Nanchang Uprising

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For the battle of Nanchang, fought during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1939, see Battle of Nanchang.

The Nanchang Uprising (Traditional Chinese: 南昌起義; Simplified Chinese: 南昌起义; pinyin: Nánchāng Qǐyì) (August 1, 1927) was the first major Kuomintang-Communist engagement of the Chinese Civil War.

Communist forces in Nanchang rebelled under the leadership of He Long and Zhou Enlai attempting to seize control of the city after the end of the first Kuomintang-Communist alliance. Other important leaders were Zhu De, Ye Ting, and Liu Bocheng.

Communist forces occupied Nanchang successfully and escaped from the siege of Kuomintang forces at August 5, withdrawing to the Jinggang Mountains of western Jiangxi. The day of August 1 was later regarded as the anniversary of the founding of the People's Liberation Army. It is regarded as the first action fought against the Kuomintang.

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The rebellion was first planned to take place during the night of July 30. But due to complications with Zhang Guotao the rebellion was postponed.

On the morning of August 1 at exactly 2am, Zhou Enlai, He Long, Nie Rongzhen, Ye Ting, Ye Jianying, Lin Biao, Zhu De, Chen Yi and Liu Bocheng led their troops and attacked the city of Nanchang from different directions.

Four hours later, the Communist troops were able to take over the entire city of Nanchang. They were able to capture 5,000 guns, and around 1,000,000 bullets from the defenders of the city. Around noon the so-called Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Nationalist Party (中國國民黨革命委員會) was established.

Jung Chang claims that the operation led by Zhou Enlai was supervised by Russian military advisors. Their goal was to lead the troops to a coastal area in order to supply the force with Russian arms.

Facing a counter attack from the Nationalists, the Communists decided to retreat towards the province of Guangdong, to try and take over the city of Guangzhou while spreading influence to the peasants and farms in that area. On August 3, the Communist troops pulled out of Nanchang.

Around the beginning of October, the Communist troops were in Chaozhou, Chaoshan area where they were defeated by the Nationalist troops. The Communists were separated and went in two general directions, one retreated to Shanwei engaged the Nationalists in guerrilla warfare, and the other went to southern Hunan and eventually joined Mao Zedong's forces.

After the serious defeat Chinese communist had suffered, only 1,000 soldiers remained as a complete unit, in a regiment. Under the command of Zhu De and Chen Yi who had fake names, the remaining regiment seek refuge under a local warlord in Hunan. From this humble beginning, the force eventually grew to a 10,000 strong force and went to Jiangxi and joined Mao Zedong at Jinggangshan in April 1928.

Other surviving members were much less fortunate, all became fugitives. Zhou Enlai, Ye Jianying and Ye Ting lost contact with others and fled to Hong Kong with Zhou seriously ill. The three had two pistols with them but was successful in reaching Hong Kong. Nie Rongzhen, the other communist leader also successfully escaped to Hong Kong.

He Long went to home after the defeat, with himself only. Reduced from an army commander in charge of tens of thousands of men to a beggar, he was not well received by his family except a few who were already communists. Soon He Long would rise another 3,000 soldier strong communist force in his native home but it would soon be wiped out by the nationalists, with only less than three dozen members surviving. It would take year for He Long's force to recover again for the third time.

Liu Bocheng became a fugitive but was lucky enough to find other communists who helped him and eventually sent him to the former-Soviet Union for military training, while Lin Biao, deserted after the defeat but had to return to the communist force because of fearing hostile locals would turn him in or kill him. Guo Moruo fled to Japan after the defeat.

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