Wang Jingwei
Wang Jingwei (
Traditional Chinese: 汪精衛,
Simplified Chinese: 汪精卫,
Hanyu Pinyin: Wāng Jīngwèi,
Wade-Giles: Wang Ching-wei) (
1883 - November
1944), was a member of the
left wing of the
Kuomintang and is most noted from breaking with
Chiang Kai-Shek and forming a Japanese supported collaborationist government in
Nanjing. He is therefore deemed as one of most infamous "Traitors of the
Han people" (漢奸).
- Courtesy name: Jixin (季新)\n* Alternate name: Zhaoming (兆銘).
Born in Sanshui (三水),
Guangdong, Wang went to
Japan as an
international student sponsored by the
Qing Empire government in
1903 and joined
Tongmeng Hui in
1905. He was jailed for plotting an
assassination of Regent Zaifeng (載灃), from 1910 until the
Wuchang Uprising the next year.
In the early
1920s Wang held several posts in
Sun Yat-sen's Revolutionary Government in
Guangzhou, but following Sun’s death in 1925 he faced a powerful challenge for leadership of the KMT.
During the
Northern Expedition, Wang was the leading figure in the left-leaning faction of the KMT that called for continued cooperation with the
Communist Party of China and the
Comintern and for a halt in the Northern Expedition. Wang’s faction, which had set up a new KMT capital at
Wuhan was opposed by Chiang Kai-shek, who was in the midst of a bloody purge of Communists in
Shanghai and was calling for a push north. Lacking the military or financial resources to resist the increasingly powerful Chiang, the Wang faction collapsed and Chiang Kai-shek continued his purge.
In 1930, Wang tried another abortive coup against Chiang, this time with the aid of
Feng Yü-hsiang and
Yen Hsi-shan. After this failure, Wang reconciled with Chiang's
Nanjing government in the early 1930s and held prominent posts for most of the decade, and accompanied the government on its retreat to
Chongqing during the
Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945). In late 1938, Wang left Chongqing and eventually ended up in Shanghai, ostensibly to negotiate with the Japanese invaders. On
March 30,
1940, however, he became
head of state of the Japanese puppet Central China government based in Nanjing serving as the
President of the Executive Yuan and Chairman of the National Government (行政院長兼國民政府主席) until his death four years later in
Nagoya.
For his role in
World War II, Wang has been vilified by most post-World-War-II Chinese historians.
See also:
History of the Republic of China