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Character ending table


Chen Zikun, originally from Hunan, was born in San Francisco, USA.

He is a descendant of Chinese laborers.

Both his parents died when he was young.

He was selected by Tao Chengzhang as the seed of the Guangfuhui Bronze Project.

He graduated from St.

John's University in Shanghai and graduated from the U.S.

Army Academy.

He is a general of the Beiyang Army and a general of Xiaowei. , Republic of China Military general, member of the Central Committee of the Kuomintang, member of the Supervisory Yuan, vice chairman of the Kuomintang Revolutionary Committee, member of the Central Committee, and governor of Jiangdong Province.

He was attacked in mid-1967 and fled to Hong Kong.

In 1993, he died in his bedroom in a villa in Jiangbei without any illness at the age of 93.

Lin Wenjing, the wife of Chen Zikun, was originally from Zhangzhou, Fujian.

She was the niece of Lin Juemin, a scholar in the late Qing Dynasty, and the cousin of socialite Lin Huiyin.

She graduated from Peking University and studied architecture in the United States.

She gave birth to her daughter Chen Jiao in 1938.

She died in 1993 in her New York apartment at the age of 90.

Yao Yilei, the wife of Chen Zikun, was born in Anhui and grew up in Shanghai and Beijing.

She is the daughter of Yao Qizhen, deputy minister of the Beiyang Ministry of Transportation.

She graduated from Peihua Girls' High School in Beijing and studied at Waseda University in Japan.

She gave birth to her daughter Chen Yan in 1925.

She was admitted to New York Hospital in 1985.

Died of illness at the age of 85.

Xia Xiaoqing, the wife of Chen Zikun, was originally from Cangxian County, Hebei Province.

She traveled around the world with her parents since she was a child.

She was skilled in both light and hidden weapons.

She gave birth to her son Chen Bei in 1921.

She died in Beijing in 2000 at the age of 100.

Jian Bing, the wife of Chen Zikun, was originally from Suzhou and was born as a famous prostitute in Shanghai.

She later married Chen Zikun from Liangliang and had nothing to do with her life.

She died of illness in the United States in 1979 at the age of 78.

Liu Ting, the wife of Chen Zikun, was originally from Jiangdong.

She graduated from the Department of Literature of Jiangdong University and had nothing to do in her life.

She died of illness in the United States in 1998 at the age of 93.

Li Yaoting, originally from Beijing, was a Shanghai tycoon and illiterate.

He immigrated to Hong Kong in 1950 and died of illness in London, England in 1995.

He is surrounded by children and grandchildren.

Lin Wenlong, originally from Fujian, graduated from Peking University.

He was a professor at Jiangdong University and a member of the Democratic Party.

He was labeled as a rightist in 1957.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1967, and later moved to the United States and served as a professor at New York University.

He died in 1988.

Ruan Mingchuan, originally from Beijing, is an old newspaperman.

He once served as the editor-in-chief and president of Huaijiang Daily.

In 1957, he was labeled as a rightist and was sent to Nantai.

He helped the leaders write articles to avoid being attacked.

After being rehabilitated in 1979, he served as the president of Huaijiang Daily.

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In 1982, he went to Visited the United States and met with Chen Zikun.

Chen Qilin, whose ancestral home is Beijing, was in the second phase of Whampoa Military Academy.

He served as commander, division commander, and army commander of the National Revolutionary Army, director of the Jiangbei Appeasement District, and Army Lieutenant General.

He was dispersed during the Huaihai Campaign.

He fled to Myanmar with the Li Mi Corps and fought hard in the Golden Triangle for many years. , later moved to Taiwan, and died of illness in Taipei Invalids General Hospital in 1995.

Yan Su, whose ancestral home is Hebei, graduated from the Army Lecture Hall, studied at the Japanese Military Academy, became a lieutenant general in the Army of the Republic of China, and Secretary-General of the Jiangdong Provincial Government.

He left the mainland for Hong Kong in 1967, and later moved to Taiwan.

He died of illness in Taiwan in 1993.

Chen Shou, whose ancestral home is Nantai, Jiangbei, was illiterate and had a background as a bandit.

He died of no illness at home in Hong Kong in 1993.

Gai Longquan, an illiterate native of Jiangbei, was a bandit leader in Daqingshan and a lieutenant general in the Army of the Republic of China.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1967 and was the leader of the Three Guns Association.

He died at home in Hong Kong in 1993.

Xue Bin, whose ancestral home is Hebei, was a bandit in Hebei in his early years with the nickname Black Wind.

He later served as Laojiu of the Daqingshan Bandit Gang.

In the 1920s, he served as the captain of the Shanghai Anti-Smoking Law Enforcement Corps.

He later served as the head of the Kuomintang Tax Police Corps, the New Sixth Army, and the Liberation Army.

Later, he moved to Hong Kong and became the president of Sangun Association.

He died in 1993 without any illness.

Zeng Jiao, whose ancestral home is Jiangdong, was the son of the magistrate of Nantai County.

After graduating from high school, he joined the Jianghu and became the leader of the Huaijiang water bandits.

He was known as Hunjianglong.

He once served as the chief of the Jiangdong Police Department.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1967 and died in 1993.

Wang Sanliu, whose ancestral home is Gaobeidian, Hebei Province, served as an officer of the Puppet Manchukuo Guards, captain of the Manchukuo Army's Special Air Force, and commander of the Beitai Security Guards.

He launched the Jiangbei Uprising and captured the Japanese prince.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1967 and died in 1993.

Gong Zijun, native of Nantai, graduated from the Department of Finance of Jiangdong University.

He was the president of Jiangdong Industrial Bank and the director of the Jiangdong Provincial Department of Finance.

He was sentenced to forced labor for anti-rightism in 1957.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1960 and became the chairman of a listed company after many struggles.

He returned to China in the 1980s.

Investment, died of illness at home in Hong Kong in 1990.

Xia Jingxi, originally from Nantai, graduated from Jiangdong University and was the wife of Gong Zijun.

She was forced to draw a clear line during the period.

After the reform and opening up, she went to Hong Kong to visit relatives and the couple reunited.

She died of illness in 1992.

Xiao Lang, whose ancestral home is in Jiangxi, graduated from the Architecture Department of Tsinghua University and was the mayor of Beitai.

He was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for suppressing rebellion in the early 1950s.

He fled to Hong Kong in 1960.

In 1975, he was awarded the title of the top ten outstanding architects in the world.

He died in the United States in 1998.

At home in Los Angeles.

Mu Yichen, originally from Shanghai, graduated from St.

John's University and studied in Germany.

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He was the general manager of Jiangbei Steel Company.

He was labeled as a rightist in the Communist Party of China.

He was rehabilitated in 1979 and served as the chief engineer of Jiangbei Hongqi Steel Plant.

His children all studied abroad and moved to the United States after retirement. , died of illness in 1999.

Che Qiuling, originally from Shanghai, graduated from St.

John's University, studied in Germany, and was the wife of Mu Yichen.

She was a close friend of the Prime Minister and never left her.

She died of illness on the same day as her husband in 1999.

Yan Qingyu, whose ancestral home is in Cangzhou, is the younger brother of Xia Xiaoqing and is an underground party member.

He later went to Hong Kong to perform covert missions.

In the 1970s, he was discovered and deported to the mainland and lived in seclusion.

In the 1980s, he served as the deputy director-level leader of the Guangdong Provincial Public Security Department.

In 1997, he participated in the Hong Kong handover ceremony. .

Shen Kai, whose ancestral home is Shanghai, was an agent of the Kuomintang military reunification and an underground member of the Chinese Communist Party.

In the 1950s, he was ordered to lurk in Hong Kong and Taiwan and served as the leader of the 14th K.

Xue Baoqing, an illiterate native of Beijing, was the owner of Ziguang Depot, deputy manager of the district transportation company after liberation, and district people's representative.

He died of illness in 1980.

Chen Xiu, Xue Baoqing's wife, was illiterate and died of illness in 1969.

Xue Dashuan, whose ancestral home is Beijing, is semi-literate and the son of Xue Baoqing.

He joined the People's Liberation Army in 1949.

He was promoted to the People's Liberation Army in 1949.

He was promoted to a deputy regiment and was relegated to the second line.

He was hit hard and later moved to a military rest center in Wuhan, where he still lives today.

Ye Xuefeng, whose ancestral home is in Henan, graduated from the Anti-Japanese University in Yan'an and was political commissar of the Jiangbei Column.

He was awarded the rank of major general in 1955 and promoted to lieutenant general in 1962.

He once presided over the military training of the General Staff.

He was hit in the military and died of illness in the old revolutionary base of Jiangbei in 2010.

Mai Ping, whose ancestral home is in Jiangdong, graduated from Jiangdong University.

He participated in the revolution in his early years and quit the party midway.

After liberation, he served successively as director of the Jiangbei Administrative Office, political commissar of the Public Security Department, director of the Department, commissioner of the Jiangbei Administrative Office, and secretary of the prefectural committee.

He was attacked in the middle and was rehabilitated in 1977 and then served as the provincial city The mayor, deputy provincial secretary of the Municipal Party Committee, has a son, Mai Yuanchao, and a daughter, Mai Kangmei.

Ma Yunqing, whose ancestral home is in Beijing, graduated from an engineering school.

After liberation, he served as secretary of the Jiangbei Prefectural Committee and governor of Jiangdong Province.

He suffered a shock during the epidemic and was later transferred to the central government.

He died in 2010.

Ma Jingsheng, whose ancestral home is in Beijing, joined the army during his period and later worked in central ministries.

In 2010, he served as the leader of the Central Steel Leading Group, but was later dismissed due to mistakes.

Zheng Zeru, whose ancestral home is in Jiangsu, graduated from Jiaotong University.

He participated in the revolution in his early years and worked underground.

After liberation, he served as Secretary of the Jiangdong Provincial Party Committee and Minister of Lin Mu.

He suffered a shock during the war and committed suicide after being unbearable.

Zheng Jeff, the son of Zheng Zeru, took the college entrance examination after being crushed and entered Peking University.

After graduation, he worked in the central ministries and commissions, the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League, and later served as Secretary of the Jiangdong Provincial Party Committee.

Pan Xin, a graduate of Jiangdong University and Zheng Zeru’s wife, suffered a persecution in the Communist Party of China and was rehabilitated in 1979.

In the 1980s, she served as the Propaganda Minister of the Provincial Party Committee.

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Chen Shi, the second son of Chen Shuangxi, later changed his name to Chen Zhiyi.

He was admitted to Jiangbei Normal College in 1977 and has been working as a teacher in Jiangbei No. 1 Middle School.

Hongyu, Zheng Zeru’s ex-wife, originally from Yangzhou, was a Shanghai prostitute and died in 1969.

Wang Beitai, the son of Hongyu and Zheng Zeru, was born in 1938.

He was admitted to Jiangbei Normal University and was assigned to teach at Chenguang Machinery Factory's Junior Middle School, where he stayed in this position for the rest of his life.

Zhang Guangyin, whose ancestral home is Jiangdong, was the husband of Liu Yu and a rightist.

He died at Salt Lake Farm in Jiangbei and was rehabilitated in 1982.

Liu Nao, whose ancestral home is Jiangdong, was the adoptive mother of Chen Guang.

She worked hard to take care of several children and passed away in 1992.

Chen Guang, the direct grandson of Chen Zikun, the son of Chen Bei, later changed his name to Liu Nianbei.

He graduated from high school and was a worker at Chenguang Machinery Factory.

He had a son, Liu Ziguang.

Xu Tingge, whose ancestral home is in Beijing, is self-taught and devoted himself to the revolution in his early years.

After liberation, he served successively as the provincial police chief, secretary of the provincial political and legal committee, director of the public security department, and deputy governor.

He was attacked in 1979 and rehabilitated in 1979.

He was appointed deputy secretary of the Jiangdong Provincial Committee.

Xu Xinhe, the son of Xu Tingge, was admitted to Tsinghua University in 1979 and later entered politics.

He has served successively as section chief, county magistrate, county party secretary, mayor, municipal party secretary, and provincial governor.

He is still in leadership positions today.

Luo Xiaolou, a martial arts student, joined the revolution in 1939 and was awarded the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1955.

He was promoted to colonel in 1962 and served as commander of the Jiangbei Military Division.

In 1967, he was implicated in the defection of Chen Zikun and was dismissed from his post.

Both of his sons joined the army.

Wu, the eldest son Luo Keqiang served as the staff officer of the Lanzhou Military Region.

During the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s, he went abroad to perform missions and died in a foreign country.

The second son Luo Kegong later served as deputy commander of the Southeast Military Region and deputy chief of general staff of the People's Liberation Army.

In 2010, he was awarded the rank of general.

Guo Yuanchao, the son of Xia Jingqi, grew up in an orphanage.

He later joined the army and went on a mission in Vietnam.

He made mistakes and was punished and retired from active service.

He transferred to Chenguang Machinery Factory and was laid off to repair bicycles on Gaotupo.

Chen Qingfeng, whose ancestral home is Shandong, was a Taoist priest at the foot of Baodugu Mountain.

He later became Chen Zikun's adjutant and a member of the Three Guns Society.

He lurked in Shanghai and was suppressed after liberation.

Su Qingyan, whose ancestral home is Hebei, was born as a scholar.

He was a bandit in Hebei and a master of the Daqingshan bandit gang.

He later became a staff officer of the mixed brigade of the Jiangbei Army and the secretary-general of the Three Guns Association.

He was suppressed by the rebels in the early days of liberation.

Liu Xiaoyong, a 1938 graduate of the Jiangdong Army Academy, participated in the Songhu Anti-Japanese War, the Beitai Defense War, and the underground party.

In 1949, he led the Jiangbei Traffic Police Corps uprising.

In 1955, he was awarded the rank of lieutenant colonel.

He later retired and became the local food director.

He is still alive today.

Wang Dongliang was originally from Changxindian, Beijing.

He was a coachman and an officer in the Northwest Army.

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He later defected to the Eighth Route Army and retired at the military level.

He died in Wuhan in 1989.

Zhao Jiayong, originally from Beijing, was a train station policeman and lived in Beijing until the mid-1990s.

Yan Zhiyong, whose ancestral home is in Henan, was a bandit in his early years.

He was a disciple of the Qitian Martial Arts School in Beijing.

He once secretly joined the anti-Japanese armed forces and later lived in seclusion among the people.

He died in the late 1990s.

Yulongwang, a Japanese Chinese, a viscount, and the head of the imperial agency.

After the defeat, his family sold off domestic property and became rich quickly, becoming a generation of rich people.

After the Plaza Accord in the 1980s, his wealth shrank rapidly and he died in depression.

The second cabinet, Vasilyevich, gathered a group of desperadoes to go to Lake Baikal to search for Kolchak's gold in the 1930s, and has not been heard from since.

Guan Shanhai, a native of Nantai, participated in the revolution during the War of Liberation, fought in both the south and the north, and died in a sanatorium in the provincial capital.

Tang Yan, a native of Shanghai, is the sister of the socialite Tang Ying.

She is an underground agent of our party.

She deals with the Japanese and puppet Kuomintang.

In the 1950s, she was implicated in the Pan Hannian case and was secretly imprisoned for a long time.

In 1982, she was rehabilitated and her salary was restored.

She continued to work for the party and served as a newspaper consultant.

Duty, eventually suffered a heart attack and died at work.

Sean Stanley, a colonel in the U.S.

Army, participated in World War I and helped the Anti-Japanese War in China during World War II.

He died of illness in 1946.

Catherine Stanley, editor-in-chief of the New York Times and Chen Zikun’s confidante from abroad, died in 1983.

Bill Chandes, a U.S.

Army brigadier general, fought in the Korean War, retired in the late 1950s, and died of illness in 1985.

Mario Pacino, the godfather of the New York Mafia family, died of heart disease caused by obesity in 1979.

Bai Yufang, the leader of Qi's class, died of illness in 1972.

Asakusa Kayo disappeared after giving birth to a child for Yan Qingyu.

Chen Jiao, still alive today, is a professor at New York University in the United States.

Wu Changqing was hit and committed suicide.

Ye Wei raised Zhao Ziming's flesh and blood and died of illness in 1974.

Cheng Shuanzhu is still alive today.

His son died in Vietnam, his grandson died in Myanmar, and his only great-grandson Cheng Weiguo Maohai served as a soldier in the 38th Army.

Liang Pan has a son, Liang Xiao, who is still alive today.

If you go to Hong Kong, you can see him in a tea restaurant in Kwun Tong.

Lu Erxi was later transferred to Chenguang Machinery Factory as the director and had a son, Lu Tianming.

Hu Chuanfeng, who was later transferred to the public security system, has a son, Hu Yuejin, who joined the police in the 1980s, and a granddaughter, Hu Rong.

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