Qin Zhen

Qin Zhen
覃振
Vice President of the Judicial Yuan
In office
March 1932  April 1947
President Ju Zheng
Preceded by Ju Zheng
Succeeded by Li Wenfan
Acting President of the Legislative Yuan
In office
1 January 1932  14 May 1932
Preceded by Hu Hanmin
Shao Yuanchong (acting)
Succeeded by Shao Yuanchong (acting)
Sun Fo
Vice President of the Legislative Yuan
In office
28 December 1931  14 May 1932
President Shao Yuanchong
Preceded by Shao Yuanchong
Succeeded by Shao Yuanchong (acting)
Ye Chucang
Personal details
Born 1885
Qing China
Died 18 April 1948
Shanghai, China

Qin Zhen (Chinese: 覃振; 1885 – 18 April 1947) was a Chinese politician.

Life and career

A native of Taoyuan County, Qin was born Daorang and known by the courtesy name Liming. He met Song Jiaoren and Hu Ying in 1899. Qin attended Changde First Middle School, but was expelled after refusing to swear allegiance to the Qing dynasty. Subsequently, Qin completed his schooling in Japan and joined the Huaxinghui. He returned to Taoyuan, married Song Zhizhao, and left for Japan, where he became a member of the Tongmenghui.[1]

The Tongmenghui sent Qin back to China, where he attended the funeral of Chen Tianhua and other revolutionaries. After Qing authorities noted his presence in China, Qin began his third journey to Japan, studying law at Waseda University. Qin was arrested in 1908, soon after having traveled to China. Released after the Wuchang Uprising, Qin joined the Progressive Association and was active in the Xinhai Revolution.[1]

Qin made his way to Japan in 1913, after the Second Revolutition, and there, joined the Kuomintang. Sun Yat-sen appointed Qin to several party posts in Hunan. During this time, he married his second wife, Mei Hexiu. In 1924, Qin attended the Kuomintang First National Congress, where he was elected to the KMT's central executive committee. Following the meeting, Qin was sent to Wuhan. Following Sun Yat-sen's death, Qin became a member of the Western Hills Group.[1]

In 1931, Qin assumed the deputy speakership of the Legislative Yuan. He left the post in 1932, becoming the vice president of the Judicial Yuan, where he remained until 1947.[1] As the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out, Qin called for the Communist Party and the Kuomintang to work together. He resigned from the Judicial Yuan in the midst Second Chinese Civil War for health reasons, and moved to Shanghai. Zhou Enlai visited Qin there in February 1947, and he died months later on 18 April 1947, survived by a third wife, Quan Ruzhen. A state funeral commemorating Qin, Bo Wenwei, Chen Qimei, Zhang Ji, Hao Mengling, and Li Jiayu was held on 19 May 1948, and Qin was interred on Yuelu Mountain.[1]

Personal life

Qin was married three times, and had thirteen children.[2]

References

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