Category
page 1People of the 1911 Revolution
Sun Yat-sen
Chinese politician, physician, and revolutionary (1866–1925)
Chiang Kai-shek
Chinese politician, military leader, and President of the ROC (1887–1975)
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Puyi
Puyi (; 7 February 190617 October 1967) was the last emperor of China, reigning as the eleventh monarch of the Qing dynasty from 1908 to 1912, and a brief return in 1917, when he was forced to abdicate. Later, he sided with Imperial Japan and was made ruler of Manchukuo—Japanese-occupied Manchuria—in hopes of regaining power as China's emperor. After over 10 years of imprisonment for war crimes following the end of World War II, Puyi worked for four years as a gardener in Beijing, China.
Yuan Shikai
Chinese military and government official (1859–1916)
Zhu De
Marshal of the People's Republic of China (1886-1976)
Qiu Jin
Chinese revolutionary, feminist, and writer (1875-1907)

Li Yuanhong
Chinese general and politician (1864-1928)
Duan Qirui
Chinese warlord and politician (1865-1936)

Hu Han-min
Chinese politician (1879-1936)

Song Jiaoren
Chinese revolutionary (1882-1913)
Feng Guozhang
Chinese general (1859-1919)
Huang Xing
Chinese revolutionary (1874-1916)
Yen Hsi-shan
Chinese military officer (1883–1960)
Tsai E
Chinese politician (1882-1916)
Ho Ying-chin
Chinese politician (1890-1987)
Empress Dowager Longyu
Chinese empress during the end of the Qing dynasty (1868-1913)
Chang Ping-lin
Chinese linguist (1868-1936)
Zhang Qun
Chinese politician (1889–1990)
Tang Shaoyi
First Premier of the Republic of China (1862-1938)
Chen Qimei
Chinese politician (1878-1916)
Huang Fu
Chinese politician (1883-1936)
Zou Rong
Chinese writer (1885–1905)
Charlie Soong
Methodist Episcopal missionary, late Qing revolutionary, businessman (1863-1918)
Ching-heng Wu
Chinese scholar (1865-1953)
Tang Jiyao
Chinese warlord (1883-1927)

Taixu
Taixu (Tai-hsu, ; January 8, 1890 – March 17, 1947), also called Shi Taixu, was a Buddhist modernist, activist and thinker who advocated for a reformation and revival of Chinese Buddhism by drawing upon eclectic domestic and foreign sources and ideologies.

Fu Zuoyi
Chinese politician (1895-1974)
Chiu Feng-chia
Chinese patriot (1864-1912)
Cheng Chi'en
Chinese politician (1882–1968)
Li Liejun
Chinese revolutionary leader and general (1882–1946)

Zang Shiyi
Chinese collaborator with Japan

Yin Ju-keng
Chinese collaborator (1883-1947)
Ivor Thord-Gray
Swedish-born adventurer, ethnologist and linguist (1878-1964)
Yinchang
Yinchang or '''In-ch'ang''' (; 1859 –1928 or 1934) was a Chinese military official, ambassador to Germany, and educational reformer in the Qing dynasty and the Republic of China. He was appointed the nation's first Minister of War in the late Qing dynasty. During the Republic he served as the military Chief of Staff for all presidents of the Beiyang Government. He was ethnic Manchu, and his family belonged to the Plain White Banner Clan of the Manchu Military Organization (滿洲正白旗); he held the title of Prince of the Plain White Banner Clan headed by Prince Chun, Zaifeng; at court he was address
Zhao Hengti
Taiwanese politician (1880–1971)
Zhang Shaozeng
Chinese general (1879–1928)
Zhu Peide
Chinese military officer and politician (1888-1937)
Chang Mo-chun
Chinese politician and women's activist
Yin Changheng
military personnel in the Qing Dynasty and the Republic of China (1884-1953)
Shao Yuanchong
Republic of China person CBDB = 82285

He Chengjun
Johan Wilhelm Normann Munthe
Norwegian military officer and art collector
Wong Nai Siong
Chinese revolutionary leader (1849–1924)
Xu Zonghan
Chinese female revolutionary
Yao Zhiqiang
Republic of China person CBDB = 85535
Tang Xiangming
Pan Dawei
Chinese artist, journalist, and political radical
Tan Haoming
Chinese military governor