The Kuomintang is a group with very complex members with different political views and conflicts of interest.
When Sun Yat-sen was alive, with his great prestige and personal charm, he was able to shroud and control the overall situation.
The rule of this regime was always carried out under the banner of the Chinese Nationalist Party, founded by Sun Yat-sen.
Because the Xinhai Revolution led by Sun Yat-sen overthrew the monarchy that had ruled China for thousands of years, and because he advocated the use of revolutionary means to achieve national independence, democracy and people's well-being (although he did not find a concrete way to achieve these goals), he enjoyed high prestige in the eyes of Chinese and became a banner.
Name Position at the time Final Ending.
Chiang Kai-shek, president of the Kuomintang, "* Died in Taipei in 1975.
Li Zongren returned to the mainland of the motherland in 1965 and died in Beijing in 1969.
Chen Cheng, Chief of Staff and Chairman of Taiwan Province, died in Taipei in 1965.
Bai Tangxi, Minister of National Defense and Commander-in-Chief of Central China, died in Taipei in 1966.
He Yingqin resigned as defense minister to "avoid longevity" in Hangzhou, and died of illness in Taipei in 1987.
Gu Zhutong, Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Chief of Staff, died in Taipei in 1987.
Chen Guofu **Director of the Finance Committee, died of illness in Taiwan in 1951.
Chen Lifu, Vice President of the Legislative Yuan, died in Taichung, Taiwan in 2001.
Kong Xiangxi lived in the United States and died of a heart attack in New York in 1967.
Song Ziwen, chairman of Guangdong Province, died in San Francisco in 1971.
Zhang Qun, commander of the Southwest Military and Political Chief's Office, died of illness in Taipei in 1990.
Weng Wenhao, President of the Executive Yuan (new resignation), returned to China via Hong Kong in 1951 and died in Beijing in 1971.
Sun Ke, President of the Executive Yuan (taking over), died in Taipei in 1973.
Wu Tiecheng, vice president of the Executive Yuan and chief of the Executive Yuan, died in Taipei in 1953.
Wang Yunwu, Minister of Finance, died of illness in Taipei in 1979.
Dai Jitao, the dean of the examination institute, committed suicide in Guangzhou in 1949.
Wu Dingchang, secretary general of the government, died in Hong Kong in 1950.
Xiong Shihui, director of the Northeast Travel Camp, died of illness in Taichung in 1974.
Zhang Lisheng, Minister of the Interior, died in Taipei in 1971.
Zhu Jiahua, Minister of Education, died of a heart attack in Taipei in 1963.
Wang Shijie ** Chang, died of illness in Taipei in 1981.
Gu Weijun, Ambassador to the United States, died in New York, USA, in 1985.
Soong Meiling, Mrs. Chiang Kai-shek, died in New York, USA in 2003.
Wu Guozhen, mayor of Shanghai, died in the United States in 1984.
Liu Zhi, commander-in-chief of Xuzhou, died of illness in Taiwan in 1971.
Cheng Qian, director of the Changsha Pacification Office, died in Beijing in 1968 during the "peaceful uprising" in Hunan in 1949.
Xue Yue, Chief of Staff of the People's Republic of China and Chairman of Guangdong Province, died in Taiwan in 1998.
Wei Lihuang, commander-in-chief of the Northeast Suppression, left Hong Kong in January 1949;He returned to the mainland in March 1955He died in Beijing in 1960.
Yu Hanmou, commander-in-chief of the army, died of illness in Taipei in 1981.
Hu Zongnan, deputy director of the Southwest Military and Political Chief's Office, died of illness in Taipei in 1962.
Fu Zuoyi, commander-in-chief of the North China Suppression, contributed to the peaceful uprising in Beiping in January 949 and died in Beijing in 1974.
Yan Xishan, director of the Taiyuan Pacification Office, died of illness in Taipei in 1960.
Zhou Zhirou, commander-in-chief of the Air Force, died of illness in Taipei in 1986.
Wang Shuming, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force, died in Taipei in 1998.
Gui Yongqing, commander-in-chief of the Navy, died of illness in Taiwan in 1954.
Du Yuming, deputy commander-in-chief of Xuzhou Suppression, was captured in the Huaihai Campaign;Amnesty in 1959;He died in Beijing in 1981.
Tang Enbo, commander-in-chief of the Beijing-Shanghai-Hangzhou garrison, died in Tokyo in June 1954.
Sun Liren, deputy director of the Southeast Military and Political Chief's Office, began to be in solitary confinement for 33 years in June 1956;He died in Taiwan in 1990.
Ma Hongkui, deputy chief of the Northwest Military and Political Commissioner's Office, died of illness in Los Angeles in 1970.
Ma Bufang, chairman of Qinghai Province, died of illness in Saudi Arabia in 1975.
Tao Xisheng, deputy director of the Propaganda Department, died in Taipei in 1988.
Zeng Qi ** Senior Minister of the People's Republic of China, died of illness in Washington, D.C., in 1951.
Zhang Junli. Chairman of the Democratic Socialist Party, died in San Francisco in 1969.
Zhu Shaoliang, chairman of Fujian Province, died in Taiwan in 1963.
Guo Chen, deputy director of the Southeast Military and Political Chief's Office, died of illness in Taiwan in 1950.
Li Pinxian Deputy Director of the Central China Military and Political Chief's Office, died in Taiwan in 1987.
Dong Zhao, commander-in-chief of joint logistics, died of illness in Taipei in 1977.
Chen Jiji was a strategic advisor to the government and died in Taiwan in 1971.
Zhang Zhen, commander-in-chief of the garrison, died of illness in Taipei in 1950.
Gu Zhenggang, Minister of Social Affairs, died in Taipei in 1993.
Yu Dawei, Minister of Communications, died of illness in Taipei in 1993.
Yang Sen, Chairman of Guizhou Province, died in Taipei in 1977.
Wang Zhanxu, deputy director of the Southwest Military and Political Governor's Office, died of illness in Chengdu prison in 1960.
Chen Xueping, Acting Minister of Education, died in Taiwan in 1999.
Hu Shih lived in the United States and died in Taipei in 1962.
Yu Bin. Archbishop of Nanjing, died in the Vatican in 1978.
Ye Qing. Deputy Minister of the Propaganda Department, died in 1990.
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