'He Long' () (
March 22,
1896 –
June 8,
1969) was a
Chinese communist military leader. He rose to the rank of
Marshal and
Vice Premier after the founding of the
People's Republic of China.
Early life
He Long is a number of the
Tujia ethnic group
[1]. Born in
Sangzhi,
Hunan province, he was the son of a minor
military officer who was a member of the
Gelaohui (Elder Brother Society), a secret society dating back to the early
Qing dynasty. A cowherd during his youth, he received no formal education. He killed a local government tax assessor who had murdered his uncle, and afterwards became an outlaw. By the mid-1920s, he had emerged as an important local military figure, rising to command the Nationalist
Twentieth Army in
1923. In
1927 He joined the
Communist Party of China (CPC).
Chiang Kai-Shek continuously tried to make him rejoin the
Kuomintang (Nationalist Party), but, failing to succeed, Chiang ordered one hundred of He's relatives killed, including three sisters and his brother. In
1934 he received command of the
Second Army of the
Chinese Red Army. During the
Long March, he emerged as a supporter of
Mao Zedong's approach. The Second Army of the Chinese Red Army under He Long's command was the only communist force that instead of having its number reduced, its number actually increased slightly during the
Long March.
After the Liberation
After the communist victory and the founding of the People's Republic in
1949, He headed the
National Sports Commission. He was made a
marshal in 1955, and was also made
vice-premier. During the
Cultural Revolution he was branded an anti-Party element and purged in 1966.
See also
List of officers of the People's Liberation Army