Chow Chih

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Born14 February 1890
Hoiping, Guangdong
Died8 March 1953(1953-03-08) (aged 63)
Allegiance Republic of China
Chow Chih
Born14 February 1890
Hoiping, Guangdong
Died8 March 1953(1953-03-08) (aged 63)
Allegiance Republic of China
Battles / wars
Spouse(s)Ao Yin-chiao
ChildrenChow Tso-hsu
Chinese name
Chinese周址[1]
Hanyu PinyinZhōu Zhǐ
Yale RomanizationJāu Jí

Chow Chih (14 February 1890 – 8 March 1953) was a general for Sun Yat-sen and a four-star general for Chiang Kai-shek during the Chinese Civil War and second Sino-Japanese War. He is also known as Chou Chih or Zhou Zhi in Mandarin. Chow Chih was a military strategist who led 100 battles in Guangdong (Canton) and was introduced by Chiang Kai-shek at a 1942 anti-Japan planning conference as a soldier with great achievements in all the military arts.

Chow was born on 14 February 1890, in Stone River Village, Cuanshi Township in Hoiping to his 17-year-old father Chow Tin Yuet and 19-year-old mother Chow Fang. Chow's father Tin Yuet was an early Chinese settler in Mississippi and was part of the Mississippi Delta Chinese. Tin Yuet regularly sent money home to his family and visited Canton. Chow's sister Run Ho was born a few years later and his brother Zhang Li was born in 1909. Tin Yuet owned and operated a grocery store in rural Hollandale, Mississippi.

Chow's first marriage at the age of 16 was to 18-year-old Ao Yin-Chiao (born 6 March 1888) from Canton and was arranged by his father Tin Yuet. A son named Chow Tso-Hsu was born on 16 April 1914 and was the only child born from Chow's first marriage.

Military career

Later life

References

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