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Yin assassination
19 18, the southern military government set up an army to help Fujian and Zhejiang move into Shantou and Chaoshan, waiting for an opportunity to occupy the southern Fujian area occupied by the northern warlords, with Lu as the commander-in-chief, Qiu Shao as the deputy commander-in-chief, chief of staff and the second division commander. Among the Beiyang troops stationed in southern Fujian, many Zhejiang villagers, such as Qiu Shao and Yin, went to revolt many times, causing the envy of Beiyang government. 1965438+July 2009 16, an assassin sent by Beiyang government sneaked into Shantou to assassinate Yin. Yin, who was pregnant for six months, was seriously injured in the struggle with the assassin and died unfortunately at the age of 23. The star of the Revolution of 1911 suddenly fell to Shantou. After Yin's death, Sun Yat-sen sent a message of condolence, and Zhang Taiyan wrote an elegiac couplet: It is hard to say that it is too painful to experience Tongan in Chaoshan.

Sun Yat-sen praised the Yin sisters as Zhejiang heroines, while people and Qiu Jin were called "three outstanding women in modern China".