565:, Li Pinxian should be recruited by the new Guangxi clique and served as the supervisor of the aftermath of Hunan. The Central Plains War resulted in the defeat of the New Guangxi clique, and Li Pinxian returned to Guangxi and served as Chief of Staff of the 4th Army Command. From then on, Li served as the principal of the Nanning Military Officer School, the Guangxi Border Defense Supervision Office and the administrative supervision of Zuojiang District, as well as the commander of the Longzhou District Civil Corps. In 1935, he once again served as chief of staff of the 4th Army Command. In January 1936, he was promoted to lieutenant general, and in July he served as deputy director of the Guangxi Suijing Office. In March 1937, he was awarded the rank of General.
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671:, chairman of the Yunnan Provincial Government, that the Guizhou Army No. 303 Division was stationed in Baise and was ready to enter Yunnan to "assist bandits"; The appeasement headquarters in the border area, with Zhang Guangwei as its commander, placing Yunnan into the defense area of the Guangxi Army. Li Pinxian was the chairman of the Guangxi Provincial Government, but was unable to stop the offensive of the Chinese People's Liberation Army and went to Taiwan in December 1949.
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501:'s army in Hubei. In February 1927, he served as the deputy commander of the Eighth Army; in April he was promoted to commander, concurrently serving as the commander-in-chief of the three towns of Wuhan and the member of the Hubei Provincial Government. After the outbreak of the Chinese Civil War and the purge of communists
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of the New
Guangxi clique. Li Pinxian joined the New Guangxi clique in February 1928. In April, he served as the commander of the 12th Army of the Fourth Army of the National Revolutionary Army and the commander of the 8th Army. Afterwards, he went northward again and defeated the 30,000 strong force
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Provincial County
Commission. Due to his military achievements, in January 1945, Li Pinxian was promoted to commander-in-chief of the Tenth Theater District. In June, he was elected as the sixth Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang. At the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Li Pinxian was
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In 1924, he served as the brigade commander of the Eighth
Brigade of the Fourth Division of the Hunan Army. In June 1926, Tang Shengzhi and the forces under his command joined the National Revolutionary Army, and Li Pinxian served as the third division commander of the Eighth Army of the National
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and served as the commander of the Fourth Army Corps of the Wuhan
Defense Army. In October of the same year, the Japanese army captured Wuhan after a 4 month battle. Afterwards, the Chinese forces under Li's command went to Hubei Province to reorganize. In April 1939, he participated in the
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Provincial
Government, the Commander-in-Chief of the 21st Army Group and Commander-in-Chief of the Henan-Anhui Border Region. He contributed to the formation of Anhui's anti-Japanese defenses. In May 1940, he fought in the Second Battle of Suixian-Zaoyang and the
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Suijing Office. On July 19, 1947, the
National Government promoted Li Pinxian to the chairman of the Anhui Election Office; the National Government also appointed him as a representative of the National Assembly and a legislator of the Legislative Yuan. In 1948,
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410:. In 1913, he entered the first phase of Baoding Army Officer School. He graduated the next year and returned to his hometown. In 1916, Li was transferred to the Hunan Army. Later, under
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He went to Taiwan in 1949 and served as an advisor to the
Presidential Strategy Advisory Committee. He retired in 1953, and served as the governor of Shuiyuanli in
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In July 1937, the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out. In
December, Li Pinxian served as deputy commander-in-chief of the fifth theater (commander-in-chief
320:. His career spanned the Xinhai Revolution, Warlord Era, the Second-Sino Japanese War, and the Chinese Civil War. After the loss of the mainland to the
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in
Jiangbei had an important impact on results of the conflict. On June 28, 1943, the National Government promoted Li Pinxian to the head of the
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broke out, Li
Pinxian joined the revolutionaries . Later, Li returned to his hometown and served as a member of the Ordnance Bureau of
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In May 1949, he served as Director of Guilin Suijing Office. On June 1, Li Pinxian, director of the Suijing Office of Guangxi, called
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Revolutionary Army. During the Northern Expedition he led the NRA troops to occupy all of Hunan and contributed to the defeat of
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in August 1941. On the other hand, Li Pinxian also strongly suppressed the CCP, and the relationship with the Communist led
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Li Pinxian was born in Cangwu County, Guangxi in 1890. In 1907, he entered the Guangxi Army Primary School created by
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and fought againstfour Japanese divisions, attempting to halt the Japanese offensive.
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of the Zhilu Coalition Army in Luanhe and stayed in Tangshan. In March 1929, the
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defeated Li Pinxian and went to Hong Kong. After the outbreak of the
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In November 1939, Li Pinxian was appointed as the Chairman of the
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At the end of 1929, Tang Shengzhi announced his split from
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In April 1946, Li Pinxian served as the chairman of the
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responsible for the surrender of the Japanese army in
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814:National Revolutionary Army generals from Guangxi
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622:. Before the incident, Li Pinxian's blockade of
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484:Learn how and when to remove this message
386:Learn how and when to remove this message
308:; April 22, 1890 – March 23, 1987) was a
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683:. On March 23, 1987, Li Pinxian died in
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788:李新; 韓信夫; 姜克夫, eds. (2011).
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730:近代史研究所 (2005). "萧棟梁「李品仙」".
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704:辭海編輯委員會, ed. (1989).
587:Battle of Taierzhuang
244:Years of service
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192:(1987-03-23)
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53:verification
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732:《民国人物传》第12卷
662:Bai Chongxi
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790:《中華民國史大事記》
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207:Allegiance
172:1890-04-22
142:Li Pinxian
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445:does not
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247:1912–1952
182:, Guangxi
761:《民国職官年表》
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225:Service/
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100:scholar
792:. 北京:
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681:Taipei
669:Lu Han
649:Xuzhou
633:Xuzhou
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449:any
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187:Died
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