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Resume of National Revolutionary Army 100 Army Chief.
Qi Chen (1897— 197 1), a native of Zhuji, Zhejiang Province, lived a concave life. Graduated from the Central Military Academy in the first phase. He has served as the platoon leader, 1 division commander, battalion commander, brigade commander of the independent brigade of the 2nd Army, staff officer in the retinue room of the chairman of the Military Commission, commander of the 80th Division, and commander of the 100 Army. 1June, 942, he was dismissed and arrested because of the defeat in the battle. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he let go of his career. 197 1 died in Jinan, Shandong.

Liu Guangji (1898-? ) Shandong native, graduated from the eighth phase of Baoding Military Academy and the second special student class of Army University. He has served as commander and head of the allied forces in five provinces, brigade commander of the National Revolutionary Army, commander of the 47th Division, chief of staff of the 32nd Army, deputy commander and commander of the 100 Army, and chief of staff of the 3rd Army.

Shi Zhongcheng (1897-? ) Tongcheng, Anhui, the word is simple. He graduated from the ninth period of Baoding Military Academy and the fourth period of higher education class of Central Military Academy. For the resume, please refer to the fourth part "Resume of the Chief Officer" of "I. Yu Jishi Department" of the 74th Army.

Li Tianxia (1905-? ) Changshu, Jiangsu. Graduated from the third phase of Central Military Academy and the third phase of Class A of Army University. For the resume, please refer to "Resume of Chief Officials" in Part III of Li Tianxia Department of the 73rd Army.

Zhou Zhidao (1900— 1984) was born in Yongxin, Jiangxi, and his real name was Fang Jing. Graduated from the fourth phase of the Central Military Academy. He has served as the party representative and company commander of the 2nd Division of the 17 Army, the company commander of the 1 Military Training Regiment, the deputy battalion commander of the 14 Independent Brigade, the battalion commander of the 32nd Independent Brigade, attached to the regimental headquarters, the acting head, the 5 1 division head, and the newly compiled1. /kloc-deputy commander of the 0/00 army, deputy commander and commander of the reorganized 83rd division,/kloc-commander of the 0/00 army, commander of the 5th training command and commander of the 0/00 army, member of the Ministry of National Defense, director of the Senate and the Senior Staff Office. 1959 retired from the enterprise. 1984 may 10 died in Taipei. He is the author of Eighty Memories.

(2) Zhou Zhidao and his subordinates

A brief history of the army:

The rest of the non-insurgents fled south with the 17 Corps and were pursued by the People's Liberation Army along the way, resulting in heavy losses. Finally, 1949 100 army 19 and 197, with a total of more than 7,000 men, fled back to Guangxi at 1950 and 1 under the leadership of Liu Jiashu, the commander of the Corps. Four battalions of the 45th Army134th Division adopted the combined attack tactics and surrounded the Guanping area on February 5th. After two days of fierce fighting, the whole army was wiped out and more than 6,000 Liu Jiashu's men were captured alive. Ding Du, the commander of the army, led the remaining troops into Myanmar and then moved to Taiwan Province Province.

Second, the affiliation:

Fifth Training Headquarters (February 1949-April1949)

Changsha appeasement office (April 1949-June1949)

1 Legion (June 1949-August1949)

17 Corps (1August 949-1February 949)

Third, sequence evolution:

1949 February military time series:

Commander Zhou Zhidao, Deputy Commander Ding Du and Chief of Staff Huang Shouqing.

19 division, teacher Liu Guangyu.

Deng Dingyuan, the 44th division commander.

Division 237, Division Li

Zhang Chengwen, 307th division commander (transferred to local government in April, 1949).

1949 in may, Ding Du took over as commander of the army:

Commander Ding Du, Deputy Commanders Liu Guangyu and Deng Dingyuan (1added in June, 949), Chief of Staff Liu Yunkai.

19 Teacher Wei Yiqing

44th Division Deng Dingyuan (1949 was merged into 19 Division in June).

Division 237, Division Li (transferred to the 8th Army in June 1949)

Teacher Zhang Chengwen, 307th Division.

June 1949 Time Series of Army Integration:

Commander, deputy commander, Deng Dingyuan/Wen/Huang Fei, chief of staff Liu Yunkai.

19 Teacher Wei Yiqing

197 Division, division commander Huang Fei/Ceng Jing (June exile 1949, August uprising 1949).

Zhang Chengwen, commander of the 307th Division (August Uprising 1949)

1949 August uprising troops sequence:

Commander, Deputy Commander, Huang Fei (captured), Chief of Staff Liu (captured)/Liu Yongzhi.

19 Teacher Wei Yiqing

197, teacher Ceng Xiangbin.

Four. First mate's resume:

Zhou Zhidao (1900— 1984) was born in Yongxin, Jiangxi, and his real name was Fang Jing. Graduated from the fourth phase of the Central Military Academy. Please refer to 100 "Chen Qi Department Part I", Part IV "Resume of the Chief Officer".

Ding Du (1905-? ) Rizhao, Shandong, Dai Sheng. Graduated from the Central Military Academy in the fifth phase. He has served as the head of the regiment, commander of the garrison, commander of the second detachment of the advance column of guerrilla warfare in the south of the Yangtze River, deputy commander and commander of the 57th Division, brigade commander of the reorganized 57th Brigade, deputy commander of the 74th Army, and commander of 100 Army. 1949 12 led the remnants into Taiwan Province province from the China-Myanmar border.