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Chinese rebels

This list has 12 sub-lists and 42 members. See also Chinese activists, Rebels by nationality, Rebellions in China, Chinese political people
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Chinese dissidents
Chinese dissidents 2 L, 174 T
  • Li Yonghe Chinese rebel leader circa 1859–1864
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    Li Yonghe (Chinese: 李永和) was a 19th-century rebel leader from Yunnan province, Qing dynasty China.
  • Shang Rang Person
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    Shang Rang (??) was a major follower of Huang Chao, an agrarian rebel leader against the rule of the Chinese dynasty Tang Dynasty, and carried prominent titles after Huang declared himself the emperor of a new state of Qi. As Huang neared defeat in 884, Shang turned against him and submitted to the Tang general Shi Pu, and participated in the final destruction of Huang's army. Shang himself was later killed by Shi.
  • Gao Guiying Person
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    Gao Guiying (Chinese: 高桂英) (died 1647) was a female Chinese rebellion leader and military commander of the short-lived Shun dynasty. She was the empress of the Shun founding emperor Li Zicheng.
  • Su Manshu
    Su Manshu Artist
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    Su Manshu (simplified Chinese: 苏曼殊; traditional Chinese: 蘇曼殊; pinyin: Sū Mànshū, 1884–1918) was a Chinese writer, poet, painter, revolutionist, and a translator. He was born as Xuanying in 1884 in Yokohama, Japan. He later adopted Su Manshu as a Buddhist name. His father was a Cantonese merchant, and his mother was his father's Japanese maid. He went back to Guangdong, China when he was five while his mother stayed in Japan.
  • Li Zicheng
    Li Zicheng 17th-century Chinese rebel leader
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    Li Zicheng (22 September 1606 – 1645), born Li Hongji, also known by the nickname, Dashing King, was a Chinese peasant rebel leader who overthrew the Ming dynasty in 1644 and ruled over northern China briefly as the emperor of the short-lived Shun dynasty before his death a year later.
  • Wang Ying Person
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    Wang Ying (王郢) (died 877) was a rebel military officer of the Chinese dynasty Tang Dynasty who, from 875 to 877, roamed and pillaged the modern Zhejiang and Fujian region.
  • Yuan Shizhong Person
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    Yuan Shizhong (?–1643) was a rebel leader in the 1640s, the later Ming Dynasty, China. A Henan native, he gathered a peasant army against the Ming government. In 1643, he briefly joined Li Zicheng, but left before the Battle of Kaifeng. He was killed by Li Guo, a general of Li Zicheng.
  • Sun En Person
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    Sun En (孫恩; died 402) courtesy name Linxiu (灵秀), was a native of Langya (in modern Shandong) who rebelled against the Eastern Jin dynasty. A descendant of Sun Xiu, he joined his uncle Sun Tai (孫泰), who was regarded as a magician member of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice movement, sharing their revolutionary aspirations. When Sun Tai was put to death, Sun En took the lead himself. At the head of a considerable force Sun En captured Kuaiji (modern Hangzhou, Zhejiang province) and proclaimed himself Generalissimo of the East (征東將軍), giving to his followers the title of "Immortals" (長生人). After a long struggle, with alternating fortune, he found himself without resources and committed suicide by drowning himself in the sea. Although eventually the rebellion was put down by Liu Laozhi (and others), during which process there was massive devastation and major loss of life including of many civilians, to the point where whole cities were almost completely deserted.
  • Ni Wenjun Person
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    Ni Wenjun (Chinese: 倪文俊; died 1357) was a general during the Red Turban Rebellion against the Mongol Yuan dynasty in the 1360s.
  • Su Jun Chinese military general and politician
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    Su Jun (Chinese: 蘇峻) (died 328) was a Chinese military general and politician of the Jin Dynasty whose rebellion against Emperor Cheng's regent Yu Liang was initially successful, allowing him to take over the imperial government, but he was eventually defeated by Tao Kan and Wen Jiao's forces and killed in battle. The disturbance he created greatly weakened the Jin regime, which for decades did not have any ability to fight back against rival Later Zhao.
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