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Jiang Qing

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Jiang Qing
江青
Jiang in 1976
Spouse of the Paramount leader of China
In office
1 October 1949 – 9 September 1976
LeaderMao Zedong (party chairman)
Succeeded byHan Zhijun
Spouse of the President of China
In office
27 September 1954 – 27 April 1959
PresidentMao Zedong
Succeeded byWang Guangmei
Personal details
Born
Li Shumeng

March 1914 (1914-03)
Zhucheng, Shandong, Republic of China
Died14 May 1991(1991-05-14) (aged 77)
Beijing, People's Republic of China
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
Resting placeBeijing Futian Cemetery
Political partyChinese Communist Party
Spouses
  • Pei Minglun
    (m. 1931)
  • (m. 1932)
  • (m. 1936)
  • (m. 1938; died 1976)
ChildrenLi Na
Criminal penaltyDeath sentence with reprieve, later commuted to life imprisonment
Signature
Jiang Qing
Chinese江青
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiāng Qīng
Wade–GilesChiang1 Ch'ing1
IPA[tɕjáŋ tɕʰíŋ]

Jiang Qing[note 1] (March 1914 – 14 May 1991), also known as Madame Mao, was a Chinese communist revolutionary, actress, and political figure. She was the fourth wife of Mao Zedong, the Chairman of the Communist Party and Paramount leader of China. Jiang was best known for playing a major role in the Cultural Revolution as the leader of the radical Gang of Four.

Born into a declining family with an abusive father and a mother whose work as a domestic servant and sometimes a prostitute, Jiang Qing rose above her beginnings to become a renowned actress in Shanghai, and later the wife of Mao Zedong, in the 1930s.[1] In the 1940s, she worked as Mao Zedong's personal secretary, and during the 1950s, she headed the Film Section of the Propaganda Department of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Appointed deputy director of the Central Cultural Revolution Group in 1966, Jiang played a pivotal role as Mao’s emissary during the early stages of the Cultural Revolution. Collaborating with Lin Biao, she advanced Mao’s ideology and promoted his cult of personality. Jiang wielded considerable influence over state affairs, particularly in culture and the arts. Propaganda posters idolised her as the "Great Flagbearer of the Proletarian Revolution." In 1969, she secured a seat on the Politburo, cementing her power.

Following Mao's death, she was soon arrested by Hua Guofeng and his allies in 1976. State media portrayed her as the "White-Boned Demon,"[1][2] and she was widely blamed for instigating the Cultural Revolution, a period of upheaval that caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Chinese people. Initially sentenced to death, Jiang's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1983. Released for medical treatment in the early 1990s, she committed suicide in May 1991.[3][4]

Names

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Chinese names

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Jiang Qing was known by various names throughout her life. Before her birth, her father named the baby Li Jinnan,[b] where Jinnan means the "coming boy." When she was born, her father changed the name to Li Jinhai,[c] meaning the "coming child."[5] Therefore, Jiang Qing also called herself Li Jin.[d][5][6] Several other sources indicate her birth name Li Shumeng,[e][7][8] which means "pure and simple."[8][9]

She adopted the name Li Yunhe[f] during primary school.[10][5] She told her biographer Roxane Witke that she liked the name because "Yunhe," meaning "crane in the cloud," sounded beautiful.[10] In July 1933, during her first visit to Shanghai, she assumed the name Li He[g] and worked as a teacher for local workers. On her second visit to Shanghai in June 1934, she used the alias Zhang Shuzhen.[h] Later, when detained by the Nationalist government in October 1934, she identified herself as Li Yungu.[i][5]

In 1935, when she entered the entertainment industry, she took on the stage name Lan Pin,[j] which means "blue apple".[11][12] Although the name had no particular meaning, its bluntness made it unique. However, Jiang Qing did not favour this name due to its association with her scandals in Shanghai.[13] She became known as Jiang Qing upon arriving in Yan'an, where "Jiang" means "river" and "Qing" means "azure" or "better than blue".[14]

In 1991, when she was hospitalised in Beijing, she used the name Li Runqing.[k] When she died in Beijing, her body was labelled with the pseudonym Li Zi.[l] In March 2002, she was buried in Beijing by the name Li Yunhe.[15][16]

English names

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In English, many contemporary articles used the Wade–Giles romanisation system to spell Chinese names. For this reason, some sources – especially older ones – spell her name "Chiang Ch'ing".[17] She was also known as Madame Mao, as the wife and widow of Mao Zedong.[18]

Early life

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Jiang Qing was born in Zhucheng, Shandong, in March 1914. She deliberately kept her exact birth date private to avoid receiving any gifts.[14] Her father was Li Dewen[m], a carpenter, and her mother, whose name is unknown,[19] was Li's subsidiary wife, or concubine.[20] Her father had his own carpentry and cabinet making workshop.[19] Her parents were married after her father found his first wife unable to conceive.[21]

As a child, Jiang was deeply traumatised by the domestic violence inflicted by her father, who verbally and physically abused her mother almost every day. One Lantern Festival, after her father broke her mother’s finger during an attack, her mother fled with Jiang under the cover of darkness.[21][22] Her mother found work as a domestic servant that often blurred the lines with prostitution, [23] and her husband separated from her.[24]

Jiang eventually moved with her mother to her grandparents' home in Jinan. However, they soon returned to Zhucheng, as her mother continued to seek inheritance rights, or financial support, from her husband’s family, which proved extremely difficult. During this period, Jiang attended two primary schools with disruptions, where she was often mocked for wearing outdated, boyish clothing from her brothers. She became silent and not easy to open up.[25]

Her mother, having fallen ill, eventually abandoned hope of obtaining further financial support from her husband. After selling some of her belongings, she purchased a train ticket, and together with Jiang, boarded a train from Jiaoxian to Jinan. There, Jiang was welcomed by her grandparents and resumed her primary education.[26] In 1926–1927, her mother took her further north to Tianjin to stay with her half-sister. During this time, Jiang worked as a housekeeper in the household. She proposed taking a job rolling cigarettes, but the family disapproved. Later they returned to Jinan, where her mother passed away in 1928.[27]

Entertainment career

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Jinan

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At 14, Jiang, now an orphan, joined a local underground theatre troupe, seeking independence. Her striking looks drew attention, but she remained sensitive about her poor upbringing. Alarmed by her undisclosed departure, her grandparents paid the troupe's boss to bring her back. She enrolled in the Experimental Arts Academy, which became less picky about the social class of new entrants due to the May Fourth Movement. Despite her strong Shandong accent initially hindering her performances, she excelled during her year of training, in some traditional opera roles. When the academy closed in 1930, Jiang, though only half-trained, was chosen to join theatrical companies in Beijing.[28] She returned to Jinan in May 1931 and married Pei Minglun,[n] the wealthy son of a businessman, and soon divorced.[28][31]

Qingdao

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Jiang Qing in Qingdao

Following her divorce, Jiang reached out to Zhao Taimou, the former director of the Arts Academy and dean of Qingdao University. With the assistance of Zhao's wife, Yu Shan, Jiang secured a position as a clerk in the university library.[32] Yu Shan later introduced Jiang to her brother, Yu Qiwei,[33] an upper-class youth who had embraced the Communist cause and was connected to underground Communist organisations as well as literary and performing arts circles.[34] The Mukden Incident in September ignited her patriotism, leading her to develop a dislike for the Kuomintang and its supporters.[35] By the end of 1932, Jiang and Yu Qiwei fell in love and began living together, enabling Jiang to gain entry into the Communist Cultural Front.[34] She became a member of the Seaside Drama Society, performing in plays such as Lay Down Your Whip, harnessing the influence of theatre to resist Japanese aggression. In February 1933, she officially joined the CCP.[36] The Communist activities at Qingdao University attracted significant attention from the Kuomintang's secret police, who arrested Yu Qiwei in July, forcing Jiang to leave Qingdao.[37]

Shanghai

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Jiang in a 1935 film poster

After the arrest of Yu Qiwei, Yu Shan arranged for Jiang to move to Shanghai. With a recommendation from Tian Han's younger brother, Tian Luan, she enrolled as a visiting student at the Great China University in Shanghai. In July, with endorsements from Tian Han and his associates, Jiang became a teacher at the Chengeng Workers' School, an institution organised by Tao Xingzhi. During this time, Yu Qiwei was released and visited her in Shanghai. In October, Jiang re-joined the Chinese Communist Youth League, became a member of the League of Left-Wing Educators, and resumed her career as a drama actress.[38] Later Jiang was among the cast of a production of Roar, China! which British authorities banned from being performed in Shanghai's International Settlement.[39]

In September 1934, Jiang was arrested and jailed for her political activities in Shanghai, but was released three months later, in December of the same year. She then traveled to Beijing where she reunited with Yu Qiwei who had just been released following his prison sentence, and the two began living together again.[38][40]

Collective wedding in Hangzhou (Jiang is the third female from the left)

She returned to Shanghai in March 1935, and entered Diantong Film Company. She became famous when featuring in Ibsen's play A Doll's House as Nora.[41] She later became an actress in Goddess of Freedom and Scenes of City Life, during which she fell in love with Tang Na, her colleague at Diantong. The two began living together in September 1935 and were married in a collective wedding ceremony at Liuhe Pagoda in Hangzhou in April 1936. However, Jiang lied to Tang, claiming her mother was ill, and returned to Tianjin to see Yu Qiwei. When Tang discovered the truth, he attempted suicide in Jinan but later reconciled with Jiang and returned with her to Shanghai in July 1935.[38]

Jiang Qing on the cover of a film magazine

In Shanghai, Jiang joined Lianhua Film Company, where she acted in Blood on Wolf Mountain and Lianhua Symphony. During this period, she began an affair with film director Zhang Min and appeared in his production The Storm, taking on the role of Wang Laowu. However, during the second performance of The Storm in May 1937, Tang attempted suicide again. Following this incident, Jiang divorced Tang and started living with Zhang Min, but the relationship cost her career as she was dismissed by Lianhua Film Company.[38]

Selected films featuring Jiang Qing in the 1930s
Year English title Original title Role Notes
1935 Goddess of Freedom 自由神 Yu Yueying
Scenes of City Life 都市风光 Wang Junsheng's girlfriend
1936 Blood on Wolf Mountain 狼山喋血记 Liu Sansao
1937 Lianhua Symphony 联华交响曲 Rickshaw puller's wife Segment 1: "Twenty Cents"
1938 Wang Laowu 王老五 Young Girl Li Filmed in 1937. Leading actress

Yan'an

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Jiang's widely publicised affair with Tang Na tarnished her reputation, making it difficult for her to continue her acting career in Shanghai. Like many youths of her time, she was drawn to the progressive ideals associated with Yan'an. The Marco Polo Bridge Incident in July 1937, which marked the start of Japan's full-scale invasion of China, further galvanised young activists to advocate for a united front. Yan'an, promoted through Communist propaganda, emerged as a symbol of democracy, freedom, and hope.[42]

She went first to Xi'an, then to the Chinese Communist headquarters in Yan'an to "join the revolution" and the war to resist the Japanese invasion. In November, she enrolled in the Counter-Japanese Military and Political University for study. The Lu Xun Academy of Arts was newly founded in Yan'an on 10 April 1938, and Jiang became a drama department instructor, teaching and performing in college plays and operas.[4][42]

Early political activities

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The conditions in Yan'an were quite harsh, but Jiang Qing was able to make it there and persist. Jiang was striking in appearance and had several talents; she could sing opera, write well, and her calligraphy was particularly impressive, especially in regular script. On one hand, she was relatively quiet and reserved—she didn't enjoy shooting, but liked playing poker, knitting, and was skilled at creating various patterns. She was also adept at tailoring and made her own clothes beautifully. On the other hand, she had a lively and bold side—Jiang enjoyed horseback riding, especially taming wild horses; the more ferocious the horse, the more she liked to ride it. This combination of traits allowed her to excel as both a homemaker and adapt to the tough, military lifestyle, earning the admiration of revolutionary leaders.[42]

Marriage with Mao Zedong

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Mao and Jiang writing together in Yan'an, 1938

In the autumn of 1937, He Zizhen, the wife of Mao Zedong, left Yan'an. When news of Jiang Qing's romance with Mao Zedong broke, it sparked significant opposition. The most vocal critic was Zhang Wentian, who believed that He Zizhen, as an outstanding CCP member, having endured the Long March and sustained multiple injuries, deserved respect. However, some felt that Mao Zedong's personal matters, including his choice of a wife, were his own business, and others should not interfere. Among those who supported Mao, the most vocal was Kang Sheng. Figures like Zhou Enlai and Liu Shaoqi, however, were more cautious in their support of Jiang Qing. They sent telegrams to the Shanghai Party leadership, urging them to clarify Jiang's conduct in Shanghai, where she was suspected of being a "secret agent" of the Kuomintang.[42]

On 28 November 1938, Jiang Qing married Mao Zedong with the eventual approval of the Politburo. Various accounts suggest that her role came with certain restrictions, although the specifics varied across sources. When the Kuomintang forces captured Yan'an, they reportedly seized a diary belonging to Wang Ruofei, which detailed the so-called "Three Conditions" imposed on Jiang. Although the original manuscript has not been publicly verified, the version released in Taiwan is considered among the most credible. The "Three Conditions" were reportedly as follows:[42]

  1. Since Mao and He Zizhen had not formally dissolved their marriage, Jiang Qing was prohibited from publicly assuming the title of Mao Zedong's wife.[42]
  2. Jiang Qing was tasked solely with caring for Mao Zedong's daily life and health, and no one else could make similar requests to the Party Central Committee.[42]
  3. Jiang Qing was restricted to managing Mao's private affairs. She was barred from holding any Party positions for 20 years and was prohibited from interfering in Party personnel matters or participating in political activities.[42]

Early years as First Lady

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Li Na, Jiang and Mao in Yan'an in 1943

Sex is engaging in the first rounds; what sustains interest in the long run is power.

— Jiang Qing[43]

In the early years of their marriage, Mao Zedong and Jiang Qing shared a harmonious life. Jiang primarily took on the role of a homemaker, attending to Mao's daily needs. In 1940, she gave birth to their daughter, Li Na. After Li Na’s birth, Jiang Qing largely withdrew from the public eye.[42] After the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Jiang Qing became the nation's first lady. She served as the deputy director of the Film Guidance Committee, overseeing the evaluation of film projects from 1949 to 1951.[44] Jiang was ill for much of the 1950s, and while ill she stepped back from her official role.[45] In 1949, she was diagnosed with uterine cancer and underwent four rounds of treatment in the Soviet Union.[42]

Mao and Jiang in 1946

During the 1950s and 1960s, Jiang Qing left a generally favourable impression on those who interacted with her.[42] In 1949, after Soong Ching-ling attended the founding ceremony in Beijing and returned to Shanghai, Mao Zedong sent Jiang Qing to see her off at the train station. It is said that Soong later remarked that Jiang was "polite and likable." In 1956, Soong hosted Indonesian President Sukarno at a banquet in Shanghai, where Jiang and Liu Shaoqi’s wife, Wang Guangmei, were also present. Soong reportedly praised Jiang for her refined manners and tasteful attire. During their conversation, Jiang even asked Soong to encourage Mao to wear a tie and suits, noting that Sun Yat-sen often did so and suggesting that foreigners found the simplicity of Chinese officials' clothing too monotonous.[42]

Before 1962, the Chinese media never mentioned who Mao Zedong's wife was in its foreign propaganda. People close to Mao Zedong claimed that after the 1950s, Jiang Qing was rarely seen by his side, and their emotional relationship had essentially ended, leaving her feeling frustrated for a time. However, as the 1960s progressed, Mao became increasingly distrustful of the surrounding leaders and his judgment of the domestic political situation grew more severe. Jiang Qing capitalised on this shift, becoming more outspoken, which led Mao to view her as "politically sensitive" and start to trust her. As a result, her power grew steadily. From 1962 onwards, Jiang Qing began appearing publicly as Mao's wife and later gave frequent speeches in the cultural and propaganda sectors, criticizing and condemning various figures. By 1965, she organised a campaign to criticise the play Hai Rui Dismissed from Office, which marked the beginning of the Cultural Revolution.[46]

Cultural Revolution

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Prelude

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In 1951, Jiang Qing was given a minor position of Film Bureau Chief. After her appointment, Jiang engaged in three attempts in establishing the standard for socialist art. Jiang's first attempt was her advice to ban the 1950 Hong Kong movie Sorrows of the Forbidden City, of which Jiang believed to be unpatriotic. Her opinion was not taken seriously by the communist leadership due to the minor political influence of her office and the movie was distributed in PRC's major cities like Beijing and Shanghai.[47] Later that year, Jiang critiqued and objected to the distribution of the movie The Story of Wu Xun for glorifying the wealthy landed class while dismissing the peasantry. Again, Jiang's opinion was dismissed. Mao intervened twice to stop the airing of the two films.[47]

Jiang's third attempt involved the role of literary criticism in the development of socialist art. She asked the editor of People's Daily to republish the new literary interpretation of the classic novel Dream of Red Mansions by two young scholars at Shandong University. The editor refused Jiang's request on the grounds that the party newspaper was not a forum for free debate. Again, Mao spoke up on Jiang's behalf.[47]

Between 1955 and 1962, Jiang stayed in Moscow for medical treatment. During this period, as a foreign dignitary, she gained access to a wide range of films banned in the Soviet Union, including many Hollywood productions. This exposure allowed her to stay informed about Western art trends, which later influenced her transformation of the Peking Opera.[48] In 1957, Jiang recovered from cervical cancer, though she believed she was still unwell, contrary to her doctors’ assessment of her good health.[45] Therefore, they recommended that she engage in therapeutic activities such as watching films, listening to music, and attending theatre and concerts.[45]

After Jiang's return to China in 1962, she frequently attended local opera performances.[49] In 1963, Jiang Qing enlisted A Jia to help modernise Beijing Opera with revolutionary socialist themes. She later instructed the Beijing Municipal Opera Company to create Shajiabang, depicting the struggle between the Kuomintang and Communists during the Second Sino-Japanese War, and tasked the Shanghai Beijing Opera Company with producing Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy.[49] In her first public speech in June 1964 at a Peking Opera convention, Jiang criticised regional opera troupes for glorifying emperors, generals, scholars, and other ox-demons and snake-spirits.[50]

Jiang's efforts to reform Peking Opera gained approval from the Communist leadership, especially during the 1964 Modern Beijing Opera Trial Performance Convention. She also formed a productive collaboration with Yu Huiyong, to push the yangbanxi (model drama) projects. Their shared vision focused on creating operas that reflected modern Chinese society and the lives of the working class, starting with On the Docks, which portrayed Communist-ruled Shanghai. Jiang’s political influence helped ensure the success of these projects, which aimed to create revolutionary art that represented the reality of contemporary life.[47]

Cultural reforms

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Poster showing Jiang promoting the fine arts during the Cultural Revolution while holding Mao's Little Red Book. The slogan reads: "The invincible thoughts of Mao Zedong illuminate the stages of revolutionary art!"

By late 1965, as Jiang Qing’s influence grew, she rallied close allies such as Zhang Chunqiao and Yao Wenyuan.[46] In February 1966, Jiang hosted a forum with PLA officers.[51] The group studied writings by Mao, watched films and plays, and met with the cast and crew of an in-progress film production.[51] The forum concluded that a "black line" of bourgeois thought dominated the arts since the PRC's founding.[52] A summary of Jiang's analysis at the forum was later distributed widely during the Cultural Revolution and became a significant document.[53]

Over April through June 1966, Jiang presided over the All-Army Artistic Creation Conference in Beijing.[53] Conference attendees evaluated a total of 80 domestic and foreign films.[53] Jiang approved of 7 as consistent with Mao Zedong Thought and criticized the other films.[53] Backed by her husband, she was appointed deputy director of the Central Cultural Revolution Group (CCRG) in 1966 and emerged as a serious political figure in the summer of that year.[54]

Revolutionary operas

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In 1967, at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, Jiang declared eight works of performance art to be the new models for proletarian literature and art.[55] These "model operas", or "revolutionary operas", were designed to glorify Mao Zedong, The People's Liberation Army, and the revolutionary struggles. The ballets White-Haired Girl,[56] Red Detachment of Women, and Shajiabang ("Revolutionary Symphonic Music") were included in the list of eight, and were closely associated with Jiang, because of their inclusion of elements from Chinese and Western opera, dance, and music.[57]

The Red Guards condemned Yu Huiyong to be a "bad element" for propagating feudalism through his utilisation of traditional Chinese music in operas. Yu was also tagged as "a democrat hiding under the banner of the Communist Party" due to his frequent absences in party meetings. In 1966, Yu was subsequently sent to a Cow Shed, a small room where the "bad elements" were confined. In October 1966, Yu was released after Jiang requested a meeting with Yu to stage the production of two operas in Beijing. Jiang seated Yu next to her, as a display of Yu's importance in the making of yangbanxi, during the showing of Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy.[47]

During Richard Nixon's famous visit to China in February 1972, he watched Red Detachment of Women, and was impressed by the opera. He famously asked Jiang who the writer, director, and composer were, to which she replied it was "created by the masses."[58]

Fashion designs

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External image
image icon Jiang Qing's Robe

In 1974, Jiang Qing directed the Ministry of Culture to design a new dress for Chinese women, inspired by elements of women's clothing from the Tang, Song, and Yuan dynasties. The dress featured a symmetrical V-neckline, differing slightly from the traditional Y-shaped neckline of Hanfu. Mockingly dubbed the "Nun's Robe," Jiang intended for female cadres to lead the way in wearing it, with the eventual goal of making it a nationwide standard.[59]

Political activism

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During this period, Mao galvanized students and young workers as his paramilitary organisation the Red Guards to attack what he termed as revisionists in the party. Mao told them the revolution was in danger and that they must do all they could to stop the emergence of a privileged class in China. He argued this is what had happened in the Soviet Union under Khrushchev.[60] With time, Jiang began playing an increasingly active political role in the movement. She took part in most important Party and government activities.[3] Jiang took advantage of the Cultural Revolution to wreak vengeance on her personal enemies, including people who had slighted her during her acting career in the 1930s. She was supported by a radical coterie, dubbed, by Mao himself, the Gang of Four. Although a prominent member of the Central Cultural Revolution Group and a major player in Chinese politics from 1966 to 1976, she essentially remained on the sidelines.[3]

1966-1969

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From 1962, Chairman Liu Shaoqi and his wife Wang Guangmei frequently appeared at diplomatic events, earning Wang the title of "First Lady," which reportedly made Jiang Qing jealous. Before Wang's overseas trips, Jiang advised her not to wear jewellery, claiming it looked better. However, upon seeing Wang on television wearing a necklace, Jiang criticised her for displaying "bourgeois style" in a talk with Red Guards.[61]

Lin Biao with Jiang Qing in Tiananmen in 1966
Jiang during the Cultural Revolution

On 13 December 1966, Liu Shaoqi voluntarily offered to resign from his positions as President. He proposed moving with his wife and children to Yan’an or his hometown in Hunan to take up farming, hoping to bring the Cultural Revolution to an early conclusion and minimise the damage to the country. On 18 December, Zhang Chunqiao, deputy head of the Central Cultural Revolution Group, summoned Kuai Dafu, a leader of the Red Guards at Tsinghua University, and instructed him to launch a campaign to overthrow Liu Shaoqi. On 25 December, Kuai Dafu led thousands of demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, where they publicly chanted the slogan “Down with Liu Shaoqi.”[62]

The Central Cultural Revolution Group was initially a small body under the Standing Committee of the Politburo.[46] With the backing of Jiang Qing, Zhang Chunqiao and Yao Wenyuan initiated a coup in Shanghai in January 1967, consolidating power and gaining support from revolutionary factions like Wang Hongwen.[46] On 6 January 1967, Red Guards at Tsinghua University, with Jiang Qing's backing, lured Wang to the campus under the pretext of her daughter being in a car accident. Once there, Wang was detained and prosecuted.[61]

Following the Red Guards' disruption of party structures in January 1967, this group replaced the Secretariat and became the central command for the party. Jiang Qing's role as the "First Deputy Head" of the group grew significantly, elevating her political power. Chen Boda, the nominal leader of the group, was repeatedly humiliated by Jiang Qing during this period. Fearing her power, he endured her mistreatment in silence. In one notable incident, after a middle school student scaled his wall, Chen’s wife reported the event, sparking a "footprint incident" that enraged Jiang Qing. She demanded Chen move out of Zhongnanhai, and this further strained his relationship with her. Seizing the opportunity, Lin Biao and his wife, Ye Qun, aligned with Chen, who quietly defected to their faction.[46]

Jiang Qing met Red Guards in 1967

On 18 July 1967, a public struggle session against Liu Shaoqi was held in Zhongnanhai. On 5 August, the Central Cultural Revolution Group approved three separate struggle sessions targeting Liu Shaoqi and his wife, Deng Xiaoping and his wife, and Tao Zhu and his wife. From that point, Liu Shaoqi was completely stripped of his personal freedom. On 16 September 1968, under Jiang Qing’s leadership, a special investigation team compiled three volumes of so-called evidence against Liu, largely extracted through torture and coercion. After being imprisoned in Zhongnanhai for over two years, Liu Shaoqi was transferred to Kaifeng, Henan Province, on 17 October 1969, where he subsequently passed away.[62]

Meanwhile, Jiang’s stature continued to rise, though she was still not a member of the Central Committee during the 11th Plenary Session of the 8th Central Committee. At the 9th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in April 1969, Jiang was admitted to the Politburo after Mao Zedong shifted his stance, likely to balance the power of the Lin Biao faction. Mao also approved the entry of Lin Biao's wife, Ye Qun, into the Politburo, further consolidating their influence.[46]

1969-1971

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Jiang's rivalry with, and personal dislike of, Zhou Enlai led Jiang to hurt Zhou where he was most vulnerable. In 1968, Jiang had Zhou's adopted son (Sun Yang) and daughter (Sun Weishi) tortured and murdered by Red Guards. Sun Yang was murdered in the basement of Renmin University. After Sun Weishi died following seven months of torture in a secret prison (at Jiang's direction), Jiang made sure that Sun's body was cremated and disposed of so that no autopsy could be performed and Sun's family could not have her ashes. In 1968, Jiang forced Zhou to sign an arrest warrant for his own brother. In 1973 and 1974, Jiang directed the "Criticize Lin, Criticize Confucius" campaign against premier Zhou because Zhou was viewed as one of Jiang's primary political opponents. In 1975, Jiang initiated a campaign named "Criticizing Song Jiang, Evaluating the Water Margin", which encouraged the use of Zhou as an example of a political loser. After Zhou Enlai died in 1976, Jiang initiated the "Five Nos" campaign in order to discourage and prohibit any public mourning for Zhou.[63] When traditional landscape and bird-and-flower paintings re-emerged in the early 1970s, Jiang criticized these traditional forms as "black paintings",[64]: 166  which in fact targeted Zhou Enlai.

1971-1973

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The Gang of Four

Jiang first collaborated with then second-in-charge Lin Biao, but after Lin Biao's death in 1971, she turned against him publicly in the Criticize Lin, Criticize Confucius Campaign.[65] After the September 13 Incident in 1971, Jiang Qing saw the collapse of the Lin Biao faction and, with Mao Zedong's declining health, she became eager to seize the highest power in the country. In 1972, Jiang Qing enlisted American journalist Roxane Witke to write her autobiography. After 1972, Mao's health deteriorated. Though Mao was largely cut off from the outside world due to his illness, Zhu De sent Mao a letter informing him about Jiang Qing’s biography. This revelation deeply angered Mao, who, in a fit of rage, even expressed his desire to expel Jiang Qing from the Politburo and sever their political ties.[46] By 1973, although unreported due to it being a personal matter, Mao and his wife Jiang had separated.[65]

1973-1976

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On 10 March 1973, Deng Xiaoping was reinstated as Vice Premier, serving as Zhou Enlai's deputy. During the 10th National Congress of the CCP, Deng remained a member of the Central Committee but he did not gain a seat on the Politburo. On 10 April 1974, Deng led the Chinese delegation to the United Nations General Assembly. Although Jiang Qing strongly opposed Deng's appointment, Mao Zedong cautioned her in a letter to cease opposing his decision.[66]

After Zhou Enlai was hospitalised, Wang Hongwen managed the Politburo, Deng Xiaoping oversaw the State Council, and Ye Jianying led the Central Military Commission.[66] On 4 October 1974, Mao Zedong proposed appointing Deng as First Vice Premier. Sensing that Deng might replace Zhou Enlai at the upcoming Fourth National People's Congress, Jiang Qing attempted to block Deng from taking charge of the State Council and the Party’s central operations.[67]

On 12 December, Mao reaffirmed his support for Deng by proposing his appointment as a member of both the Military Commission and the Politburo—a suggestion that gained majority approval from Politburo members.[66] On 23 December, despite his ill health, Zhou Enlai flew to Changsha to meet Mao and seek his endorsement of Deng Xiaoping, with Wang Hongwen also in attendance. Mao agreed and, while pointing at Wang, remarked that Deng's "politics is better than his." Mao spoke English for the word "politics." Wang was embarrassed as he did not understand.[67]

Downfall

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Protests

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By the mid-1970s, Jiang spearheaded the campaign against Deng Xiaoping.[68] Yet, the Chinese public became intensely discontented at politics and chose to blame Jiang, a more accessible and easier target than Mao.[68]

In January 1976, official news announced the death of Zhou Enlai. Zhou was highly respected in Chinese society, second only to Mao Zedong in influence. However, no official commemorative activities were organised following his death. On 5 March and 25 March, Wenhui Daily published two reports criticising Deng Xiaoping, indirectly accusing Zhou Enlai of being the "biggest capitalist roader" who had supported and protected Deng. Starting on 21 March, students at Nanjing University began questioning and condemning Wenhui Daily and the criticisms of Zhou in Shanghai. On 29 March, the students escalated their protests by writing large slogans on trains departing from Nanjing, spreading their message nationwide. On 30 March, members of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, including Cao Zhijie, posted signed wall posters in Beijing. These posters transformed the veiled political dissent into open protest, marking the beginning of the Tiananmen protests in Beijing.[69]

Many Chinese instinctively believe that it was Jiang Qing who ordered the removal of the wreaths dedicated to Zhou Enlai from Tiananmen Square. In response, slogans appeared, such as "Down with the Empress Dowager, down with Indira Gandhi." Another individual placed a wreath in honour of Mao's revered second wife, Yang Kaihui, who had been executed by Chiang Kai-shek in 1930. Jiang Qing was often referred to obliquely as "that woman" or "three drops of water," a reference to part of the Chinese character for her name.[70] The protests eventually evolved into a riot, with cars ignited by angry protesters and militia intervention.[71]

Coup d'état

[edit]

On 5 September 1976, Mao's failing health turned critical when he suffered a heart attack, far more serious than his previous two earlier in the year. Mao's death occurred just after midnight at 00:10 hours on 9 September 1976. By this time, state media was effectively under the control of the Gang of Four. State newspapers continued to denounce Deng shortly after Mao's death. Jiang was little-concerned about the weak Hua Guofeng, but she feared Deng Xiaoping greatly. In numerous documents published in the 1970s, it was claimed that Jiang was conspiring to make herself the new Chairman of the Communist Party.[72][43]

Hua Guofeng was Mao's chosen successor and became acting CCP chairman and acting premier after Mao's death;[73] Hua became embroiled in a power struggle with the Gang of Four.[74] In May 1975, Mao Zedong once criticised the Gang of Four for leaning too heavily on empiricism. However, he downplayed the severity of their issue, stating that it was not a significant problem but needed to be addressed. Mao remarked,[75]

If it cannot be resolved in the first half of the year, then address it in the second half; if it cannot be resolved this year, then next year; and if not next year, then the year after.

The remark later served as a justification for Hua Guofeng to arrest the Gang of Four.[75] On 6 October 1976, Hua – supported by the military and state security – had Jiang and the rest of the Gang arrested and removed from their party positions. According to Zhang Yaoci, who carried out the arrest, Jiang did not say much when she was arrested. It was reported that one of her servants spat at her as she was being taken away under a flurry of blows by onlookers and police.[74] Hua was later replaced by Deng Xiaoping, who proceeded with persecuting Jiang. She was tried starting in late 1980 with the other three members of the Gang of Four and six associates. At the time of her arrest, the country lacked the proper institutions for a legal trial.[76]

Televised trial

[edit]
Jiang at her trial in 1980

In November 1980, the government announced that Jiang and nine others would stand trial. Jiang argued to the special prosecution teams that Mao should also be held accountable for her actions. Xinhua News Agency reported that Jiang initially sought to recruit her own lawyers but rejected those recommended by the special team after interviews. Meanwhile, five of the ten defendants agreed to be represented by government-appointed lawyers who would act as their defence counsel.[77]

As a result she and the other members of the Gang of Four were held in a state of limbo for the first six months of their capture. Following prompt legal modernization, an indictment was brought forward, formally titled "Indictment of the Special Procuratorate under the Supreme People’s Procuratorate of the People’s Republic of China.” The indictment contained 48 separate counts. She was accused of persecuting artists during the Cultural Revolution, and authorizing the burgling of the homes of writers and performers in Shanghai to destroy material related to Jiang's early career that could harm her reputation. Jiang was defiant.[76]

Whenever a witness took the stand, there was a chance the court proceedings would devolve into a shouting match.[76] She did not deny the accusations,[73] and insisted that she had been protecting Mao and following his instructions. Jiang remarked:[78]

I was Chairman Mao's dog. I bit whomever he asked me to bite.

Her defence strategy was marked by attempts to transcend the court room and appeal to history and the logic of revolution.[76] Jiang Qing sought to challenge Hua Guofeng's authority within the Party, with an appalling and unverifiable claim,[79]

[A]bout that night Mao Zedong wrote the words, "With you in charge, I'm at ease" for Hua Guofeng. [...] That was not all Chairman Mao wrote to Hua. He wrote six more characters: "If you have questions, ask Jiang Qing."

The court announced its verdict after six weeks of testimony and debate and four weeks of deliberations. In early 1981, she was convicted and sentenced to death with a two year reprieve. She was assigned the highest level of criminal liability among the defendants as a "ringleader" of a counterrevolutionary group. Wu Xiuquan recounted in his memoir that the court room erupted into applause as the verdict was read and Jiang Qing was dragged out of the court room by two female guards while shouting revolutionary slogans.[76]

Death and burial

[edit]

Internment and illness

[edit]

Following her arrest, Jiang Qing was held at Qincheng Prison, where she occupied herself with activities such as reading newspapers, listening to radio broadcasts, watching television, knitting, studying books, and writing. Her daughter, Li Na, visited her fortnightly.[80]

The sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1983.[73] The Supreme People's Court determined that both Jiang and her chief associate, Zhang, had demonstrated "sufficient repentance" during their two-year reprieve, leading to their death sentences being commuted. However, senior Chinese officials stated that Jiang has not shown genuine remorse and remains as defiant as the day she was removed from a crowded courtroom, shouting, "Long Live the Revolution."[81]

In 1984, Jiang was granted medical parole and relocated to a discreet residence arranged by the authorities.[80] In December 1988, on the occasion of Mao Zedong's 95th birth anniversary, Jiang requested approval to hold a family gathering, but her petition was denied. Distressed, she attempted suicide by ingesting 50 sleeping pills she had secretly saved. The attempt failed. She was later sent back to Qincheng Prison in 1989 when her medical parole concluded. While in custody, Jiang was diagnosed with throat cancer, and doctors advised surgery. She refused, asserting that losing her voice was unacceptable.[80]

Suicide

[edit]

On 10 May 1991, she tore apart her memoir manuscript in front of others and expressed a wish to return to her home. Two days later, on 12 May, her daughter and son-in-law came to visit her in the hospital after learning about her condition, but Jiang declined to meet them. On 14 May 1991, Jiang Qing died by suicide. At 3:30 a.m., a nurse entered her room and found her hanging above the bathtub, having passed away.[80] The suicide note read,[23]

Today the revolution has been stolen by the revisionist clique of Deng, Peng Zhen, and Yang Shangkun. Chairman Mao exterminated Liu Shaoqi, but not Deng, and the result of this omission is that unending evils have been unleashed on the Chinese people and nation. Chairman, your student and fighter is coming to see you!

That afternoon, Li Na, went to the hospital to sign the death certificate and agreed that no funeral or memorial service would be held. On 18 May, Jiang Qing's remains were cremated. Neither Li Na nor any of Jiang Qing's other relatives attended the cremation. Jiang Qing's ashes were entrusted to Li Na, who kept them at her home.[82] The Chinese government confirmed her suicide on 4 June, withholding the announcement for two weeks to avoid its impact before the second anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen protests.[83][84]

However, He Diankui, a former staff of Qincheng Prison, later claimed that "Jiang Qing never left Qincheng Prison until her death." He suggested that she died in the prison from taking sleeping pills, which refuted the official report regarding where she died.[85]

Burial

[edit]

While imprisoned, Jiang Qing expressed in her will a desire to be buried in her hometown of Zhucheng, Shandong. In 1996, Yan Changgui, Jiang Qing's former secretary, visited Zhucheng, where the city’s Party Secretary asked him to convey to Li Na that Jiang Qing could be buried there, pending her consent. However, after the 16th National Congress of the CCP, Jiang Zemin suggested to Li Na that Zhucheng might not be a secure burial site. Instead, Li Na inquired about the possibility of burial in Beijing, which Jiang Zemin approved. Li Na arranged the burial at her own expense. In March 2002, Jiang Qing’s ashes were interred at the Futian Cemetery in Beijing's Western Hills scenic area. The tombstone reads: "The Grave of Mother Li Yunhe, 1914–1991, respectfully erected by her daughter, son-in-law, and grandson."[82]

Legacy

[edit]

Public image

[edit]

Jiang Qing was never a widely admired figure throughout her life. Her marriage to Mao in the 1930s scandalised many of the more puritanical comrades in Yan'an. During the Cultural Revolution, she did little to win the favour of other Chinese leaders.[70]

Jiang Qing is often viewed as a figure of naked ambition, with many perceiving her as a typical power-hungry wife of an emperor, seeking to secure power for herself through questionable means. Her public image is largely shaped by her self-serving narrative, which portrays her as a central figure in the turbulent and cutthroat environment of Chinese leadership. She is seen as embodying the ruthless, unpredictable, and dangerous nature of life at the top. Her long-standing vendetta against former cultural-political rivals from her acting days in Shanghai has fueled her reputation for vindictiveness. Though she framed her conflicts with these men as ideological battles, it is widely believed that personal grudges and animosities were the true driving forces behind her actions.[43]

According to Roxane Witke, Jiang's early life was marked by poverty, hunger, and violence, and later, as a woman in a male-dominated world, she faced numerous challenges. These experiences shaped her defensive and aggressive personality, fostering an opportunism that persisted even when she no longer needed to assert herself.[70]

Official historiography

[edit]

After Jiang Qing’s arrest in 1976, the Chinese government launched a massive propaganda campaign to vilify her and the other members of the so-called Gang of Four. Orchestrated under the authoritarian political culture of Mao’s successor Hua Guofeng, this campaign aimed to discredit Jiang and her associates entirely. In the years leading to her trial in 1980, millions of posters and cartoons depicted the Gang of Four as class enemies and spies. Jiang herself became the primary target of ridicule, portrayed as an empress scheming to succeed Mao and as a prostitute, with references to her past as a Shanghai actress used to question her moral integrity. The propaganda also criticised her interest in Western pastimes, such as photography and poker, portraying them as evidence of her lack of communist values. Ultimately, she was branded the "white-boned demon," a gendered caricature symbolising destruction and chaos.[86]

The 1980 Gang of Four trial solidified Jiang’s image as a manipulative and villainous figure. The indictment held the Gang responsible for the violence of the Cultural Revolution, accusing Jiang of using political purges for personal vendettas and fostering large-scale chaos. Widely broadcast both within and outside China, the trial reinforced a clear dichotomy: Jiang as a symbol of the past’s chaos, and Deng Xiaoping’s administration as the harbinger of order and progress. This narrative was consistent with the CCP’s Resolution on History, which sought to redefine Mao Zedong’s legacy. While Mao was criticised for "errors," he was not held directly accountable for the excesses of the Cultural Revolution. Instead, full blame was shifted to Jiang and the Gang of Four, allowing Mao Zedong Thought to remain ideologically valid under Deng’s reforms.[86]

Alternative views

[edit]

Biographical literature on Jiang Qing has emerged as a tool to critique and reinterpret official Chinese historiography. These works challenge the one-dimensional vilification of Jiang, contributing to broader historical debates about the Cultural Revolution and its impact on shaping modern China. While factual biographies aim to deliver an accurate portrayal of their subject, fictional works take creative liberties, reimagining the life of a historical figure without strict adherence to facts. By rejecting the traditional authoritative biographical model—which presents a subject’s life as a coherent narrative—works such as Jiang Qing and Her Husbands and Becoming Madame Mao instead question the validity of totalising narratives about Jiang. Ultimately, the private sphere in these narratives is used not to provide more intimate insights into the subject but as a means to deconstruct and challenge official Chinese historiography.[86]

Comparisons

[edit]

The 2013 trial of Bo Xilai was regarded as the most dramatic courtroom event in China since Jiang Qing's trial in 1980.[87] Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, was frequently likened to Jiang Qing due to the nature of her crimes.[88] In 2024, Yomiuri Shimbun reported on Peng Liyuan's influence over key personnel decisions within the CCP. The report highlighted her backing of Dong Jun's appointment as Minister of Defence and Li Ganjie's selection as head of the CCP Organisation Department. Dong and Li were both from Shandong, where Peng was born. The report drew parallels between Xi Jinping's leadership in his later years and Mao Zedong's, likening Peng to Jiang Qing.[89]

Memorials

[edit]

Each year during the Tomb-Sweeping Festival, flower baskets are placed at Jiang's tomb. In 2015, leftist activists attempting to pay their respects faced resistance from dozens of security guards, with several taken to Pingguoyuan Police Station for questioning. Frustrated Maoist supporters questioned why publicly honouring Chiang Kai-shek was permitted while commemorating Jiang Qing was not, rhetorically asking if Taiwan had somehow reclaimed mainland China. Since 2018, such commemorations have proceeded without police interference.[90] On 14 May 2021, leftist activists held a panel discussion on "the Role of Li Jin in the History of the Party", which Li Na reportedly attended.[91]

Peking Opera

[edit]
Symphony in the Peking Opera Shajiabang in 1967

During the production of yangbanxi, Jiang had shown keen intuition, due to her experience as an actress, in showing the shape yangbanxi should take. However, Jiang's directions on opera reforms were often vague. Yu, acting as the pawn of Jiang, was able to manifest Jiang's orders into technical details that can be followed by the performers. Despite Yu's growing influence, he was never able to defy Jiang's orders, as he could only influence her thinking.[48]

Jiang identified the weakness of Beijing opera as the lack of well organized music, which according to Jiang, "builds the image of the characters." This conception was influenced by Yu's writing on the functional conception of music. Yu focused on reforming the language of music. This was due to Yu's belief that for yangbanxi to become successful in educating the masses on the structure and benefits of the new socialist state, the language of the music must be understandable to the common person. He first recommended that the lyrics be written in Mandarin, which was in line with the Chinese government policy that mandated the use of Mandarin as the language of instruction in schools nationwide. Yu also advocated that "the melody should be composed in such a way that it also shadowed the syllabic tonal patterns", which "should sound natural to the ear as well as being easily understandable to the listener."[47]

On the Docks in 1967

According to Jiang's theory of the "three prominences," the model revolutionary works were to foreground the principal hero over other heroic characters and positive characters over other characters. Jiang criticized spy thrillers (which were known as counterespionage films) for making the antagonists seem too intriguing.[92] Jiang was known to be blunt in directing the yangbanxi, but Yu was able to serve as the mediator between Jiang and the performers. Since Jiang could not communicate her vision clearly, performers often take her criticisms as personal insults. Du Mingxin, one of Jiang's composers, recalled Jiang dismissed his music in the ballet The Red Detachment of Women (Hong Se Niang Zi Jun) as "erotic ballad that used to be performed in the 1930s Shanghai nightclubs". Du was then criticized for trying to destroy the yangbanxi project by hiding bourgeois music in a revolutionary ballet. Du felt humiliated by this remark. It was until Yu asked the group to submit another composition that Du regained his motivation and composed the now famous Wanquan Heshui (On Wanquan River). According to Du, this incident revealed Yu's artistic integrity, personal courage, and the ability to gain Jiang's acknowledgement on his decisions.[47]

Calligraphy

[edit]

Jiang Qing was able to imitate Mao Zedong's handwriting. Her calligraphy was so similar to Mao's that some of her works were even displayed as Mao Zedong's manuscripts[93][94]

Photography

[edit]

Since 1961, Jiang Qing, under the pen names Li Yunhe and Li Jin, had multiple landscape photographs selected for four consecutive National Photography Exhibitions. She became one of the photographers with the most works featured in each exhibition. In terms of lighting techniques, Jiang favoured backlighting and side-backlighting. Her visual style, which emphasised grandeur and completeness, had a significant influence on the photography community in mainland China.[95]

Personal life

[edit]

Jiang's hobbies included photography, playing cards, and holding screenings of classic Hollywood films, especially those featuring Greta Garbo, one of her favorite actresses, even as they were banned for the average Chinese citizen as a symbol of bourgeois decadence.[96] In Mao Zedong’s later years, he frequently refused to meet Jiang Qing. The two lived apart—Mao resided in Zhongnanhai, while Jiang stayed at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse—and rarely saw each other. Mao often criticised Jiang Qing and noted in his written comments that "Jiang Qing does not represent me; she represents herself." He once confided to Wang Hairong and Tang Wensheng that Jiang aspired to become the Party Chair. During his interactions with Jiang Qing, Mao advised her to improve her relationships with colleagues who held differing opinions, rather than her small group. He also expressed frustration that she did not study the works of Marx, Lenin, or his own writings. Mao voiced concerns about Jiang Qing’s future after his death, fearing that she might face troubles.[75]

[edit]

Fiction

[edit]

Film and television

[edit]
Year Region Name Actress
1976 Taiwan Fragrant Flower Versus Noxious Grass Yao Hsiao-Chang
1993 China China has a Mao Zedong Zhang An'an
2009 China The Founding of a Republic Zhang Erdan
The Liberation Yan Xuejing
Australia Mao's Last Dance Yue Xiuqing
2013 China Mao Zedong Sun Jia

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Explanatory notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Jiang Qing[a] is a common name of this topic, but she had various names in her life. Please read Names section for details.

Translation notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Chinese: 江青; pinyin: Jiāng Qīng; Wade–Giles: chiang ch'ing
  2. ^ simplified Chinese: 李进男; traditional Chinese: 李進男; pinyin: Lǐ Jìnnán; Wade–Giles: li3 chin4 nan2
  3. ^ simplified Chinese: 李进孩; traditional Chinese: 李進孩; pinyin: Lǐ Jìnhái; Wade–Giles: li3 chin4 hai2
  4. ^ simplified Chinese: 李进; traditional Chinese: 李進; pinyin: Lǐ Jìn; Wade–Giles: li3 chin4
  5. ^ Chinese: 李淑蒙; pinyin: Lǐ Shúméng; Wade–Giles: li3 shu2 mêng2
  6. ^ simplified Chinese: 李云鹤; traditional Chinese: 李雲鶴; pinyin: Lǐ Yúnhè; Wade–Giles: li3 yün24
  7. ^ simplified Chinese: 李鹤; traditional Chinese: 李鶴; pinyin: Lǐ Hè; Wade–Giles: li34
  8. ^ simplified Chinese: 张淑贞; traditional Chinese: 張淑貞; pinyin: Zhāng Shúzhēn; Wade–Giles: chang shu2 chên
  9. ^ simplified Chinese: 李云古; traditional Chinese: 李雲古; pinyin: Lǐ Yúngǔ; Wade–Giles: li3 yün2 ku3
  10. ^ simplified Chinese: 蓝苹; traditional Chinese: 藍蘋; pinyin: Lán Píng; Wade–Giles: lan2 ping2
  11. ^ simplified Chinese: 李润青; traditional Chinese: 李潤青; pinyin: Lǐ Rùnqīng; Wade–Giles: li3 jun4 ch'ing
  12. ^ Chinese: 李梓; pinyin: Lǐ Zǐ; Wade–Giles: li3 tzu3
  13. ^ Chinese: 李德文; pinyin: Lǐ Déwén; Wade–Giles: li32 wên2
  14. ^ simplified Chinese: 裴明伦; traditional Chinese: 裴明倫; pinyin: Péi Mínglún; Wade–Giles: p'ei2 ming2 lun2; According to the Revised Mandarin Chinese Dictionary by the Taiwanese Ministry of Education, the surname is pronounced Péi.[29] However, Hong Kong's Multi-function Chinese Character Database notes an additional pronunciation as Féi.[30] Terrill 1999 (pp. 29–31) adopts the translation Fei.

References

[edit]

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Sources

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Further reading

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  • A great trial in Chinese history: the trial of the Lin Biao and Jiang Qing counter-revolutionary cliques, Nov. 1980 - Jan. 1981 (1st ed.). Beijing: New World Press. 1981. ISBN 978-0-08-027919-0.
  • Sisyphus, John, ed. (2015b). Mao Zedong's Standard Bearer: Chiang Ching and the Cultural Revolution (in Traditional Chinese). Vol. I. New Taipei, Taiwan: Sisyphus Publishing. ISBN 978-986-91545-1-2.
  • Sisyphus, John, ed. (2015c). Mao Zedong's Standard Bearer: Chiang Ching and the Cultural Revolution (in Traditional Chinese). Vol. II. New Taipei, Taiwan: Sisyphus Publishing. ISBN 978-986-91545-2-9.
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Honorary titles
New title Spouse of the paramount leader of the People's Republic of China
1949–1976
Han Zhijun
New title
Spouse of the President of the People's Republic of China
1954–1959
Succeeded by