Pan Zili

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Pan Zili
People's Republic of China
Battles/warsSecond Sino-Japanese War
Chinese Civil War
Spouse(s)Yao Shuxian
Other workCommunist Party Chief and Chairman of Ningxia (1949–1952)
Communist Party Chief of Shaanxi (1952–1955)
Chinese Ambassador to:

Pan Zili (

Hua County, Shaanxi
.

Early life

Pan Zili was born in Zaoyuan Village, Huaxian County, Shaanxi Province. At the age of 17, he joined the artillery battalion of the Shaanxi Mixed Brigade. He enrolled in the Xianlin Middle School the following year. He was influenced by the early revolutionaries of Shaanxi, such as Wei Yechu and Wang Fusheng, and joined the Chinese Socialist Youth League in 1923. After the May 30th Movement broke out in 1925, Pan Zili organized youths to participate in anti-imperialist demonstrations; afterwards, he was instructed by the CCP to conduct youth and military movements in Shaanxi and Henan.

In October 1925, Pan Zili was sent to study at Sun Yat-sen University in Moscow; in January 1926, he became a member of the Chinese Communist Party. After returning to China in May 1927, he was engaged in the youth movement, agricultural movement and military movement of the Chinese Communist Party in Xi'an, Weinan and other places; he served as the propaganda minister of the Shaanxi Changan County Farmers Association, acting secretary and propaganda minister of the Shaanxi Provincial Party Committee of the Communist Youth League, and the secretary of the Xi'an Municipal Party Committee Shaanxi Provincial Party Committee East Road Special Commissioner and Secretary of Weinan County Party Committee and other positions. After the failure of the first cooperation between the KMT and the Communist Party, in January 1928, Pan Zili served as the Standing Committee of the Shaanxi Provincial Party Committee and Acting Secretary of the Provincial Party Committee;

After successfully escaping from prison in October 1930, he lost contact with the CCP organization. In 1931, under the support of Yang Hucheng, he went to study in France; in 1932, he moved to the United Kingdom to participate in the work of the Chinese Language Group of the British Communist Party; in May 1933, he returned to China. In 1935, the Red Four Front Army was found in northern Sichuan, served as an officer in the General Political Department, and participated in the Long March. In September 1936, Pan Zili rejoined the Chinese Communist Party and served as a political instructor at the Red Army University; after the Xi’an Incident, he transferred the Northwest People ’s Movement Steering Committee as the Minister of the Organization Department; later he served as the Minister of the Propaganda Department of the Shaanxi Provincial Party Committee.

During the Anti-Japanese War and the Civil War of the Kuomintang and the Communist Party, Pan Zili worked in the border area of Jinchaji for a long time; he served as the propaganda minister and deputy director of the political department of the Jinchaji Military Region, the director of the political department of the Jinchaji Field Army, and the director of the political department of the Second Army Corps of the North China Military Region Director of the political department, deputy political commissar and director of the political department of the 19th Corps of the People's Liberation Army; participated in the battles of

Pingjin, Taiyuan, Fumei, Lanzhou, etc. .; in September 1949, he entered Ningxia with the army.[1]

People's Republic of China

Pan was the 1st

Nepal and India (1956–1962) and the Soviet Union (1962–1966).[2] He was a delegate to the 1st and 3rd National People's Congress
.

Preceded by
new office
Communist Party Chief and Chairman of Ningxia
1949–1952
Succeeded by
Zhu Min (as party chief), Xing Zhaotang (as chairman)
Preceded by Communist Party Chief of Shaanxi
1952–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Chinese Ambassador to North Korea

1955–1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chinese Ambassador to the Soviet Union
1962–1966
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ 从领导渭华起义到出任驻苏大使 Archived 2011-02-21 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Sino-Nepal Treaties 1960 JOINT COMMUNIQUE ISSUED AT THE END OF PRIME MINISTER BISHWESHWAR PRASAD KOIRALA'S VISIT TO CHINA PEKING, MARCH 21, 1960". Archived from the original on January 8, 2006. Retrieved September 11, 2020.