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Du Xigui

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Chinese admiral
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Du Xigui
杜錫珪
Acting President of the Republic of China
In office
22 June 1926 – 1 October 1926
PremierHimself
Preceded byYan Huiqing (acting)
Succeeded byV. K. Wellington Koo (acting)
Acting Premier of the Republic of China
In office
22 June 1926 – 1 October 1926
PresidentHimself
Preceded byYan Huiqing (acting)
Succeeded byV. K. Wellington Koo (acting)
Minister of Navy of the Republic of China
In office
October 1924 – November 1924
PremierHuang Fu (acting)
Preceded byLi Dingxin
Succeeded byLin Jianzhang
In office
December 1925 – June 1927
PremierXu Shiying
Jia Deyao
Hu Weide (acting)
Yan Huiqing (acting)
Himself (acting)
V. K. Wellington Koo
Preceded byLin Jianzhang
Succeeded byYang Shuzhuang
Personal details
Born(1875-11-12)12 November 1875
Fuzhou, Fujian, Qing dynasty
Died28 December 1933(1933-12-28) (aged 58)
Shanghai, Republic of China
NationalityRepublic of China
Political partyZhili clique
AwardsOrder of Rank and Merit
Order of the Precious Brilliant Golden Grain
Order of Wen-Hu
Military service
Allegiance Qing dynasty
(1902 – 1912)
Beiyang government Beiyang government
(1912 – 1928)
 Republic of China
(1928 – 1933)
Branch/service Imperial Chinese Navy
Republic of China Navy
Years of service1902 – 1933
Rank Admiral
Battles/warsXinhai Revolution
Chinese Civil War

Admiral Du Xigui (Chinese: 杜錫珪; Wade–Giles: Tu Hsi-Kuei; November 12, 1875 – December 28, 1933) was a Chinese naval officer during the late Qing dynasty and the Warlord Era.

Biography

Born in Fuzhou, he graduated from the Nanjing naval college in 1902. In July 1911, Du was appointed the commander of a vessel. His crew followed orders from Yuan Shikai to sail up the Yangtze and help put down the Wuchang Uprising later that year. However, when he saw that the Qing empire was collapsing, Du and his sailors mutinied, joining the Republican government. The uprising was what forced the Qing naval minister Sa Zhenbing to resign his post. After Yuan became the head of the government in Beijing, Du continued to serve him.

In 1922, he was made chief of the navy and helped the Zhili clique defeat Zhang Zuolin. In the spring of 1923, Shanghai's fleet rebelled and Du took responsibility by resigning but was recalled in November. In 1924, he commanded the Yangtze fleet of Jiangsu and defeated the Anhui clique's Zhejiang fleet led by Lin Jianzhang. Several ships defected to his side giving him control of Shanghai's waters.

In 1926, he served concurrently as acting president, premier, and minister of the navy. The Nanjing-based Nationalist government later employed him and sent him on an inspection tour of foreign navies.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. Ong, Soon Keong (2021-08-15). Coming Home to a Foreign Country: Xiamen and Returned Overseas Chinese, 1843–1938. Cornell University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-5017-5620-7.
Political offices
Preceded byYan Huiqing President of the Republic of China
1926
Succeeded byGu Weijun
Preceded byYan Huiqing Premier of the Republic of China
1926
Succeeded byGu Weijun
Military offices
Preceded byLi Dingxin Minister of Navy of the Republic of China
1924
Succeeded byLin Jianzhang
Preceded byLin Jianzhang Minister of Navy of the Republic of China
1925–1927
Succeeded byYang Shuzhuang
Presidents of the Republic of China
Provisional Government Flag of the Republic of China

Flag of the Republic of China
Beiyang government
Nationalist government
(Chairman)
Constitutional government
(Indirect election)
Constitutional government
(Direct election)
See also List of presidents of the Republic of China
XiaShangZhouQinHan3 KingdomsJìn / 16 KingdomsS. Dynasties / N. DynastiesSuiTang5 Dynasties & 10 KingdomsLiao / Song / W. Xia / JīnYuanMingQingROC / PRC
Heads of government of the Republic of China
Premiers of Cabinet Flag of the Republic of China (1912-1928)

Flag of the Republic of China
Secretaries of State
Premiers of State Council
Premiers of State Council
Presidents of Executive Yuan
(Mainland China)
Presidents of Executive Yuan
(Taiwan)
*acting
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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