Hu Qiaomu (1 965438+June102—1September 28th, 992), whose real name is Hu Dingxin, has a pen name of "Qiaomu". Yancheng, Jiangsu, Tsinghua, Zhejiang University, 1930 joined the Communist Youth League of China, 1932 transferred to China. He was a member of the Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China Advisory Committee, deputy head of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China Party History Leading Group and honorary president of China Academy of Social Sciences.
As a teenager, Hu Qiaomu liked reading and writing poems. He studied in Yangzhou Provincial No.8 Middle School and Yangzhou Middle School (high school). 1930, after graduating from high school, Hu Qiaomu was admitted to the Physics Department of Tsinghua University. He used to be secretary of the Communist Youth League Beiping Xijiao District Committee and minister of the Propaganda Department of the Communist Youth League Beiping Municipal Committee. Participate in leading the anti-Japanese patriotic movement of students and workers in Beiping.
The memory of Hu Qiaomu's descendants
1994 published Memories of Hu Qiaomu and Works of Hu Qiaomu. On September 5th, 2007, a symposium on publishing work between Hu Qiaomu and China Academy of Social Sciences was held in Beijing. The book Hu Qiaomu and China Academy of Social Sciences comprehensively and objectively evaluates the outstanding contributions made by Hu Qiaomu, the first president, to the construction of China Academy of Social Sciences and the development and prosperity of social sciences in China, as well as Hu Qiaomu's outstanding theoretical contributions throughout his life.
In particular, there are in-depth and objective theoretical attainments in the study of the history of the Communist Party of China, journalism, text reform and Chinese standardization, literature and art, and major international and domestic issues, which can be said to be a comprehensive summary of Hu Qiaomu's precious spiritual wealth. The book has more than 300,000 words and consists of three parts: summary, memory and literature. The book also selected five photos and a handwriting of Abreu's work before his death.