This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army | |
---|---|
中國工農紅軍 | |
Flag of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army | |
Active | 1928–1937 |
Disbanded | 1937 |
Country | China |
Allegiance | Chinese Communist Party |
Branch | Central Military Commission |
Type | Army |
Role | Land warfare |
Headquarters | Jinggang Mountains (1928-1929) Ruijin, Jiangxi Soviet (1929-1934) Yan'an, Yan'an Soviet (1935-1937) |
Engagements | Chinese Civil War |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Mao Zedong, Peng Dehuai, Zhu De |
Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 中國工農紅軍 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 中国工农红军 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chinese People's Red Army | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 中國人民紅軍 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 中国人民红军 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Abbreviation: Red Army | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 紅軍 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 红军 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Part of a series on the | ||||||
Chinese Communist Revolution | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mao Zedong and leading revolutionaries proclaim the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949. | ||||||
Outline of the Chinese Civil War | ||||||
Origins
|
||||||
Early history
|
||||||
Civil War
|
||||||
Second United Front
|
||||||
Resumed Civil War
|
||||||
Forming the People's Republic
|
||||||
Legacy | ||||||
Communism portal | ||||||
The Chinese Red Army, formally the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army or just the Red Army, was the military wing of the Chinese Communist Party from 1928 to 1937. It was formed when Communist elements of the National Revolutionary Army splintered and mutinied in the Nanchang Uprising. The Red Army was reincorporated into the National Revolutionary Army as part of the Second United Front with the Kuomintang to fight against the Japanese during the Second Sino-Japanese War of 1937–1945. In the later stages of the Chinese Civil War the Red Army splintered off once again and was renamed the People's Liberation Army.
History
See also: Warlord Era and National Revolutionary ArmyFormation (late 1920s)
In the summer of 1926, the CCP took over the two divisions of the Chinese Nationalist Party forces and led a military mutiny. Nationalist forces General He Long commanded the 20th Corps to join them. They had a total of 20,000 soldiers and planned to occupy Guangzhou. However, they were defeated before they reached Guangzhou with only a few thousand men surviving the battle. Zhu De led a column of survivors to Hunan to fight in the Autumn Harvest Uprising where they were defeated again. After the revolt, Mao Zedong organized the rebels into a guerilla army, establishing a revolutionary base area in the Jinggang Mountains. The two armies joined forces in the following year. In the winter of 1927, the CCP planned to conquer Guangzhou; however, the uprising failed and thousands of insurgents were killed by the Nationalist forces of General Li Jishen.
Between 1928 and 1929, the CCP launched multiple uprisings. Mao Zedong and Zhu De led the organization and training of the Communist military, including the Fourth Army, which totaled about 6,000 men in the summer of 1928 and fought in Jiangxi. Also in the summer of 1928, Peng Dehuai, the Nationalist forces Regimental Commander, led a military mutiny. A Nanchang uprising survivor, He Long, also created an army in his hometown, with former government soldiers as the main fighting force.
In the late 1920s, the Communist forces lacked resources and relied on guerilla tactics such as hit-and-run operations to compensate for their material limitations.
Early success (early 1930s)
In early 1930, more red armies were created and the number of red soldiers grew rapidly. By the summer of 1930, the Chinese Red Army had grown to more than 100,000 soldiers and had several base areas, such as in southern and northern Jiangxi, western Hubei, and eastern Hunan, among others. Peng Dehuai's Fifth Army and Yang Youlin's 16th Red Army attacked and occupied Changsha, the capital of Hunan. After the attack, Jiangxi became the largest base area of the Chinese Red Army. In the autumn of 1930, Deng Xiaoping's Seventh Army left its base area in Guangxi.
In 1931, the Chinese Red Army defeated the Nationalist forces three times with a large-scale attack, causing the Nationalist forces to lose nearly 100,000 soldiers. Several smaller red armies came together and formed a group army. In the summer of 1931, General Zhang Guotao arrived at the Fourth Red Army's base area and took over the army. Most of the Fourth Red Army's senior officers were killed by him, including Xu Jishen, Zhou Weijiong, and Xiaofang. Similar movements also occurred in western Hubei; in the spring of 1931, Xia Xi took over He Long's army and killed most of his senior officers including Duan Dechang.
In the fall of 1932, the Nationalist forces gathered 300,000 soldiers to attack the Fourth Red Army. Most of the Nationalist forces' future generals participated in this battle such as Huang Wei, Du Yuming, Sun Li-jen, and others. Having lost more than half of its soldiers, the Fourth Red Army was defeated and had to retreat from its base area. He Long's Third Army also sustained significant loses, with more than 10,000 soldiers losing their lives after leaving western Hubei. During this time, there were also several battles between the Nationalist forces and Jiangxi's First Red Army.
In the spring of 1933, the First Red Army defeated the Nationalist forces' fourth large-scale attack and eliminated two and a half of its elite divisions. Several of the Nationalist forces' generals were also captured. In 1933, the Fourth Red Army arrived at Sichuan and recruited more than 80,000 soldiers. This caused Sichuan's warlord Liu Xiang to gather 200,000 troops to attack the Fourth Red Army in autumn.
Defeats (mid 1930s)
In 1934, the Nationalist forces purchased new German weapons and launched a fifth large-scale attack on the Red Army's base area in Jiangxi. The First Red Army lost more than 50,000 soldiers in this battle and had to leave Jiangxi to establish a new base. This was the beginning of the Long March. About 30,000 soldiers were left to defend the base areas in southern China. During the same time, the Fourth Red Army defeated Liu Xiang's attacks, who lost more than 80,000 soldiers in battle. Before the First Red Army began the Long March, Xiao Ke's Sixth Legion arrived at eastern Guizhou and joined forces with He Long's Third Army. After this, the Third Army changed its designation to Second Legion.
In the autumn of 1935, the First Red Army arrived in northern Shaanxi with only 6,000 soldiers after losing more than 80,000 along the way. During this same time, the Fourth Red Army moved to northern Sichuan and planned to attack Chengdu. By the end of 1935, they had lost more than 40,000 soldiers and were defeated. Therefore, they were forced to move to southern Gansu and wait for He Long's Second Legion and Sixth Legion to arrive.
Formation of a new Army (late 1930s)
In the summer of 1936, the Second Legion, the Sixth Legion and the Thirty-Second Army formed a new group army. It was named the Second Red Army and He Long was tasked with being its commander. The Second Red Army and Fourth Red Army arrived in north Shaanxi in the autumn of 1936. Around the same time, roughly 21,000 soldiers from the Fourth Red Army attacked Gansu, wanting to find a way to the Soviet Union. By the end of 1936, they were defeated by the Nationalist forces' General Ma Bufang, with more than 6,000 soldiers being captured. Only Xu Xiangqian and other senior officers survived. Because of this great failure, the Fourth Red Army's Commander in Chief Zhang Guotao was stripped of his military power.
When the anti-Japanese war broke out on 7 July 1937, the communist military forces were nominally integrated into the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China, forming the Eighth Route Army and the New Fourth Army units. The First Red Army was integrated into the 115th Division of the Nationalist forces. The Second Red Army was integrated into the 120th Division of the Nationalist forces. The Fourth Red Army was integrated into the 129th Division of the Nationalist forces. These three divisions had 45,000 soldiers in all. 10,000 soldiers were left to defend the base areas in northern Shaanxi. In southern China, the New Fourth Army's 10,000 soldiers acted as a guerrilla force. At the time of the Second Sino-Japanese War, these two armies contained one million armed men. The Red Army grew rapidly during the war, including through mass mobilization campaigns operating behind enemy lines. At the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Red Army had 2 million militia members and 900,000 regular troops.
Re-organization into People's Liberation Army
In 1947, the Red Army was reorganized into the People's Liberation Army. It continued to operate as a guerilla army reliant on the support of the peasantry. By the time the People's Republic of China was established on 1 October 1949, the PLA had 5.5 million personnel, primarily light infantry.
After the Communist Party assumed power in 1949, veterans of the Red Army were venerated in mainland Chinese culture and are distinguished from those who joined to fight with the Communist Party after the integration with the Nationalists, or during the second civil war.
In 1954, the relationship between the Party and the military was further institutionalized by the establishment of the Central Military Commission.
Major events
- 1 August 1927: Nanchang Uprising
- 1927: Autumn Harvest Uprising
- 1927: Guangzhou Uprising
- 1930 to 1931: First Encirclement Campaign
- 1931: Second Encirclement Campaign
- July 1931: Third Encirclement Campaign
- 1932 to 1933: Fourth Encirclement Campaign
- 1933 to 1934: Fifth Encirclement Campaign
- 1934 to 1936: Long March
Political and ideological roles
In the view of the Communist Party, participation of the masses in the Red Army was significant beyond the direct concerns of manpower and material support. It was also viewed as a political process through which the masses would evolve into "masters of the state." According to Mao, "he Red Army is not an entity for fighting only. Its major task (or function) is to mobilize the masses. Fighting is only a means." This process involved the Red Army's significant responsibility for educating, organizing, and mobilizing the masses, functioning like the mobile embodiment of the Communist Party in addition to its military roles. Academic Cai Xiang writes that the Red Army's ability to function in this way helps explain why despite the weak industrial base in revolutionary China, a proletarian party nonetheless successfully developed.
These ideas developed at the 1929 Gutian Congress The June 1930 Program for the Red Fourth Army at All Levels and the winter 1930 Provisional Regulations on the Political Work of the Chinese Workers and Peasants Army (Draft), which formally established Party leadership of the military.
In the article The Democratic Movement within the Army, written during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Mao Zedong discussed the Red Army's political work and stated, "Through the democratic movement under centralized leadership, we were able to achieve a high degree of political unity, improve lives, and improve military technology and tactics, which are our three main purposes." This view of democracy in the military emphasized democratic centralism and avoiding what the Party deemed "extreme democracy or anarchism."
Main leadership
Main leadership of the Red Army headquarters
In May 1933, the Chinese Red Army began to build a military regularization system. They established the Red Army headquarters on the front line to command operations.
Military Posts | First Term | Second Term | Third Term |
---|---|---|---|
Chairman of the Military Commission | Zhu De (May 1933 to December 1936) | Mao Zedong (December 1936 to July 1937) | |
Commander in Chief | Zhu De (May 1933 to July 1937) | ||
Chief Political Commissar | Zhou Enlai (1933.5 - 1935.6) | Zhang Guotao (1935.6 to July 1937) | |
Chief of the General Staff | Liu Bocheng (1933.5 to July 1937) | ||
Deputy Chief of the General Staff | Zhang Yunyi (1933.5 - 1934.10) | Ye Jianying (1934.10 to July 1937) | |
Director of the General Political Department | Wang Jiaxiang (1933.5 - 1935.6) | Cheng Changhao (1935.6 - 1936.12) | Wang Jiaxiang (1936.12 to July 1937) |
Deputy Director of the General Political Department | He Chang [zh] (1933.5 - 1934.10) | Yuan Guoping (1934.10 - 1936.12) | Yang Shangkun (1936.12 to July 1937) |
Director of Security | Li Kenong (1933.5 - 1935.12) | Luo Ruiqing (1935.12 to July 1937) | |
Minister of Supply | Ye Jizhuang (1933.5 to July 1937) | ||
Minister of Public Health | Peng Longbo (彭龙伯, 1933.5 - 1933.12) | He Cheng (1933.12 to July 1937) | |
Minister of Military Station | Yang Lisan [zh] (1933.5 to July 1937) |
Commanders of group armies
The Chinese Red Army often claimed they had three group armies, although, by 1931, the Second Red Army was much smaller than the other two.
Army | Military Posts | First Term | Second Term | Third Term |
---|---|---|---|---|
First Red Army | Commander | Zhu De (1930.8 - 1935.10) | Peng Dehuai (1935.10 - 1937.8) | |
Political Commissar | Mao Zedong (1930.8 - 1933.5) | Zhou Enlai (1933.5 - 1935.10) | Mao Zedong (1935.10 - 1937.8) | |
Chief of Staff | Zhu Yunqing [zh] (1930.8 - 1931.6) | Ye Jianying (1931.6 - 1937.8) | ||
Director of Political Department | Yang Yuebin [zh] (1930.8 - 1932.6) | Yang Shangkun (1932.6- 1935.10) | Wang Jiaxiang (1935.10 - 1937.8) | |
Second Red Army | Commander | He Long (1936.7 - 1937.8) | ||
Political Commissar | Ren Bishi (1936.7 - 1936.10) | Guan Xiangying (1936.10 - 1937.8) | ||
Chief of Staff | Li Da (1936.7 - 1936.10) | Zhou Shidi (1936.10 - 1937.8) | ||
Director of Political Department | Gan Siqi (1936.7 - 1936.10) | Zhu Rui (1936.10 - 1937.8) | ||
Fourth Red Army | Commander | Xu Xiangqian (1931.11 - 1937.8) | ||
Political Commissar | Cheng Changhao (1931.11 - 1937.8) | |||
Chief of Staff | Zeng Zhongsheng [zh] (1931.11 - 1933.10) | Ni Zhiliang (1933.10 - 1936.4) | Li Te (李特, 1936.4 - 1937.8) | |
Director of Political Department | Liu Shiqi (刘士奇, 1931.11 - 1932.11) | Cheng Changhao (1932.11 - 1936.4) | Li Zhuoran (1936.4 - 1937.8) |
Main leadership of base areas
In 1930, the Chinese Red Army had established several base areas. Though the designations of the Red Army changed frequently, the main leadership of base areas did not change significantly.
Base Area | Duration | Main Leadership | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
Jiangxi | 1929 - 1934 | Mao Zedong | |
Zhu De | |||
Bo Gu | |||
Zhou Enlai | |||
Northern Jiangxi | 1929 - 1934 | Kong Hechong [zh] | Betrayed in 1934 |
Fu Qiutao | |||
Fang Buzhou (方步舟) | Betrayed in 1937 | ||
Eastern Jiangxi | 1929 - 1935 | Fang Zhimin | Died in 1935 |
Zhou Jianping [zh] | |||
Shao Shiping | |||
Northern Fujian | 1929 - 1934 | Huang Dao | |
Huang Ligui (黄立贵) | Died in 1937 | ||
Wu Xianxi (吴先喜) | Died in 1937 | ||
Western Jiangxi and Eastern Hunan | 1930 - 1934 | Ren Bishi | |
Wang Zhen | |||
Xiao Ke | |||
Cai Huiwen [zh] | Died in 1936 | ||
Western Anhui, Eastern Hubei, and Southern Henan | 1930 - 1932 | Zhang Guotao | |
Xu Jishen | Died in 1931 | ||
Xu Xiangqian | |||
Chen Changhao | |||
Shen Zemin | Died in 1933 | ||
Western Hubei | 1930 - 1932 | He Long | |
Zhou Yiqun | Died in 1931 | ||
Guan Xiangying [zh] | |||
Xia Xi | Died in 1936 | ||
Northern Sichuan | 1933 - 1935 | Zhang Guotao | |
Xu Xiangqian | |||
Chen Changhao | |||
Wang Weizhou [zh] | |||
Northern Shaanxi | 1932 - 1937 | Liu Zhidan | Died in 1936 |
Xie Zichang | Died in 1935 | ||
Xi Zhongxun | |||
Eastern Guangdong | 1930 - 1931 | Gu Dacun [zh] | |
Guangxi | 1930 - 1932 | Deng Xiaoping | |
Zhang Yunyi | |||
Li Mingrui [zh] | Died in 1931 | ||
Yu Zuoyu [zh] | Died in 1930 | ||
Wei Baqun [zh] | Died in 1932 | ||
Hainan | 1930 - 1932 | Wang Wenming (王文明) | Died in 1930 |
Feng Baiju |
Personnel
Military rebellion
In the early phases of its establishment, most of the Chinese Red Army's military officers were made up of former officers of the Nationalist forces, with most of them joining the Red Army secretly between 1925 and 1928. Many of these officers were killed in the first years of the war. The largest rebellion was the Ningdu Uprising which occurred in the winter of 1931. General Dong Zhentang [zh], head of the 26th Route Army of the National Revolutionary Army and his 17,000 soldiers were the first to join the First Red Army. After the uprising, the Nationalist Party strengthened its control over the army, making launching a military rebellion more difficult. Despite this, General Zhang Guotao, who regarded the former officers of the Nationalist forces with disdain, lead an attack in the summer of 1931 which killed more than 2,500 of the Fourth Red Army's middle and senior officers who originated from the Nationalist forces.
Ranks and titles
The Chinese Red Army had no ranks. Officers and soldiers were considered equal. Early on, the officers were elected by the soldiers; however, during the later parts of the war this system was eliminated. From regiment to army, the command system at each level had four commanders: commander, political commissar, chief of staff, and director of political department, with the political commissar holding the most power.
Recruitment
Red Army recruitment efforts often involved mass meetings and competitions between different villages, counties, or mass organizations on the basis of which could supply the most recruits. Women's Organizations were mobilized to provided support to the dependents of Red Army soldiers and to prevent women from "pulling on tails" to forestall their enlistment.
Coerced recruiting was explicitly forbidden.
Military education
As the number of former officers of the Nationalist forces that made up the Red Army decreased throughout the war, the Red Army began to develop military education for the new officers who were formerly farmers. Each base area established its own military academies, usually using captured enemy officers as teachers. The enterprise was very successful, and by 1936 most of the Red Army's military officers were former farmers.
Purges
In 1931, commanders determined that there were a number of spies in the Red Army. This issue became particularly prevalent when the First Red Army's Chief of Staff Zhu Yunqing was assassinated by a spy in a hospital. After this, each Red Army began to judge and execute the officers and soldiers who were suspected. In 1931, the First Red Army executed about 4,000 men. The Fourth Red Army and Third Red Army also executed thousands of officers, especially senior officers.
Militia
Typically a Red Army's base area was surrounded by enemy forces. To protect the base area from enemy attack, the Red Army recruited red guards. The red guards were commanded by officers of the local soviet. When large-scale war broke out, the red guards were responsible for the logistical support of the Red Army and supplied new soldiers for the Red Army. For example, in the winter of 1932, Xiao Ke's Eighth Army had 2,200 red soldiers and 10,000 red guards. The red guards' officers were not always loyal. In the spring of 1933, one of the red guards' officers killed 29th Army's commander Chen Qianlun and surrendered to the Nationalist forces.
Organization
Usually each Chinese Red Army's army or legion had three or two infantry divisions. Each division has three infantry regiments and one mortar company. In different time the number of one division's soldiers is different. In the beginning every division had about 1000 or 2000 men. From 1933 to 1936, one division usually had about 5000 or 6000 men.
1928
After several uprisings, the Chinese Red Army had several armies in the summer of 1928.
Province | Order of battle | Commander | Troop strength |
---|---|---|---|
Jiangxi | 4th Army | Zhu De | 6000 |
Hunan | 5th Army | Peng Dehuai | 2000 |
Hubei | 2nd Army | He Long | 1500 |
Anhui | 11th Army | Wu Guanghao [zh] | 300 |
1930
The Chinese Red Army became stronger than before and during the summer of 1930.
Province | Order of battle | Commander | Troop strength |
---|---|---|---|
Jiangxi | 4th Army | Lin Biao | 5000 |
6th Army | Huang Gonglue [zh] | 5000 | |
10th Army | Fang Zhimin | 2000 | |
12th Army | Deng Yigang (邓毅刚) | 3000 | |
20th Army | Hu Shaohai (胡少海) | 1500 | |
Hunan | 5th Army | Peng Dehuai | 4000 |
8th Army | He Changgong | 5000 | |
16th Army | Hu Yiming (胡一鸣) | 2000 | |
Hubei | 4th Army | He Long | 2000 |
6th Army | Duan Dechang | 8000 | |
Anhui | 1st Army | Xu Jishen | 2100 |
Zhejiang | 13th Army | Hu Gongmian [zh] | 3000 |
Jiangsu | 14th Army | He Kun [zh] | 700 |
Guangxi | 7th Army | Zhang Yunyi | 6000 |
8th Army | Yu Zuoyu [zh] | 1000 |
1932
In the summer of 1932, the Chinese Red Army had formed three main forces before the Fourth Encirclement Campaign.
Province | Order of battle | Commander | Troop strength |
---|---|---|---|
Jiangxi | 1st Legion | Lin Biao | 20000 |
3rd Legion | Peng Dehuai | 18000 | |
5th Legion | Dong Zhentang [zh] | 17000 | |
12th Army | Luo Binghui [zh] | 7400 | |
22nd Army | Xiao Ke | 2000 | |
Northern Jiangxi | 16th Army | Kong Hechong | 17000 |
Eastern Hunan | 8th Army | Wang Zhen | 2200 |
12th Division | Ye Changgeng [zh] | 1200 | |
Eastern Jiangxi | 10th Army | Zhou Jianping | 4000 |
Western Hubei | 3rd Army | He Long | 14000 |
Western Anhui and Eastern Hubei | 4th Army | Xu Xiangqian | 30000 |
25th Army | Kuang Jixun [zh] | 12000 | |
1st Division | Zeng Zhongsheng [zh] | 3000 | |
Northern Shaanxi | 42nd Division | Liu Zhidan | 200 |
Guangxi | 21st Division | Wei Baqun [zh] | 1000 |
1934
The Chinese Red Army had nearly 200,000 men in the winter of 1934.
Province | Army | Order of battle | Commander | Troop strength |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jiangxi | First Red Army | 1st Legion | Lin Biao | 22400 |
3rd Legion | Peng Dehuai | 19800 | ||
5th Legion | Dong Zhentang [zh] | 12000 | ||
8th Legion | Zhou Kun [zh] | 10900 | ||
9th Legion | Luo Binghui [zh] | 11500 | ||
Eastern Guizhou | Second Red Army | 2nd Legion | He Long | 4400 |
6th Legion | Xiao Ke | 3300 | ||
Sichuan | Fourth Red Army | 4th Army | Wang Hongkun | 20000 |
9th Army | He Wei | 18000 | ||
30th Army | Yu Tianyun [zh] | 16000 | ||
31st Army | Sun Yuqing [zh] | 16000 | ||
33rd Army | Luo Nanhui [zh] | 10000 | ||
Fujian | 7nd Army | 7th Legion | Xun Huaizhou [zh] | 6000 |
Eastern Jiangxi | New 10th Army | New 10th Army | Liu Chouxi [zh] | 4000 |
Northern Jiangxi | 16th Division | 47th regiment | Xu Yangang [zh] | 1500 |
Eastern Hubei | 25th Army | 25th Army | Xu Haidong | 3100 |
Northern Shaanxi | 26th Army | 78th Division | Liu Zhidan | 2000 |
Western Anhui | 28th Army | 82nd Division | Gao Jingting [zh] | 1000 |
1936
Most of Chinese Red Army had arrived in northern Shaanxi by autumn 1936. Only a minority of them stayed in southern China.
Province | Army | Order of battle | Commander | Troop strength |
---|---|---|---|---|
Northern Shaanxi | First Red Army | 1st Legion | Zuo Quan | 10000 |
15th Legion | Xu Haidong | 7000 | ||
28th Army | Song Shilun | 1500 | ||
Second Red Army | 2nd Legion | He Long | 6000 | |
6th Legion | Xiao Ke | 5000 | ||
32nd Army | Luo Binghui [zh] | 2000 | ||
Fourth Red Army | 4th Army | Chen Zaidao | 9000 | |
31st Army | Wang Shusheng | 7000 | ||
Gansu | Western Route Army | 5th Army | Dong Zhentang [zh] | 3000 |
9th Army | Sun Yuqing [zh] | 6500 | ||
30th Army | Cheng Shicai | 7000 | ||
Southern Shaanxi | 25th Army | 74th Division | Chen Xianrui | 1400 |
Western Anhui and Eastern Hubei | 28th Army | 82nd Division | Gao Jingting [zh] | 2500 |
Northern Jiangxi | 16th Division | 47th regiment | Fang Buzhou (方步舟) | 1200 |
Eastern Fujian | Eastern Fujian Military Command | Independent Division | Ye Fei | 1000 |
Northern Fujian | Northern Fujian Military Command | Independent Division | Huang Ligui (黄立贵) | 3000 |
Southern Zhejiang | Southern Zhejiang Military Command | Independent Division | Su Yu | 1600 |
Equipment
Rifles
The Chinese Red Army's weapons were all captured from the enemy army, with the most important and useful weapon being the rifle. In the winter of 1934, the First Red Army's twelve divisions had 72,300 soldiers and 25,300 rifles. Compared to the First Red Army, the Fourth Red Army had more rifles which allowed it to recruit many new soldiers in Sichuan. However, the local forces lacked rifles. In the summer of 1934, Xun Huaizhou [zh]'s Seventh Legion had 6,000 soldiers but only 1,200 rifles, which lead to the Seventh Legion's quick defeat when they attempted to attack Fuzhou.
Machine guns
Every Red Army regiment typically had one machine gun company, with every company having six or more machine guns. The machine gun equipment rate of the Red Army was no less than that of the Nationalist forces' elite troops. This was one of the important reasons why the Red Army was able to defeat the Nationalist forces on many occasions. The most common machine guns were the MG08, ZB vz. 26, M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle, and Hotchkiss M1914 machine gun.
Cold weapons
Due to the lack of rifles, the Chinese Red Army was forced to use cold weapons such as broadswords, spears, sabres, and other melee implements. In particular, most of the soldiers from the Red Army's militia troops were armed with cold weapons at all times. In the autumn of 1930, Zeng Zhongsheng commanded 30,000 red guards who were armed with cold weapons. Despite the overwhelming numbers of red soldiers, 1,000 opposing troops armed with rifles were able to defeat Zeng Zhongsheng's forces.
Submachine guns
The Chinese Red Army used various types of submachine guns from Thompsons to MP 18s. They were captured from the Nationalist forces.
Artillery
The Chinese Red Army made use of artillery seized from the enemy forces. Most of the time the Red Armies only had mortars, with typically every army having three to five mortars. During the summer of 1930, Peng Dehuai's Fifth Army captured four 75mm mountain guns in Yuezhou, but they lacked the required ammunition.
Aircraft
In the spring of 1931, the Fourth Red Army captured a Nationalist forces' reconnaissance aircraft in eastern Hubei. The pilot, Long Wenguang, joined the Red Army and assisted them in attacking the enemy army. Before the Fourth Red Army retreated from its base area, the aircraft was concealed by local farmers and was found again in 1951. The First Red Army also captured two reconnaissance aircraft in 1932.
See also
Notes
- Alternatively, the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Revolutionary Army
References
- "PLA History". Archived from the original on 7 April 2023.
- Li, David Daokui (2024). China's World View: Demystifying China to Prevent Global Conflict. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393292398.
- Rhoads, Edward J. M.; Friedman, Edward; Joffe, Ellis; Powell, Ralph L. (1964). The Chinese Red Army, 1927–1963: An Annotated Bibliography. Vol. 16 (1 ed.). Harvard University Asia Center. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1tg5nnd. ISBN 978-0-674-12500-1. JSTOR j.ctt1tg5nnd.
- ^ Duan, Lei (2024). "Towards a More Joint Strategy: Assessing Chinese Military Reforms and Militia Reconstruction". In Fang, Qiang; Li, Xiaobing (eds.). China under Xi Jinping: A New Assessment. Leiden University Press. ISBN 9789087284411.
- ^ 李涛 (1 November 2012). 《湘江血泪:中央红军长征突破四道封锁线纪实》 (in Chinese). 长征出版社. ISBN 9787802047488.
- 《中國國民黨史》:“赤匪自稱這次流竄為長征。這次長征開始於民國二十三年十月,到二十四年一月,紅軍主力已到達貴州的遵義。”
- ^ Cai, Xiang; 蔡翔 (2016). Revolution and its narratives : China's socialist literary and cultural imaginaries (1949-1966). Rebecca E. Karl, Xueping Zhong, 钟雪萍. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-7461-9. OCLC 932368688.
- ^ Huang, Yibing (2020). An Ideological History of the Communist Party of China. Vol. 1. Qian Zheng, Guoyou Wu, Xuemei Ding, Li Sun, Shelly Bryant. Montreal, Quebec: Royal Collins. ISBN 978-1-4878-0425-1. OCLC 1165409653.
- ^ Han, Xiaorong (2014). Red God: Wei Baqun and His Peasant Revolution in Southern China. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. pp. 147–149. ISBN 978-1-4384-5385-9.
- ^ Opper, Marc (2020). People's Wars in China, Malaya, and Vietnam. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. doi:10.3998/mpub.11413902. ISBN 978-0-472-90125-8. JSTOR 10.3998/mpub.11413902.
- Peng, Dehuai (1984). "Finding the Communist Party of China (1926-April 1928)". In Grimes, Sarah (ed.). Memoirs of a Chinese Marshal: The Autobiographical Notes of Peng Dehuai (1898-1974). Translated by Zheng, Longpu. Foreign Languages Press Beijing. p. 136. ISBN 0-8351-1052-4.
I suggested that the be taken out in so many batches as might be decided in a discussion with the County Party Committee, adding that they must be handed over to very reliable persons. Weapons had no class nature in themselves, I said, and they could be used by anybody who possessed them. I stressed the need to ensure secrecy.
- Jowett, Philip S. (2013). China's Wars. Rousing the Dragon 1894–1949. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer. p. 167. ISBN 978-1-782-00407-3.
- 寻淮洲将军传 (Biography of General Huaizhou) 解放军出版社 (People's Liberation Army Publishing House), 1991
- Shaanxi, Chinese Red Army soldiers with machine guns. Harrison Forman. University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
- From peasant guerrillas to high-tech troops: 80 years of the PLA Chang Ai'ling. China Features. Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the Hellenic Republic.Archived July 5, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
- Shaanxi, Chinese Red Army soldiers holding submachine guns. Harrison Forman. University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Libraries
- Print 1723 c1: 1935/1937. The Long March. Chinese Red Army troopers with German Bergmann sub-machine guns. Print 1723 c2: Chinese Reds (note sickle-and-hammer and red star in flag) with German-made Bergmann submachine guns. Yun Yang, Shensi (Shaanxi). Harrison Forman. University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Libraries
- Shaanxi, Chinese Red Army soldiers in the field with cannon. Harrison Forman. University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Libraries
- Peng, Dehuai (1984). "Storming Changsha City (June–September 1930)". In Grimes, Sarah (ed.). Memoirs of a Chinese Marshal: The Autobiographical Notes of Peng Dehuai (1898-1974). Translated by Zheng, Longpu. Foreign Languages Press Beijing. p. 291. ISBN 0-8351-1052-4.
There were four 75 mm. field artillery pieces and several howitzers, and the Red Army began to have an artillery unit. After we had taken Yuezhou, British, U.S. and Japanese warships carried out reckless provocations against us as they did at Huangshigang port. They wantonly bombarded the city walls. We mounted our artillery pieces under cover. (Only Wu Ting, a Korean comrade, and I knew how to fire artillery shells then.) When the warships sailed close, we hurled dozens of shells at them. A dozen shells hit home, and they dared not come near the banks. At Huangshigang port we had not been able to shell them because we had no artillery pieces.
Preceded byCommunist elements of the National Revolutionary Army | Armed Wing of the Chinese Communist Party 25 May 1928 – 25 August 1937 |
Succeeded byEighth Route Army and New Fourth Army |