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Lai Wenguang

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Years of service
  
1856–1868

Rank
  
Colonel General


Awards
  
King of Jun

Name
  
Lai Wenguang

Born
  
1827 Meizhou (梅縣), Guangdong, Qing Empire (
1827
)

Allegiance
  
Qing Empire (to 1849) Taiping (to 1864) Nien Rebellion(to 1868)

Battles/wars
  
Eastern Front Second rout the Army Group Jiangnan(1860) Battle of Shanghai(1860), first time,Fallen down Qingpu District in june Western Front Third Battle of Wuhan(1856) Battle of Sanhe(1858) Battle of Guanzhong (1861)-1863 Hubei Pocket(1864) Nien Rebellion(18641868) Battle of inlon river(1867)

Died
  
January 10, 1868, Yangzhou, China

Similar People
  
Li Xiucheng, Sengge Rinchen, Liu Mingchuan, Nurhaci

Lai Wenguang (賴文光, 1827–1868), born in Mei County (now Meixian District), Guangdong, and later worked in Guangxi, was an eminent military leader of the Taiping Rebellion and Nian Rebellion, and known during his military tenure as the King of Zun (遵王) ("believe God"). He served under Hong Xiuquan's Taiping Administration, and was Hong Xiuquan's wife young brother. He led Taiping forces to many military victories. In June 1865, he commanded Nian cavalry forces of 90,000 in surrounding and attacking the capital Beijing, nearly successfully. He was executed by Li Hongzhang after interrogation in February 1868.

Lai Wenguang attracted many northern Chinese to unite fighting against the Qing government because people believed the Aisin Gioro had a secret agenda to stage a coup against Empress Dowager Cixi.

His elder brother Lai Hanying was the Taiping Rebellion's king early on, and one of the few of kings still alive after the civil war ended in 1870. As a child, future revolutionary Sun Yat-sen often heard the story of the Taiping Rebellion.

When Mao Zedong occupied Beijing in 1949, he commissioned Lai first Beijing Military Region commander, to commemorate him.

References

Lai Wenguang Wikipedia