way for an advance to Wuchang along the route of the Beijing Guangzhou railway 36 As Wu Peifu s forces retreated northward they breached several Yangtze dikes slowing the KMT push By 28 August the KMT led by Li Zongren and his Guangxi NRA Seventh Army had taken Xianning about 75 kilometres 47 mi south of Wuchang Wu Peifu who had returned south to mount a defence of Wuchang gathered his forces at Heshengqiao Bridge On 29 August he launched a counterattack against KMT forces to the south compromising his defensive line and by noon the next day his forces were in general retreat toward Wuchang In this short period of time Wu lost 8 000 troops At least 5 000 of these were taken prisoner along with their rifles providing a boost to KMT forces 37 By 2 September the NRA had nearly surrounded Wuchang Whilst Wu and most of his army fled north to Henan province his remaining troops in the walled city held out for over a month 38 39 40 His failure in the face of the NRA however left his hold on power and reputation broken What remained of his army would disintegrate in the following months 33 Against Sun Chuanfang September 1926 February 1927 Edit With Wu Peifu s forces in retreat the NRA directed itself toward Sun Chuanfang controlled Jiangxi province namely the city of Jiujiang and the provincial capital Nanchang Whilst Sun had been offered a non aggression pact by the Guangzhou government he was not willing to subordinate his administration to KMT rule Consequently whilst the siege in Wuchang was still ongoing Chiang Kai shek launched an attack across the Jiangxi border on 4 September 41 By 19 September both Jiujiang and Nanchang had come under KMT control hastened by the defection of Lai Shih huang one of Sun s generals 42 43 Despite these successes the NRA offensive was forced into retreat as Sun arrived from Nanjing with reinforcements on 21 September Sun retook most of the territory he had lost brutally reasserting his authority by killing hundreds of students teachers and suspected members of the KMT whose severed heads he displayed on spikes in public places 44 Routes of the Northern Expedition With the Northern Expedition s advance halted Chiang wired the government in Guangzhou demanding an end to the still ongoing Canton Hong Kong strike which continued to hamper his supply chain 45 Negotiations with the British began on 23 September with the strike finally called off on 10 October This eased access to supplies for the NRA and freed up manpower in the form of the strikers for the continued push north 45 46 On the same day Wu Peifu s remaining forces at Wuchang surrendered completing the NRA s conquest of Hubei province 38 As bloody fighting continued in Jiangxi the civil governor of Zhejiang province Xia Chao one of Sun s subordinates defected to the KMT government in Guangzhou Zhejiang inhabitants had become increasingly dissatisfied with the rule of Sun who was foreign to the province and on 16 October Xia declared its independence 47 48 Chiang Kai shek a native of Zhejiang was able to convince Xia to side with the KMT Following his defection Xia launched an attack on Sun controlled Shanghai but was almost immediately forced to withdraw back to Zhejiang Sun had detected Xia s plans days earlier 47 Sun s forces subsequently marched on Zhejiang crushing the rebellion by 23 October Xia was executed along with hundreds of his troops while thousands of civilians were massacred at Xia s former headquarters 47 40 Alongside the Zhejiang rebellion the NRA had continued their offensive in Jiangxi Adding to the pressure on Sun the Shantou based NRA First Army led by He Yingqin marched across the Guangdong border and began a new offensive into Fujian province NRA troops were welcomed by many locals including the Hakka who resented foreign control and gradually began to infiltrate the Fujian countryside He s forces moved up the coast pushing toward the provincial capital Fuzhou 49 50 By the end of October Sun s forces were again in retreat across Jiangxi and Fujian 51 52 In early November KMT troops moved to capture the Yangtze ports of Jiujiang and Hukou and by 9 November retook control of Nanchang Sun s forces abandoned substantial materiel as they retreated bolstering the poorly armed NRA which suffered 20 000 casualties in the final push on Nanchang alone 53 Concurrently Sun himself had left for Tianjin with the aim of seeking aid from the powerful Fengtian clique 54 Shandong warlord Zhang Zongchang and Manchurian warlord Zhang Zuolin offered assistance agreeing that it was necessary to contain the NRA though they demanded payment in return for their help As the NRA offensive carved its way through Fujian 60 000 troops from Shandong arrived in Sun controlled Anhui province on 24 November These were organised into the National Pacification Army NPA on 1 December Zhang Zuolin took the position of commander in chief with Zhang Zongchang and Sun Chuanfang as deputy commanders 55 Members of the National Pacification military government from left to right Pan Fu Gungsangnorbu Wu Junsheng Sun Chuanfang Zhang Zuoxiang and Zhang Zongchang This alliance was hugely unpopular with locals in the regions under Sun s control with Zhang Zhongchang s northern troops viewed as invaders The Zhejiang autonomy movement continued and a meeting of influential provincial figures nominally loyal to Sun was held in Shanghai on 8 December 56 In Fujian many of Sun s troops had already defected to the NRA and on 9 December He Yingqin s army entered Fuzhou unopposed 54 57 On 11 December Zhejiang commander Zhou Fengqi announced his defection to the NRA This started a cascade of defections leading to Zhejiang s secession from Sun s United Provinces after which it was given autonomous status by the Guangzhou government 58 In response Sun rallied his army on Zhejiang border with the NPA protecting his rear and charged into Zhejiang retaking most of the province By 10 January the majority of the Zhejiang rebel forces had retreated to Quzhou To relieve the besieged rebels He Yingqin pushed his Fujian based forces into Zhejiang halting Sun s advance The rebel and KMT forces merged under the command of Bai Chongxi who launched a counteroffensive on 20 January By 29 January the offensive had reached Lanxi and Jinhua where a fierce battle resulted in a catastrophic defeat for Sun s forces 59 Following this victory the NRA launched a pincer attack on provincial capital Hangzhou Many of Sun s northern troops demoralised by defeat broke ranks and streamed north looting the towns and villages they passed along the way With his forces in disarray Sun s commander in the area Meng Chao yueh decided on 17 February to abandon Hangzhou and flee with his 20 000 troops by train to Jiangsu province 59 By 23 February Zhejiang was under complete KMT control In six months the nationalists had expanded their control to seven provinces inhabited by a population of about 170 million people 57 Aided by the defection of numerous warlords and their armies by this point the NRA had bolstered its ranks to 700 000 9 Shanghai Nanjing offensive February April 1927 Edit See also Nanking incident of 1927 and Wuhan government Sun Chuanfang retreated to Nanjing in the aftermath of these setbacks 60 The Fengtian clique responded to Sun s plea for help by reinforcing Jiangsu and Anhui provinces while increasing the number of troops in Henan in support of Wu Peifu 61 Two major Fengtian formations the Shandong Army of Zhang Zongchang and the Zhili Army of Chu Yupu crossed the Yangtze River in February 1927 to help Sun defend Nanjing and Shanghai 62 Following their victory in Zhejiang Chiang Kai shek ordered the launch of an offensive on those two cities The Hangzhou based eastern NRA led by Bai Chongxi and He Yingqin launched a two pronged attack in mid March Bai s forces advanced toward Shanghai whilst He s forces moved toward Changzhou with the goal of severing Sun s lifeline the Shanghai Nanjing railway 63 Meanwhile Cheng Qian s central NRA advanced toward Nanjing through Anhui province its path opened by the defection of Sun s forces there 64 The remnants of Sun s forces supported by the Shandong Army were forced to withdraw to Shanghai proper in the face of Bai s army 62 He s forces quickly severed the railway link with Shanghai while Sun was confronted with the defection of his navy and a communist general strike in Shanghai 63 65 Intense fighting took place at Songjiang just outside the city but on 22 March Bai s forces marched into Shanghai victorious 66 63 9 The Fengtian support operation had proven to be a costly operational disaster for the northern warlords whose armies had suffered heavy casualties forcing them to retreat north across the Yangtze 62 Meanwhile the strike continued until 24 March when Bai ordered its end The general disorder caused by the strike is said to have resulted in the deaths of 322 people with 2 000 wounded contributing to KMT feelings of unease with its wayward communist allies 67 With Shanghai under their control the NRA turned its attention to Nanjing He Yingqin advanced from the south east whilst Cheng Qian came from the south west 63 Zhang Zongchang ordered his Shandong Army to withdraw from Nanjing on 23 March leaving the city undefended 68 Cheng arrived on the next day entering the city with no resistance 63 69 61 Almost immediately after arrival of the NRA mass anti foreigner riots broke out in the city in an event that came to be known as the Nanjing Incident 63 British and American naval forces were sent to evacuate their respective citizens resulting in a naval bombardment that left the city burning and at least forty people dead 70 He s forces arrived on 25 March and on the next day Cheng and He were finally able to put an end to the violence 67 70 Chiang Kai shek s faction accused Lin Boqu of planning the unrest viewing it as an attempt to turn international opinion against the KMT Lin a member of both the CCP and the KMT had been serving as political commissar of the Sixth Army part of Cheng Qian s forces 69 Whoever was responsible the Nanjing Incident represented the culmination of tensions within the First United Front The nationalist government had moved from Guangzhou to the new city of Wuhan which was formed from a merger of Wuchang and two other nearby cities The Wuhan administration gradually drifted away from Chiang becoming a centre of leftist Soviet backed power within the KMT and constraining his authority Communist led trade unions staged near constant demonstrations in Wuhan itself and across the nominally KMT controlled territories establishing parallel structures of administration in areas liberated by the NRA 71 72 In the final success of the first phase of the expedition the NRA went on to capture Anhui provincial capital Hefei and the smaller city of Bengbu NRA forces that had already been operating north of the Yangtze continued into northern Jiangsu province Their advance however was hampered by the administrative chaos that followed the Nanjing Incident 73 Tensions between the leftists in Wuhan and rightists in Nanjing would come to a head bringing the Northern Expedition to a halt 71 Meanwhile in the aftermath of the Shanghai Nanjing offensive the aid of the Fengtian armies prevented Sun Chuanfang s army from collapsing completely and they eventually managed to regroup and strengthen their forces for the next phase of the conflict 62 Launching a counteroffensive on 3 April the NPA had been able to force the NRA back more than 161 kilometres 100 mi to the Yangtze by 11 April 74 Anti communist purge and second phase April 1927 June 1928 EditInternal conflict among the nationalists April August 1927 Edit Further information Shanghai massacre Wuhan government and Nanchang uprising Mikhail Borodin making a speech in Wuhan 1927 As part of the First United Front many members of the Chinese Communist Party had joined the KMT and they exerted significant influence over its left wing faction Mikhail Borodin the official liaison between the KMT and the Soviet government in Moscow had spent years cultivating this alliance while covertly encouraging CCP expansion 75 This Soviet backed leftist wing of the KMT came to dominate the nationalist government in Wuhan which increasingly directed its ire at NRA commander in chief Chiang Kai shek On 1 April the Wuhan government advised by Borodin issued edicts stripping Chiang of his authority in foreign affairs financial matters and communications and ordered that he leave his command post in Shanghai and go to the front These orders had no effect as Wuhan had almost no military authority 76 The government intended to send a small force to Nanjing with the aim of disarming Chiang but put that plan on hold following Wang Jingwei s return from exile in Europe Wang who had travelled back to China at the urging of members of the government was greeted in Shanghai by Chiang who offered a power sharing deal Wang said that he would consider the deal and boarded a ship for Wuhan on 7 April He arrived on the 10th where he was eagerly greeted by the Wuhan leadership Having heard from Wang about Chiang s offer the government decided to turn its limited forces toward Beijing instead Chiang on the other hand was already preparing for a purge of communists in Shanghai 76 77 Between 12 and 14 April hundreds of communists in Shanghai were arrested and killed on the orders of Chiang in a disturbance that came to be called the Shanghai massacre effectively ending the alliance between the nationalists and the communists 9 78 The ensuing White Terror devastated the Communists and only 10 000 out of 60 000 party members survived 79 The purge was condemned by the Wang Jingwei now leader of the Wuhan government formalising the split between the KMT leftists based in Wuhan and the KMT rightists who subsequently established their own government in Nanjing 80 The precariousness of the NRA position in Nanjing was clear at ceremonies held to commemorate the city s elevation to capital of China warlord Zhang Zongchang s artillery bombarded the city s waterfront from across the Yangtze 81 With the Nanjing Shanghai area under constant threat of attack from the NPA a series of independent offensives was launched by NRA and NRA aligned forces in May 1927 Feng Yuxiang and his Guominjun moved first leaving their base in Shaanxi to march on Luoyang in Henan 82 On 10 May the NRA First and Sixth armies crossed the Yangtze into Anhui and on 16 May Li Zongren based in western Anhui led the Seventh Army toward Hefei 83 Concurrently the Wuhan government launched its own campaign in Henan province led by Tang Shengzhi whom was appointed to serve as the Wuhan army s commander in chief Aided by the defection of remnants of Wu Peifu s forces Tang advanced to fight the forces of the Young Marshal Zhang Xueliang Zhang Zuolin s son and political heir pushing them back to a river at Yancheng 84 Feng Yuxiang meets with Chiang Kai shek in Xuzhou on 19 June 1927 By 20 May Li had captured Bengbu whilst Chiang unleashed a four pronged attack through Jiangsu toward the warlord power base in Shandong 83 85 He Yingqin led the NRA First Army across the Yangtze at Zhenjiang and moved to capture Haizhou 86 On 28 May Li took Suzhou while the Guominjun took Luoyang forcing Zhang Zongchang to withdraw his forces to Shandong and Zhang Xueliang to fall back north of the Yellow River 87 Following Xueliang s retreat Feng Yuxiang moved east from Luoyang to Zhengzhou 88 Finally on 2 June the NRA captured the vital railway junction of Xuzhou 86 With both the Longhai and Beijing Hankou railways under NRA or Guominjun control Feng came into direct contact with the Wuhan and Nanjing factional governments who both sought his aid 88 He met with Wang Jingwei and Tang Shengzhi at Zhengzhou on 10 11 June then travelled to Xuzhou to meet with Chiang Kai shek on 19 June On the next day Feng announced that he would align with the Nanjing faction and purge communists from the areas under his control crippling the Wuhan government s plan to push north upon which Tang returned to Wuhan with his troops 89 90 91 Whilst Chiang intended to push into Shandong he was thwarted by the arrival of the Japanese Kwantung Army during the course of June who were ostensibly deployed to protect Japanese citizens in Qingdao 92 Around this time Wu Peifu retreated with his remaining forces into Sichuan where he announced his retirement 33 On 5 July NPA general Chen Yi yen defected to the NRA but failed to convince his 10 000 soldiers at Qingdao to do likewise 9 At Wuhan Tang Shengzhi began to mobilise his troops for an attack on the Nanjing government Aware of this threat Chiang recalled troops from the Shandong border in an effort to block Tang In turn the NPA launched an attack on Chiang in early July reclaiming much of the territory they had lost 93 By 24 July the NPA had retaken Xuzhou 94 In the face of mounting losses inflicted by the warlords the Wuhan and Nanjing factions began reconciliation talks 91 The Wuhan government purged communists from its ranks and expelled Soviet advisors facilitating a rapprochement between the two factions but also sparking the communist Nanchang uprising which weakened its authority 95 In the meantime however the NPA counter offensive continued reaching Bengbu on 9 August and forcing Chiang to withdraw his troops south of the Yangtze In return for his co operation Wang Jingwei demanded that Chiang resign from his post of commander in chief and relinquish all political titles Accordingly Chiang resigned from his post on 12 August though this did not immediately reunify the Wuhan and Nanjing factions 96 97 Without Chiang Kai shek August 1927 January 1928 Edit Further information Guangzhou Uprising Shanxi warlord Yan Xishan started to fight the NPA in October 1927 strengthening the KMT military position As the two sides attempted to reconcile their political differences Sun Chuanfang s forces continued to bombard Nanjing from across the Yangtze Sensing the NRA s continual disarray Sun moved to try and recapture Shanghai contrary to the wishes of NPA leader Zhang Zuolin 98 On 25 August NPA landing parties were dispatched to cross the Yangtze at Longtan near Nanjing In the early morning of 26 August thousands of Sun s troops crossed the river rallying at the Longtan station of the Shanghai Nanjing railway Li Zongren s NRA Seventh Army managed to drive the NPA away from the railway briefly but thousands more of Sun s troops including White Russian mercenary units crossed the river the next day and retook the station cutting off contact between Nanjing and Shanghai 99 The reeling NRA sent missives to all factions within the revolutionary movement calling for unity in the face of Sun s advancing troops Accordingly in an attempt to put pressure on Sun Feng Yuxiang and his Guominjun launched an attack into Shandong on 28 August while Wuhan sent its troops north trying to flank Sun and He Yingqin approached from Shanghai With its forces encircled and unable to continue to move troops across the river the NPA was forced to abandon Longtan railway station on 30 August In a desperate attempt at resistance Sun rallied his 40 000 remaining troops and launched a counter offensive on 31 August only to be crushed in a hard fought battle that left more than 10 000 of those troops dead While Sun was able to escape to Shandong his surviving troops were forced to surrender to NRA 99 100 Beiyang warlord soldiers retreating by railway With victory in hand reconciliation talks restarted on 7 September and on 15 September the Wuhan government was dissolved with a new joint government established in Nanjing under the leadership of Guangxi clique generals Wang Jingwei refused to join the new government as did Tang Shengzi who became an independent warlord in his own right controlling Hubei Hunan Jiangxi and parts of Anhui 101 On the other hand Shanxi warlord Yan Xishan theretofore independent aligned his province with the Nanjing government adding 100 000 troops to NRA ranks and increasing the pressure on Zhang Zuolin 102 103 In the subsequent fighting neither the Shanxi nor Fengtian forces managed to gain the upper hand Yan s troops successfully withstood a massive siege at Zhuozhou but went on to suffer a heavy defeat at Baoding on 15 October 104 The threat from Tang s forces however prejudiced any further northward advance by the NRA and so in October it moved to quash his rebellion Tang was defeated in early November and left for exile in Japan shortly afterwards 105 With Tang dealt with the push north resumed reaching Bengbu by 9 November Continuing their advance the NRA and Feng Yuxiang s Guominjun moved toward Xuzhou The NPA attempted a counter offensive on 12 December led by armoured trains but was quickly forced back by the combined NRA and Guominjun forces which took Xuzhou on 16 December The NPA retreated once more to Shandong 106 107 Meanwhile in Guangzhou a communist uprising broke out on 11 December 104 108 The violent rebellion was quickly put down and on 13 December Chiang Kai shek called for the ending of all remaining relations with the Soviet Union The Nanjing government agreed and also aired its suspicions over the allegiances of Wang Jingwei who had been based in Guangzhou after the end of the Wuhan government Wang left for exile in France on 17 December paving the way for Chiang s return as commander in chief 108 With the military success of Chiang s Whampoa troops the various KMT factions agreed to recognise the legitimacy of Chiang s leadership Consequently Chiang was officially invited to resume command of the NRA on 1 January 1928 109 110 Regrouping and Jinan incident January May 1928 Edit Further information Jinan incident With the frigid winter of northern China prohibiting any further advance Chiang used the months following his reappointment to consolidate his control and restore the integrity of the Nanjing administration 111 On 18 February Chiang was granted the title Commander in Chief of the Northern Expeditionary Forces whilst He Yingqin was made NRA chief of staff The NRA was reorganised into four collective armies The First Collective Army was made up largely of the original NRA forces from Guangzhou now based in the Nanjing Shanghai area The Second Collective Army consisted of Feng s Guominjun the Third of Yan s Shanxi forces and the Fourth of Li Zongren s Guangxi clique army 112 By this point the NRA was made up of one million soldiers most of them part of ex warlord armies 113 114 Preparing for a resumption of the expedition in March Chiang ordered his foreign ministry to negotiate with the Japanese in order to try to prevent their further intervention in Shandong 115 By 1 April Feng s NRA Second Collective Army Guominjun and Yan s NRA Third Collective Army had started to fight the NPA on the Henan Shandong border and along the Beijing Suiyuan railway The resumption of the Northern Expedition was officially launched by Chiang Kai shek on 7 April With the NPA line softened by Feng and Yan s attacks the NRA First Collective Army rushed into Shandong along the Tianjin Pukou railway capturing Tengzhou by 16 April 111 Meanwhile Feng s forces advanced into Shandong from the west capturing Jiaxiang on the 15th Sun Chuanfang decided to attempt a two pronged counter offensive against the NRA First and Second armies managing to push the First back to the Longhai railway His attack against the Second Army failed and by the 21st the combined NRA had forced him to withdraw from Jining to the provincial capital Jinan 116 117 118 According to an American account Sun s retreat the great majority of the troops in this retreat literally walked the soles off their shoes and this combined with the scarcity of food and total lack of shelter left the vast horde without any idea of further resistance 119 The Japanese meanwhile having heard of Sun s defeat began to move Kwantung Army troops by train from Qingdao to Jinan 120 While the NRA Second Collective Army advanced northeast to Jinan along the southern bank of the Yellow River the First Collective Army diverged east from the Tianjin Pukou railway at Tai an crossing the Taishan mountains to attack Jinan from the west via the Qingdao Jinan railway This strategy was successful and by 29 April the NRA had nearly encircled Jinan The beleaguered NPA retreated to the north bank of the Yellow River amidst looting and outbreaks of violence At this point there were already 3 000 Japanese troops in Jinan guarding the 2 000 Japanese civilians in the city 121 On the next day NRA troops entered Jinan 119 Chiang Kai shek arrived on 2 May and attempted to negotiate a Japanese withdrawal from Jinan issuing safety guarantees for Japanese civilians to local Kwantung Army commander Hikosuke Fukuda Fukuda agreed and his troops prepared to leave that night 122 Early the next morning conflict broke out between the Chinese and Japanese troops starting what came to be called the Jinan incident What began as a minor armed altercation escalated on 8 May into a full scale Japanese attack on the city 122 During the course of the incident the Japanese killed KMT foreign affairs commissioner Cai Gongshi several diplomats and about five thousand Chinese civilians 123 124 Final offensive and capture of Beijing May December 1928 Edit Further information Huanggutun incident and Chinese reunification 1928 When Zhang Xueliang right decided to make peace with the nationalist government his former subordinates Zhang Zongchang middle and Chu Yupu left unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow him Deciding to avoid further confrontation with the Japanese the NRA First Army continued its march north by going around Jinan to capture Dezhou on 13 May while the NRA Second Army moved north along the Beijing Hankou railway Meanwhile Yan Xishan s NRA Third Army proceeded toward Beijing from its base in Shanxi 102 125 The Second and Third armies met at Baoding on the North China Plain While the Second Army besieged that city the Third Army went north toward Zhangjiakou gateway to Beijing 126 On 17 May however the forces of Zhang Zuolin launched a 200 000 man counter offensive forcing the First Army back and the Second Army 48 kilometres 30 mi south of Baoding 127 As fighting grew closer to Beijing the Japanese sent a communique to both the NRA and Zhang warning that any fighting in Manchuria would result in a Japanese intervention in that region Zhang weary of KMT propaganda that linked him with the Japanese massacre at Jinan responded that he would not recognize Japan s interest in Manchuria compromising his position 128 With his troops demoralised the momentum of the NPA counter offensive fizzled out by 25 May and the Third Army was able to capture Zhangjiakou on that day and Nankou Pass on the next 126 With pressure growing on his vital railway links Zhang gradually began to withdraw his troops from the North China Plain on 30 May In the face of the NRA onslaught and under pressure from the Japanese Zhang decided to evacuate to Manchuria by train leaving with his staff on 3 June 129 Early the next morning a bomb planted by the Japanese Kwantung Army exploded under the train killing Zhang in the so called Huanggutun incident 15 His remaining forces even further demoralised crumpled under the pressure of the NRA advance Sun Chuanfang unleashed the final blow to the NPA when he withdrew his troops from the defensive line and fled to Japanese controlled Dairen on 4 June On 6 June the NRA Third Collective Army marched into Beijing ending the Beiyang government 129 The other NRA armies would arrive in the Beijing area over the next few days Zhang Zongchang subordinate Xu Yuanquan subsequently surrendered Tianjin to the NRA First Collective Army on 11 June 130 Zhang Xueliang succeeded Zhang Zuolin as leader of the Fengtian clique and decided to end the war and to co operate with the nationalists The Shandong Zhili Army led by Zhang Zongchang and Chu Yupu refused to surrender and despite the defeats it had suffered still numbered about 60 000 70 000 soldiers as well as at least three armoured trains manned by White Russian mercenaries under General Konstantin Nechaev As Zhang Xueliang had sided with the nationalists Zhang Zongchang declared war on the Fengtian clique 131 132 Supported by Japan the Shandong Zhili Army moved from its base at Tangshan on 2 August 132 crossed the Luan River and invaded Manchuria 131 After six days of fighting 132 however the defiant warlord army was trapped by KMT and Zhang Xueliang aligned forces many of Zhang Zongchang s troops including the White Russian mercenaries defected or deserted and those who refused to surrender were killed 131 Zhang Xueliang officially declared his allegiance to the nationalist government in Nanjing on 29 December 1928 marking the formal end of the Northern Expedition and the reunification of China 133 Aftermath EditFurther information Nanjing decade and Central Plains War The leaders of the Northern Expedition gather on 6 July 1928 at Sun Yat sen s mausoleum in the Temple of Azure Clouds Beijing to commemorate the completion of their mission Following the capture of Beijing Chiang and his administration moved quickly to reorganise the government for peacetime In July he and the leaders of the four collective armies met at Beijing to discuss the demobilisation and disarmament of the roughly 2 2 million troops that had come to be part of the NRA 134 135 Chiang desired to reduce the size of the army by half so as to free up government monies for domestic development The lack of unity in the new administration quickly became apparent and on 14 July Feng Yuxiang left Beijing 135 A general meeting of the KMT was held in Nanjing from 8 14 August At this meeting also attended by non KMT members Feng and Yan Xishan the primary topic discussion was that of centralisation Chiang desired to take the power that had been executed through various provincial entities and concentrate it in the central government in an effort to curtail the provincialist tendencies of the warlord era 136 Minister of Finance T V Soong called for all revenues to be centralised in the national treasury 137 In the end though it was recognised that real centralisation could only occur if the various commanders the former warlords relinquished their financial and military power to the national government While these principles were nominally agreed to by the KMT membership their exercise in practice was far from assured 138 The new peacetime Nanjing government was launched on 10 October 1928 the seventeenth anniversary of the start of the Xinhai Revolution with Chiang at its head The country however remained de facto divided into five realms controlled by military leaders 139 133 The Nanjing faction controlled the area around Nanjing and Shanghai while the Guangxi clique controlled Hubei Hunan and Guangxi Feng Yuxiang s Guominjun continued to control Shaanxi Henan and parts of Shantung and Zhili while Yan Xishan controlled Shanxi Beijing and the area around Tianjin 139 Zhang Xueliang continued to control Manchuria as a quasi independent state and local warlords in Sichuan Yunnan and Guizhou remained as they were before the Northern Expedition 139 140 Defeated warlord Zhang Zongchang would return to his former territory of Shandong in 1929 where he launched a rebellion against his former subordinate Liu Zhennian who had defected to the nationalists during the Northern Expedition While the rebellion was put down swiftly it demonstrated the Nanjing government s shaky hold on China s vast territory 141 As Chiang attempted to cut back the military and centralise the power of the nationalist government in Nanjing the regional warlords with their military forces largely intact began to renounce their allegiance to Chiang and form an alliance against the KMT 133 This struggle for supremacy broke into armed conflict in the Central Plains War of 1929 30 142 Although Chiang was ultimately victorious in that war which ensured his status as the singular leader of all China regionalism and warlordism would continue weakening the country and laying the groundwork for the Second Sino Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War 143 In the Soviet Union Edit The Northern Expedition became a point of contention between Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky in the Soviet Union Stalin encouraged the CCP to co operate with the KMT on multiple occasions as he believed the KMT was more capable of completing the Chinese revolution Trotsky was against collaboration with the KMT as he believed that it was opposed to the concept of proletarian revolution The Comintern backed Stalin s decision to financially support the KMT 144 Stalin who in his China strategy prohibited the arming of workers and peasants and encouraged co operation with the bourgeoisie was considered vulnerable in the aftermath of the failure of the first United Front This failure crystallised his move away from international revolution and toward Socialism in One Country 145 Stalin would never again trust the Chinese Communist Party which he would later refer to as margarine communists who deviated from Marxist orthodoxy in their drive for peasant based land reform rather than worker based revolution 146 References EditCitations Edit a b Jowett 2017 p 8 Fenby 2004 pp 117 119 123 Kotkin 2014 pp 626 629 Gao 2009 p 115 Jacobs 1981 p 211 Wilbur 1983 p 14 Jowett 2017 pp 2 7 Jowett 2017 p 7 a b c d e Jowett 2014 p 26 a b Jowett 2017 p 2 Jowett 2014 p 35 Taylor 2009 p 68 Taylor 2009 p 72 Boorman Cheng amp Krompart 1967 p 53 a b Taylor 2009 p 83 Taylor 2009 pp 30 37 Wilbur 1983 p 11 a b Kwong 2017 pp 149 160 Taylor 2009 p 41 Wilbur 1983 p 22 Jordan 1976 pp 11 29 Jordan 1976 pp 39 40 Wilbur 1983 p 47 Jordan 1976 pp 42 49 Kotkin 2014 pp 627 629 Wilbur 1983 p 51 a b c Wilbur 1983 p 56 a b c d Hsi Sheng 1976 p 225 Fischer 1930 pp 661 662 Jordan 1976 p 75 Jordan 1976 pp 76 78 Jowett 2014 p 36 a b c Jowett 2014 p 31 Jordan 1976 p 68 Chang 1953 p 524 vol 2 Jordan 1976 p 78 Jordan 1976 pp 79 80 a b Wilbur 1983 pp 57 59 Jordan 1976 p 81 a b Jowett 2014 p 25 Jordan 1976 p 82 Jordan 1976 p 83 Hsi Sheng 1976 p 100 Jordan 1976 p 84 a b Jordan 1976 p 85 Wilbur amp How 1989 pp 331 332 a b c Jordan 1976 pp 89 91 Smith 2000 p 149 Jordan 1976 pp 94 96 Worthing 2016 p 65 Jordan 1976 p 92 Jordan 1976 p 95 Jordan 1976 pp 91 92 a b Jordan 1976 p 96 Jordan 1976 pp 96 97 Jordan 1976 pp 100 101 a b Wilbur 1983 p 62 Jordan 1976 p 102 a b Jordan 1976 pp 103 104 Worthing 2016 p 70 a b Taylor 2009 p 65 a b c d Kwong 2017 pp 164 166 a b c d e f Worthing 2016 p 75 Jordan 1976 pp 113 114 Smith 2000 pp 181 183 Jordan 1976 pp 115 116 a b Jordan 1976 p 116 Wilbur 1983 p 617 a b Jordan 1976 p 117 a b Tolley 2000 pp 150 160 a b Jordan 1976 pp 118 120 Chiang 1978 p 69 Jordan 1976 p 120 Jordan 1976 p 125 Jacobs 1981 pp 146 147 a b Jacobs 1981 pp 245 246 Worthing 2016 p 84 Wilbur 1983 p 110 Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press00 p 33 ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 Wilbur 1983 p 113 Jordan 1976 p 127 Jordan 1976 p 131 a b Jordan 1976 p 129 Jordan 1976 p 130 Worthing 2016 pp 89 90 a b Worthing 2016 p 90 Jordan 1976 pp 129 131 a b Jordan 1976 p 132 Jordan 1976 p 272 Worthing 2016 pp 90 91 a b Jordan 1976 p 135 Jordan 1976 p 133 Jordan 1976 p 136 Worthing 2016 p 92 Worthing 2016 pp 91 92 Worthing 2016 pp 92 93 Jordan 1976 p 137 Jordan 1976 p 138 a b Jordan 1976 pp 138 141 Worthing 2016 p 104 Jordan 1976 pp 143 144 a b Taylor 2009 p 71 Jordan 1976 pp 273 274 a b Jowett 2014 p 27 Jordan 1976 p 145 Jordan 1976 pp 145 146 Kwong 2017 pp 193 194 a b Jordan 1976 pp 148 149 Worthing 2016 p 105 Jordan 1976 p 150 a b Jordan 1976 pp 151 152 Jordan 1976 pp 153 154 Jowett 2014 p 28 Jowett 2013 p 161 Jordan 1976 pp 154 155 Jordan 1976 pp 155 156 Wilbur 1983 p 176 Kwong 2017 pp 195 200 a b Kwong 2017 p 200 Jordan 1976 p 156 Jordan 1976 p 158 a b Wilbur 1983 pp 178 180 Taylor 2009 p 82 Wang 2014 p 80 Jordan 1976 p 162 a b Jordan 1976 p 163 Jordan 1976 p 164 Jordan 1976 pp 165 166 a b Jordan 1976 p 166 Jordan 1976 p 167 a b c Malmassari 2016 pp 88 89 a b c Mitter 2000 p 26 a b c Worthing 2016 p 112 Taylor 2009 p 84 a b Wilbur 1983 p 185 Wilbur 1983 p 186 Wilbur 1983 p 187 Wilbur 1983 p 188 a b c Wilbur 1983 p 193 Jowett 2013 p 165 Jowett 2017 pp 195 200 Taylor 2009 p 132 Jowett 2013 pp 165 169 173 Taylor 2009 p 57 Jacobs 1981 p 302 Brandt 1958 pp 174 175 Sources Edit Boorman Howard L Cheng Joseph K H Krompart Janet 1967 Biographical Dictionary of Republican China New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231089579 Brandt Conrad 1958 Stalin s Failure in China 1924 1927 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press OCLC 222139243 Chang Ch i yun 1953 Tang shih kai yao Outline of the party s history in Chinese Taipei Central Committee on Culture Supply Association Chiang Kai shek Madame 1978 Conversations with Mikhail Borodin London Free Chinese Centre Fenby Jonathan 2004 Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek and the China He Lost London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0743231449 Fischer Louis 1930 The Soviets in World Affairs A History of Relations Between the Soviet Union and the Rest of the World Vol 2 London J Cape OCLC 59836788 Gao James Z 2009 Historical Dictionary of Modern China 1800 1949 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810863088 Hsi Sheng Ch I 1976 Warlord Politics in China 1916 1928 Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804766197 Jacobs Dan N 1981 Borodin Stalin s Man in China Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 07910 8 Jordan Donald A 1976 The Northern Expedition China s National Revolution of 1926 1928 Honolulu University Press of Hawaii ISBN 9780824803520 Jowett Philip S 2013 China s Wars Rousing the Dragon 1894 1949 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 9781782004073 Jowett Philip S 2014 The Armies of Warlord China 1911 1928 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing ISBN 9780764343452 Jowett Philip S 2017 The Bitter Peace Conflict in China 1928 37 Stroud Amberley Publishing ISBN 9781445651927 Kwong Chi Man 2017 War and Geopolitics in Interwar Manchuria Zhang Zuolin and the Fengtian Clique during the Northern Expedition Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 9789004339125 Kotkin Stephen 2014 Stalin Paradoxes of Power 1878 1928 London Allen Lane ISBN 978071399944 0 Malmassari Paul 2016 1st pub 1989 Armoured Trains Translated by Roger Branfill Cook Barnsley Seaforth Publishing Pen and Sword Books ISBN 9781848322622 Mitter Rana 2000 The Manchurian Myth Nationalism Resistance and Collaboration in Modern China Berkeley Los Angeles University of California ISBN 9780520923881 Smith Stephen Anthony 2000 A Road Is Made Communism in Shanghai 1920 1927 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824823146 Taylor Jay 2009 The Generalissimo Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674033382 Tolley Kemp 2000 Yangtze Patrol The U S Navy in China Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 883 6 Wang Zheng 2014 Never Forget National Humiliation Historical Memory in Chinese Politics and Foreign Relations New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231148917 Wilbur C Martin 1983 The Nationalist Revolution in China 1923 1928 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521318648 Wilbur Clarence Martin How Julie Lien ying 1989 Missionaries of Revolution Soviet Advisers and Nationalist China 1920 1927 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674576520 Worthing Peter 2016 General He Yingqin The Rise and Fall of Nationalist China Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107144637 Further reading EditEastman Lloyd E 1986 The Nationalist Era in China 1927 1949 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521385916 Koga Yukiko 2016 Inheritance of Loss China Japan and the Political Economy of Redemption After Empire Chicago IL University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226412139 Lary Diana 2015 China s Civil War Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107054677 External links Edit Media related to Northern Expedition at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northern Expedition amp oldid 1128697428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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