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Yunnan clique
Chinese: 滇系; pinyin: Diān Xì
Yunnan Provincial Government Seal
Active1915–1945
Disbanded1945
Country Republic of China
AllegianceIndependent (1915–1916)
Constitutional Protection Junta (1917–1921)
Government of the Republic of China in Guangzhou (1921–1922)
Army and Navy Marshal stronghold of the Republic of China (1923–1924)
China Public Interest Party (1924–1927)
Nationalist Government (1927–1945)
TypeWarlord faction
Size20 regiments
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief (1911–1913)Cai E
Commander-in-Chief (1913–1921; 1922–1927)Tang Jiyao
Commander-in-Chief (1921)Gu Pinzhen
Commander-in-Chief (1927–1945)Long Yun
Aircraft flown
BomberBréguet 14
TrainerCaudron G.3
Military unit

The Yunnan clique (Chinese: 滇系; pinyin: Diān Xì) was one of several mutually hostile cliques that split from the Beiyang Government in the Republic of China's warlord era. It was named for Yunnan Province.

History

Kunming Uprising

When the 1911 Revolution began, Cai E, the commander of the 37th Brigade of the New Army, revolted against the Qing government and quickly gained control over Yunnan. The local Qing administration was replaced with an independent government and educational reforms were enacted by Cai. He also reorganised the provincial military into a more cohesive independent force. In the following six months, all of Yunnan and southern Sichuan were unified under the clique's rule. Cai E was very popular among people because he denounced factionalism and supported a strong central government.

In 1913, Cai E went to serve in Yuan's government in Beijing, leaving behind Tang Jiyao as provincial governor. Jiyao came from a prominent Yunnanese family. That same year the Yunnan provincial police department established the provincial public health office. In December 1915, Yuan Shikai announced his plan to turn China back into a monarchy with himself as emperor. This enraged Cai, who was a supporter of the Republic. Shortly after the announcement, Cai E secretly left Beijing and returned to Yunnan to stage a revolt.

Independence

On December 25, Cai E, Tang Jiyao, and Li Liejun, on the advice of Liang Qichao, declared Yunnan independent and expressed their opposition to Yuan Shikai's monarchy. Tang would stay as governor, but Cai and Li would assume command of the Nation Protection Army. On January 1, 1916, Yunnan published an official denunciation of Yuan Shikai's monarchy. The same day, three divisions of the National Protection Army marched onto Sichuan, Guizhou, and Guangxi, beginning the National Protection War to restore the republic.

After being informed of Yunnan's declaration of independence, Yuan immediately sent out three armies to crush the rebellion but suffered heavy losses in southern Sichuan by Cai's forces. After several campaigns in the province, it fell under Cai's rule, who became its governor till his death. In the following two months, other provinces declared independence and joined Yunnan in its fight against Yuan. By June, Yuan had been defeated and was replaced by Li Yuanhong as president of the republic.

The National Protection War made Cai a national hero, but he died shortly after from tuberculosis. His chief lieutenant, Tang Jiyao, took over Yunnan and demanded that the National Assembly be restored. When this was accomplished, Yunnan officially reunified with the national government but kept its provincial army separate due to the Beiyang Army's grip on Beijing politics.

Rival government

After the second dissolution of the National Assembly, the Manchu Restoration debacle, and the complete domination of the central government by the Beiyang generals, Yunnan joined several other southern provinces in forming a rival government in Guangzhou during the Constitutional Protection Movement. Tang Jiyao was chosen as one of the seven executives of its ruling committee. Within the committee, there was a power struggle between Sun Yatsen's supporters and the Old Guangxi clique. Tang sided with Sun and helped in the expulsion of the Guangxi executives. In 1921, he was ousted by Gu Pinzhen, whose rule was recognized by Sun. The following year, Gu's army defected back to Tang. Tang sided with Sun again during Chen Jiongming's betrayal. Less than a week after Sun died in 1925, Tang claimed to be his rightful successor and made a move on Guangzhou in a bid to overthrow Hu Hanmin and put himself in charge of the Kuomintang. His forces were routed by Li Zongren during the Yunnan-Guangxi War. Thereafter, Tang joined Chen Jiongming's China Public Interest Party as its vice premier. In 1927, Long Yun seized control of the clique; Tang died shortly after.

Long Yun's rule

Long then re-aligned Yunnan under the Nationalist government in Nanjing but stringently guarded the province's autonomy. Long was a critic of Chiang Kai-shek and after the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War, he was removed from office.

International Relations

Due to its proximity to French Indochina, Yunnan's main supplier of arms came from France. Yunnan tried to buy aircraft from the British but was denied because of an arms embargo agreement. Tang also bought German machines, lathes, and planning tools for his arsenal but decided to go no further. In 1920, Tang bought 7,000 rifles and 20 machine guns from French merchants.

Airforce

In October 1922, Tongking-based firm, Poinsard et Veyret, sold Tang six Bréguet 14 airplanes and 12 Yunnanese students went to Tongking to receive flight training.

See also

References

  1. ^ Brazelton 2019, p. 41.
  2. ^ "Index Ca-Ce". rulers.org. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  3. Brazelton 2019, p. 42.
  4. ^ Zhang & Zhai 2020, p. 149.
  5. Zhang & Zhai 2020, p. 150.
  6. Ho 2002, p. 25.
  7. ^ Chan 2010, p. 102.

Works cited

Warlord Era and warlordism during the Nanjing decade
1915–19241925–1934Factions
1911–1914Bai Lang Rebellion
1913Second Revolution
1915Twenty-One Demands
1915–1916Empire of China (Yuan Shikai)
National Protection War
1916Death of Yuan Shikai
1917Manchu Restoration
1917–1922Constitutional Protection Movement
1917–1929Golok rebellions
1918–1920Siberian intervention
1919Paris Peace Conference
Shandong Problem
May Fourth Movement
1919–1921Occupation of Outer Mongolia
1920Zhili–Anhui War
1920–1921Guangdong–Guangxi War
1920–1926Spirit Soldier rebellions
19211st National CPC Congress
1921–1922Washington Naval Conference
1922First Zhili–Fengtian War
1923–1927First United Front
1923Lincheng Outrage
1924Second Zhili–Fengtian War
Canton Merchants' Corps Uprising
Beijing Coup
1925Yunnan–Guangxi War
May Thirtieth Movement
1925–1926Anti-Fengtian War
Canton–Hong Kong strike
1926Zhongshan Warship Incident
1926–1928Northern Expedition
Nanjing–Wuhan Split
Nationalist-Communist Civil War
1927Nanking incident of 1927
1927Shanghai Commune of 1927
1927Shanghai massacre
1927July 15 Incident
1927–1930Muslim conflict in Gansu
1928Jinan incident
Huanggutun incident
Looting of the Eastern Mausoleum
Northeast Flag Replacement
1928–1929Third Red Spears' uprising in Shandong
1929Chiang-Gui War
Warlord Rebellion in northeastern Shandong (incl. Beijing Revolt)
Sino-Soviet conflict
1930Central Plains War
1930–1932Sino-Tibetan War / Qinghai–Tibet War
1931–1935Kumul Rebellion / Soviet invasion of Xinjiang
1932Han–Liu War
1932Two-Liu war
1934War in Ningxia
Beiyang
Anhui
Zhili
Fengtian (National Pacification Army)
Zhili Army
Shanxi
Guominjun
Ma
Xinjiang
Yunnan
Sichuan
Old Guangxi
New Guangxi
Guangdong
Guizhou
Kuomintang (KMT)
Communist Party (CCP)
Republic of China (1912–1949)
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