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Trường Chinh

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Preceded by
  
Le Duan

Preceded by
  
Nguyen Van Cu

Preceded by
  
Van Tien Dung

Name
  
Truong Chinh

Succeeded by
  
Nguyen Van Linh

Succeeded by
  
Ho Chi Minh

Succeeded by
  
Nguyen Van Linh

Truong Chinh Qu trnh pht trin B Khoa hc v Cng ngh Qua
Role
  
Vietnamese Political leader

Died
  
September 30, 1988, Hanoi, Vietnam

Party
  
Communist Party of Vietnam

Books
  
The Resistance Will Win, The August Revolution

Parents
  
Nguyen Thi Tu, Dang Xuan Vien

Similar People
  
Le Duan, Ho Chi Minh, Nguyen Chi Thanh, Ngo Dinh Diem, Dwight D Eisenhower

Trường Chinh ([tʂɨ̂əŋ tɕiŋ]; 9 February 1907, Xuân Trường District, Nam Định Province – 30 September 1988, Hanoi) was a Vietnamese communist political leader and theoretician. From 1941 to 1957, he was Vietnam's second-ranked communist leader (after Ho Chi Minh). Following the death of Lê Duẩn in 1986, he was briefly Vietnam's top leader.

Contents

Trường Chinh REDSVN Tng B th Trng Chinh ngi t nn mng cho s

Life

Trường Chinh Nh Trng Chinh v Tng b th ca Cch Mng Thng Tm Thi s

Born Đặng Xuân Khu, he joined the Vietnamese Communist Party in the 1930s. He became an admirer of the Chinese communist leader, Mao Zedong, and adopted the pseudonym Trường Chinh, which was the Vietnamese cognate for Chinese name for Long March, 長征. In 1930, he was appointed to the Committee's propaganda of the Central Committee of Communist Party of Indochina. Later this year, he was arrested by the French and sentenced to 12 years in prison and deported to Sơn La, the year 1936 was released. In 1941, Trường Chinh became the first secretary of the communist party and thus the party's second ranking leader after Hồ Chí Minh. He was chaired of Party National Conference in northern Tuyên Quang Province, launching an uprising to seize power from the French and Japanese. In the following years, the party fought a war for independence against the French colonists.

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The communists gained power in North Vietnam in 1955, while a non-communist government retained power in South Vietnam.

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In the 1950s, Trường Chinh supervised the Land reform in North Vietnam, which was modeled on the Chinese experience. The land reform campaign was accompanied by extensive repression and excess, which resulted the false imprisonment and execution of large numbers of people, many of whom were party members. Trường Chinh had already been criticized for his unwillingness to agree with other party leaders and for his support of China while other leaders relied on the Soviet Union as their role model. The Sino-Soviet split reduced China's influence in Hanoi and Trường Chinh lost the position of first secretary toward the end of 1956. However, he was still seated as the second-ranking leader at the 1957 May Day parade. At the 1958 May Day parade, Lê Duẩn was ranked second, but Trường remained a powerful figure on the Politburo, theorist of the party. Trường Chinh was Chairman of the National Assembly's Standing Committee from 1960–81, and Chairman of the Council of State from 1981-87.

Trường Chinh Trng Chinh ngi sao sng trn bu tri Cch mng thng Tm

Vietnam was unified in 1975, and Trường Chinh was selected president in 1981. He chaired the work of the Politburo when Le Duan to be out. He became general secretary and Vietnam's top leader in July 1986 following Lê Duẩn's death.

Trường Chinh Bo tng Lch s quc giaTin tc

Trường Chinh came to be receptive to reformists and gradually sided with them after visits to the countryside in 1983, amidst the critical economic conditions facing Vietnam at the time, support Nguyễn Văn Linh; nevertheless, he was replaced by Nguyễn Văn Linh at the Sixth Party Congress in December 1986, part of a sweeping leadership change that marked the beginning of the Đổi mới (Renovation) period. He was advisor of the Party's Central Committee from December 1986.

Death

Trường Chinh resigned as president in 1987 due to ill health and died the following year.

Trường Chinh Trng Chinh Trng Chinh K vong bn tn ti phn quc

References

Trường Chinh Wikipedia