Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Feng Yuxiang ( chinesisch 馮玉祥 / 冯玉祥, Pinyin Féng Yùxiáng, W.-G. Feng Yü-hsiang; Geburtsname 馮基善, Féng Jīshàn, Feng Chi-shan; Zì 焕章, Huànzhāng, Huan-chang; * 1882 in Xingji ( Hebei ); † 1. September 1948 nahe Odessa [1]) war einer der Kriegsherren in der frühen Periode der Republik China, der Ära ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Feng_YuxiangFeng Yuxiang - Wikipedia

    Feng Yuxiang (simplified Chinese: 冯玉祥; traditional Chinese: 馮玉祥; pinyin: Féng Yùxiáng; IPA: [fə́ŋ ỳɕi̯ɑ́ŋ]; 6 November 1882 – 1 September 1948), courtesy name Huanzhang (焕章), was a Chinese warlord and a leader of the Republic of China from Chaohu, Anhui.

  3. Feng Yuxiang (born Nov. 6, 1882, Xingjizhen, Zhili [now in Hebei province], China—died Sept. 1, 1948, at sea) was a Chinese warlord, known as the Christian General, who dominated parts of North China from 1918 to 1930. A soldier at the age of 11, Feng was largely self-educated.

  4. Feng Yuxiang (1882-1948, Wade-Giles: Feng Yu-hsiang) war ein mächtiger Militärführer, der auch als „christlicher Generaloderchristlicher Kriegsherrbekannt war. In politischer Übereinstimmung mit den Nationalisten fungierte Feng auch als erster Vizepremier Chinas unter Jiang Jieshi.

  5. Feng, now elevated as an important ally, had cleared warlord troops blocking the roads to Beijing. Together with Yan Xishan, the “Model Governor,” and yet another warlord player, Jiang and Feng ended the Northern Expedition with the conquest of Beijing on June 8, 1928. Although cooperating warlords survived as Guomindang al­lies, their ...

  6. alphahistory.com › chineserevolution › feng-yuxiangFeng Yuxiang - Alpha History

    Feng Yuxiang (1882-1948, Wade-Giles: Feng Yu-hsiang) was a powerful military leader, variously known as the ‘Christian general’ or the ‘Christian warlord’. In political alignment with the Nationalists, Feng also served as the first vice premier of China under Jiang Jieshi.

  7. Zusammen mit den Resten der Letzteren und den Kommunisten formte Feng Yuxiang 1933 in der Inneren Mongolei die „Alliierte Antijapanische Armee“, konnte sich ab 1935 jedoch innerhalb derselben nicht mehr gegen die Kommunisten durchsetzen.