Biography of Li Hongzhang (collection)

Biography of Li Hongzhang (collection)

by Liang Qichao

Length:
65Kwords
Activity:
Updated 4y agoScraped 12d ago
18Favorites
0QD Score

About This Novel

Liang Qichao (February 23, 1873 - January 19, 1929), also known as Zhuoru, Renfu, Rengong, also known as the master of Yinbingshi, Yinbingzi, Ai Shike, a new citizen of China, and the master of Free Zhai. During the Guangxu period of the Qing Dynasty, he was a thinker, politician, educator, historian and writer in modern China. One of the leaders of the Reform Movement of 1898 (Hundred Days Reform), a representative figure of modern Chinese reformists and neo-Legalists. Liang Qichao is recognized as an outstanding scholar in the late Qing Dynasty, an encyclopedic figure in Chinese history, and one of the rare figures who can still make great achievements in academic research after withdrawing from the political stage. Celebrity comments: Mr. Ren Gong is highly educated and erudite, which is rare in modern times. --Chen Yinke: His momentum and scale are a bit like Li Shimin and Kublai Khan. Although they did not reach the founding of the country, their momentum and scale are already frightening. --Zheng Zhenduo To be honest, Liang Rengong's status was indeed a representative of revolutionaries at that time. He was born when China's feudal system was broken by capitalism. He shouldered the mission of the times, flaunting free thought and fighting against the remnants of feudalism. Before his new and vigorous remarks, almost all the old ideas and customs were like fallen leaves in the wind, completely losing their brilliance. It can be said that no one among the teenagers of twenty years ago-in other words, the children of the proletarian class at that time-had not been baptized by his thoughts or writings, whether they were in favor or against. He is a powerful spokesperson of the bourgeois revolutionary era, and his achievements are indeed not inferior to those of Zhang Taiyan. --Guo Moruo's "The Biography of Li Hongzhang" fairly and objectively describes Li Hongzhang's legendary life from his early years of isolation to suppressing the Taiping Army, participating in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894, founding the Westernization Movement, and navigating the history of world diplomacy. It restores a real Li Hongzhang from a historical perspective.

What Readers Think

Rating

Good0%Neutral0%Bad0%

Community(0)

You Might Also Like