1929 in China
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Events from the year 1929 in China.
Incumbents
Events
March
- March 5 â Yi Peiji was appointed as the president of the National Palace Museum and the curator of the antiquities museum by Nationalist Government.
April
- April 1 â Zhifu is captured by rebel forces in course of the Warlord Rebellion in northeastern Shandong, and subsequently largely destroyed.
- April 11 â Battle of Yichang in western Hubei between the armies of the Sichuan clique and New Guangxi clique
- Mid-April â Zhang Zongchang's warlord rebel army in northeastern Shandong collapses as result of indiscipline and a government counter-offensive.
May
- May 15: First Battle of Guilin: Hunan Army attacks Guilin, Guangxi
- May 17â21: Second Battle of Guangzhou between New Guangxi clique and Guangdong Army
June
- June 6 â 1929 Westlake exposition was opened.[1][2]
- June 7â18: Battle of Liuzhou, Guangxi between armies of New Guangxi clique and Hunan
July
- July 25 â the Soviet government's Assistant Commissar of Foreign Affairs, Lev Karakhan, had issued a manifesto to the Chinese government promising the return of the Chinese Eastern Railway to Chinese control with no financial cost.[3] (Sino-Soviet conflict (1929))
August
- August 26 â the Karakhan Manifesto was published by the Soviet press, but the document failed to mention neither the return of CER to the Chinese nor the lack of financial compensation.[3] (Sino-Soviet conflict (1929))
September
- September 23 â Liu Zhennian launches a campaign to crush the Red Spears' uprising in Shandong (1928â1929).
October
- October 10 â the closing of the 1929 Westlake exposition.
- October 18â24: battle at Zhengzhou, Henan between Feng Yuxiang's Northwest Army and National Revolutionary Army
November
- November â The Red Spear Society ceases to exist on the northern Shandong Peninsula as result of Liu Zhennian's counter-insurgency campaign.
- November 20 â Taiping Fire and Marine Insurance, as predecessor of China Taiping Insurance was founded in Shanghai.[citation needed]
- November 30 â end of battle of Heishiguan
December
- December â Gutian Congress
Births
January
- January 13 â Ge Cunzhuang, actor (d. 2016)
February
March
April
- April 7 â Yang Jie, television director and producer (d. 2017)
- April 8 â Sun Jiadong, aerospace engineer
May
- May 15 â Zhou Guangzhao, theoretical physicist (d. 2024)
June
- June 4 â Tian Jiyun, former Vice Premier of China
- June 21 â Ying Ruocheng, actor, director, playwright and former Vice Minister of Culture (d. 2003)
- June 30 â Yang Ti-liang, senior Hong Kong judge (d. 2023)
July
- July 4 â Tan Shaowen, 10th Secretary of the Tianjin Municipal Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (d. 1993)
- July 9 â Chi Haotian, 8th Minister of National Defense
- July 13 â Hou Yunde, virologist, geneticist and genetic engineer
- July 30 â Ji Chaozhu, diplomat (d. 2020)
- Chen Jinhua, politician (d. 2016)
August
- August 9 â Lui Che-woo, Hong Kong business magnate, investor and philanthropist (d. 2024)
- August 15 â Xiao Yang, 11th Mayor of Chongqing (d. 1998)
September
- Ding Guangen, 8th Minister of Railways (d. 2012)
October
- October 13 â Walasse Ting, Chinese-American painter (d. 2010)
- October 15 â Dong Cunrui, soldier in the People's Liberation Army (d. 1948)
- October 19 â Deng Sanrui, shipbuilding engineer (d. 2020)
November
- November 15 â Li Guangxi, national-level actor (d. 2022)
- November 26 â Tang Chongti, parasitologist
- November 28 â Yu Lihua, Taiwanese writer (d. 2020)
- Mao Zhiyong, politician (d. 2019)
December
- December 26 â Gong Yuzhi, theorist and politician in the Chinese Communist Party (d. 2007)
- December 29
- Shen Jilan, politician (d. 2020)
- He Zhenliang, politician and diplomat (d. 2015)
- December 31 â Guo Lanying, operatic soprano
Dates unknown
- Li Senmao, 9th Minister of Railways (d. 1996)
Deaths
- January 5 â Wang Daxie, 14th Premier of the Republic of China (b. 1859)
- January 10
- Yang Yuting, general in the Fengtian Army (b. 1885)
- Chang Yinhuai, statesman and general (b. 1888)
- January 19 â Liang Qichao, politician, social and political activist, journalist and intellectual (b. 1873)
- February 25 â Su Zhaozheng, early leader of the Chinese Communist Party and a labour movement activist (b. 1885)
- March 18 â Lü Yanzhi, architect (b. 1894)
- June 18 â Zaize, Manchu noble (b. 1868)
- August 30 â Peng Pai, pioneer of the Chinese agrarian movement and a leading revolutionary in the Chinese Communist Party (b. 1896)
