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At the time of the 1927 split-up between the Communists and Nationalists, Mao Zedong, who became the Communist leader in 1935, served as the acting minister of publicity and education within the Nationalists, responsible for training farmers to be revolutionaries.
Mao Zedong in 1924. Mao moved to Beijing, where his mentor Yang Changji had taken a job at Peking University. [39] Yang thought Mao exceptionally "intelligent and handsome", [40] securing him a job as assistant to the university librarian Li Dazhao, who would become an early Chinese Communist. [41]
When Zedong was two years old, his mother gave birth to another son, her fourth child, Mao Zemin, and still another son, Mao Zetan, was born when Zedong was eleven. [24] She also gave birth to two daughters, both of whom died in infancy, [ 25 ] although soon after Zetan's birth the couple adopted a baby girl, Zejian , the daughter of one of Mao ...
The Hundred Flowers Campaign, also termed the Hundred Flowers Movement (Chinese: 百花齐放) and the Double Hundred Movement (双百方针), was a period from 1956 to 1957 in the People's Republic of China during which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), led by Mao Zedong, proposed to "let one hundred flowers bloom in social science and arts ...
Fudan University (FDU) is a national public university in Yangpu, Shanghai, China. ... 1949–1976: Mao Zedong era. In 1949, the university was taken over by the ...
Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun (Chinese: 枪杆子里面出政权) is a phrase which was coined by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong.The phrase was originally used by Mao during an emergency meeting of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) on 7 August 1927, at the beginning of the Chinese Civil War.
Mao Zedong expressed personal approval and support for the Red Guards in a letter to the Tsinghua University Red Guards on 1 August 1966. [1] During the " Red August " of Beijing , Mao gave the movement a public boost at a massive rally on 18 August at Tiananmen Square .
On Practice, along with Mao's On Contradiction, elevated his reputation as a Marxist theoretician. [2]: 38 Both works became widely read in the USSR after Mao was celebrated in the Eastern Bloc for China's intervention in the Korean War. [2]: 39 On Practice laid the theoretical foundation for Mao's subsequent slogan, "seek truth from facts."