Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Guo Songling

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
1916
  
Death of Yuan Shikai

1918–1920
  
Siberian Intervention

Role
  
Warlord

1917
  
Manchu Restoration

Name
  
Guo Songling

Guo Songling httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
1915–1916
  
Empire of China (Yuan Shikai) National Protection War

1917–1922
  
Constitutional Protection Movement

1919
  
Paris Peace Conference May Fourth Movement

Died
  
December 24, 1925, Shenyang, China

Guo Songling (simplified Chinese: 郭松龄; traditional Chinese: 郭松齡; pinyin: Guo Songling; Wade–Giles: Kuo Sung-ling) (1883 – 24 December 1925) was a Manchurian general who led a three-month rebellion against his commanding warlord - Zhang Zuolin.

Rising from obscure origins, Guo Songling enlisted in Zhang Zuolin's Fengtian clique as a division commander in 1920. After nearly five years of service, Guo served with distinction as commander of the Fengtian 6th Brigade. However, his personality caused problems: during the Second Zhili-Fengtian War a personal grievance over a friend's removal from command caused him to retreat and nearly cost his army the war. A sense that he was being under-appreciated, along with gradual encouragement by Guominjun rival Feng Yuxiang to help put Zhang's more liberal son on the Manchurian throne, led to his mutiny in mid-1925. Marching his division north towards Zhang's headquarters at Shenyang on 22 November, Guo met success in the early weeks of the offensive. However, when the city's Japanese garrison interfered in defence of Zhang and neither the expected popular support or assistance of the Guominjun appeared, his rebellion stalled. Within the month his forces were surrounded by the Fengtian Army and annihilated. Guo and his wife were captured on 24 December 1925, and executed the next day.

References

Guo Songling Wikipedia