1 Wu Wanqian (1601-1647), a native of Shicheng, Jiangxi, was the leader of the peasant army in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. After the fall of the Ming Dynasty, an armed uprising of tenant farmers was organized. Therefore, the joint leaders Zheng Changchun, Li Chengwu and others formed the Jixianhui, and the powerful landlords colluded with the government and mobilized officers and soldiers to suppress it. Joint operations with field soldiers from Ninghua and other places. In 1645, he invited field soldiers from several counties to besiege Shicheng County, destroy the inspection office, and punish the powerful landlords. The siege was immediately withdrawn and the landlords' armed forces took advantage of the situation to pursue them. In 1647, troops were stationed in Shimazhai and continued to carry out the anti-Qing struggle. In May, the county magistrate Fang Shangxian sent troops to suppress the attack, and Qing general Hou Tianchong led more than 10,000 troops to surround and attack the stronghold. During the battle, his son Wu He was killed by an arrow. He was defeated and fled to Ninghua. He was captured by Ninghua officers and soldiers and was killed immediately.
2 Xie Qian (1598-1649) was a native of Gaoqing, Shandong, and a leader of the anti-Qing Dynasty in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. In the late Ming Dynasty, he worked as a servant at Han Yuan's house in Zichuan and later returned to his hometown. After the fall of the Ming Dynasty, the Qing army invaded Beijing and issued an order to shave their heads, which aroused resistance from the Han people. In November 1646, he led an uprising in Shandong and occupied Zichuan City. The following year, he executed the traitor Sun Zhixian. The rebel army persisted in fighting for three years and was brutally suppressed in 1649, which dealt a heavy blow to the Manchu rulers. In the autumn of the same year, he was captured and killed by the Qing army in Zichuan, at the age of 52.
3 Zhang San (-1662), a native of Changxing, Jianjiang, nicknamed Barefoot Zhang San, was the leader of the Taihu uprising in the early Qing Dynasty. Originally a fisherman from Taihu Lake, he launched a great uprising in 1645. The uprising team was based in the Yixing mountainous area and appeared in Suzhou, Changzhou and Huzhou on the coast of Taihu Lake. They also cooperated with the Nanming official army to participate in the attack on Suzhou occupied by the Qing army. Due to his bravery and good fighting skills, he had a great influence among the people. The couple was extremely strong and strong. They could dance on water and fly with two swords. No one dared to get close to him. The uprising lasted for 17 years. Finally, due to paralysis and underestimation of the enemy, he was captured and executed by Zhu Yungong, a large landowner in Dongshan, in 1662, and the uprising was suppressed.
4 Zhang Nianyi (1680-1715) Jianjiang, a native of Hangzhou, with the Buddhist name Monk Yi Nian, was the leader of the uprising army in the Qing Dynasty and the leader of the peasant uprising in Dalan Mountain in eastern Zhejiang. In 1709, when he wrote a letter to Zhu Yongzuo, he called him the reign of Ming Dynasty, and Zhu Yongzuo was executed. In October 1714, the Qing army sent troops to conquer, and later fled to North Korea with Qian Baotong. They died in North Korea the next year at the age of 36.
5 Zhu Yigui (1689-1721), formerly known as Zhu Zu, was originally from Zhangzhou, Fujian. He immigrated to Taiwan in 1713 and led the Taiwanese uprising in the Qing Dynasty. started out raising ducks as a career, and he had long been dissatisfied with feudal oppression and exploitation. In 1720, he gathered with his friends Huang Dian, Yan Zijing, Li Yong and other 16 people to worship him and decided to launch an armed uprising. In April, he proclaimed himself emperor, plundered treasures, and rose up. The flag of the uprising was to show to fight against the Qing Dynasty, restore the Ming Dynasty, and regain the motherland. Soon, more than a thousand people gathered to capture the Qing barracks in Gangshan and seized shotguns and dozens of rattan brand . Then, they captured Xinyuan Xun, Nanlu Camp, Zhuluoshan and other camps. The following year, the rebel army reached 300,000 people. Taiwan General Soldier Ouyang Kai was attacked and assassinated by Yang Taili. The Qing army fled to Penghu and successively captured Fengshan County , Taiwan Prefecture and other places. In June, the Qing army landed at Luermen, and the rebels fought fiercely with the Qing army. Taiwan Prefecture was captured by the Qing army, and the rebels retreated to Zhuluo, where they were attacked by Lan Tingzhen. In July, he was betrayed by the traitors Yang Xu and Yang Xiong and captured by the Qing army. In December, he and the leader of the rebel army died in Beijing at the age of 33.
Zhu Yigui
6 Luo Rizhao (-1746) Luo Rizhao (-1746) was a native of Shanghang, Fujian, and the leader of the tenant farmers' uprising in the mid-Qing Dynasty. In 1746, under the leadership of the Luo brothers, he fought for the government to grant free food and property owners, and bravely resisted the officers and soldiers who came to suppress him. In October of the same year, he was captured and killed.
7 Wang Lun(-1774) was born in Yanggu, Shandong Province and was the leader of the peasant uprising in the mid-Qing Dynasty. The main battle was fought in Linqing Prefecture, also known as the Linqing Uprising. In 1751, he secretly joined the Qingshui Sect, a branch of the White Lotus Sect. In 1771, he claimed to be the leader of the sect. He used luck to heal people, taught boxing and other methods, and recruited disciples to preach in Yanzhou and other places. He led the uprising in August 1774 and captured various states and counties in September. The rebels fought bravely and used short-handled guns and other weapons to fight the Qing army, but ultimately failed because they were outnumbered. The Qing army discovered his residence and sent bodyguard Yingjitu and others to arrest him. The two struggled on the ground. Meng Can, the leader of the uprising, stabbed Yingjitu in the throat with a short spear and rescued him. Afterwards, seeing that the situation was over, he set fire to himself. Wu Sanniang, the righteous daughter, had outstanding martial arts skills and could use two swords. She commanded the battle from horseback in street fighting. She was shot and killed at the age of 20.
8 Hu Tingsan (-1776) was born in Yongjia, Jianjiang, and was the leader of the anti-tenant uprising in the Qing Dynasty. In 1776, he led the tenant farmers to organize an armed uprising and carry out the anti-rent struggle. The tenant farmers' anti-rent struggles in various places hit hard the landlord class and its feudal ruling regime, and affected the fiscal revenue of the Qing government. He was arrested and executed in October of the same year.
9 Lin Shuangwen (1756-1788) was originally from Zhangzhou, Fujian, and was the leader of the Tiandihui uprising in the mid-Qing Dynasty. In 1773, he traveled to Taiwan with his father and settled in Dali Zhuangzhuang, Changhua County. He joined the Tiandihui in 1784 and later became the leader of the Tiandihui in Changhua. In 1786, he launched an uprising against the Qing Dynasty, killed Sun Jingsui, the prefect of Taiwan, and stationed himself at the Yamen of Changhua County, calling himself the leader of the alliance, Grand Marshal. On the 20th of the first lunar month, Wang Zuo from the North Road, Li Tong led the crowd to respond, killed Tongzhi in Tamsui, and went north to capture Hsinchu Zhuqian City. Subsequently, he was unsuccessfully arrested in 1788 and executed by Lingchi at the age of 32.
Lin Shuangwen
10 Shi Liudeng (1737-1796) Miao nationality, a native of Songtao, Guizhou, leader of the Miao rebel army in the Qing Dynasty. A Miao peasant family could not bear the oppression of the imperial court and plotted an uprising in 1794. The following year, he launched an uprising in Datang Flood and led peasants in northeastern Guizhou and western Hunan to fight with Shi Sanbao and Wu August. He persisted for two years and repeatedly defeated the Qing army. He was later killed in the battle at the age of 60.
11 Wang Conger (1776-1798) was born in Xiangyang, Hubei Province, and was the female leader of the White Lotus Sect uprising in the Qing Dynasty. Born as a martial artist, he joined the White Lotus Sect in 1792 and married Qi Lin, also known as Qi Wang. After participating in the White Lotus Sect uprising, she served as the commander-in-chief of the rebel army. She is a heroine with strong martial arts skills, courage and strategy. He was good at fighting on horseback. After his husband died, he led the White Lotus Rebellion in 1796. He led more than 100,000 troops to gallop through the four provinces of Hubei, Sichuan, Shaanxi and Henan. In 1798, seeing that the breakout was unsuccessful, he and his men retreated to the top of the mountain. Eventually, he committed suicide due to the failure of the uprising. He was 23 years old.
Wang Conger
12Wang Achong(1777-1797)Buyi people, from Anlong, Guizhou, whose real name is A Cong, was the female leader of the Buyi uprising army in the Qing Dynasty. He practiced martial arts since he was a child, was good at curing diseases with witchcraft, and used religion to organize people's uprisings. He was known as Nangxian among the people. In 1797, she gathered a crowd for an uprising and was known as the Queen of the Immortal Emperor. Her army often numbered hundreds of thousands and successively captured Puping, Zhenfeng, Xingren, Xingyi, and even attacked Ziyun and other places. There were uprisings in various places. The Qing army sent a large army to suppress him, captured Guiyang and other places, and captured him alive. He was then escorted to Beijing and executed in December at the age of 21.
13 Wei Chaoyuan (1768-1797), also known as Deming, nicknamed Acheng, was a native of Nanlongfu (now Anlong), Guizhou, and a Buyi ethnic group. Born into poverty, in the first month of 1797 he plotted an armed uprising with his apprentices Wang Baoliang and Wang Baoyang. Later, he cooperated with Wang Acong and promoted Wang Acong as the leader, called the "Emperor Immortal Empress", and called him the Heavenly King and Jade Emperor Immortal Official. Wang Baoliang was the prime minister, Li Aliu was the marshal of the army, and Sang Hong was promoted to the military advisor. Sazhai became the capital, Dangzhang became the fairy city, and conquered Ceheng, Yongfeng and other places. The prefect Cao Tingkui died after touching the couplet, and the Qing government mobilized troops to besiege him in three directions. After a fierce battle for half a year, in September Dongsha stronghold was broken, and Wang Acong and Sang Hongsheng were captured and sacrificed at the age of 30.
14 Cai Qian (1761-1809) was a native of Tong'an, Fujian, and a pirate in the Qing Dynasty. His parents died and he lived in Sansha Port, Xiapu County, working for a fishing boat owner. In 1794, he became a bandit and responded to many requests. He led thousands of people to gallop on the seas of Fujian and Zhejiang, robbed ships, stole goods, and collected overseas taxes. In 1802, he led a fleet to attack Haikou, Xiamen, and landed 13 guns. In 1804, he went to Luermen, Taiwan, and was later defeated by Li Changgeng, the governor of Zhejiang, on the surface of Dinghai. The following year, he claimed to be the King of Zhenhai and led his fleet into Fengshan, Taiwan, to surround Taiwan Prefecture. In the same year, Li Changgeng and Navy Admiral Zhang Jiansheng jointly attacked his fleet in Blackwater and fired artillery to kill Li Changgeng. In 1809, Li Changgeng's generals Wang Delu and Qiu Lianggong met to besiege Li Changgeng in Yushan, Taizhou. Because they were outnumbered, they opened fire and blew up the boat. They sank into the sea with his wife and subordinates and died at the age of 49.
Cai Qian's Uprising
15Wang Sanhuai(1761-1799)A native of Zhili Prefecture, Dazhou, Sichuan, he was the leader of the Sichuan-Chu White Lotus Religious Army in the Qing Dynasty. In 1796, he launched an uprising in Lianchigou, Taohua Township, Xuanhan County. The following year, he joined Xu Tiande's troops to conquer Dongxiang County, and led his troops to fight in northeastern Sichuan, controlling vast areas of more than 20 states and counties. The Qing army Lebao , Guan Cheng led his troops to suppress it. In 1799, due to paralysis and underestimation of the enemy, he went to the Qing army camp to negotiate and was trapped and sent to Beijing. He was later executed by Ling Chi at the age of 39.
16 Li Wencheng(-1813) was born in Anyang, Henan, and was the leader of the Tianli Sect uprising in the Qing Dynasty.Born into a poor peasant, because he was unwilling to be oppressed by the government, he joined the anti-Qing secrets and organized the Bagua . Soon, he was promoted as the head of the Zhen hexagram and became the main leader. Later, the name of the sect was changed to Tianlijiao . Using missionary work to develop tens of thousands of believers, in September 1813, uprisings broke out in Zhili, Henan, and Shandong at the same time. The flags were white. When the date of the uprising was approaching, the news was leaked. He was arrested and imprisoned on September 5. He was tortured in prison and showed unyielding force. The Tianli Sect rebel army captured Hua County, rescued him, occupied the county office, and set up the banner of "Shun Li Zhenzhu tomorrow." In November, Qing soldiers surrounded the gun tower where he was located and rushed up to kill him. Liu Guoming jumped out with a knife and died heroically. When the rebels ran out of ammunition and food, they ordered themselves to be set on fire and burned to death.
17 Lin Qing (1770-1813) was born in Shuntian Daxing (Beijing) and was the leader of the Tianli Sect uprising in Jiaqing . Originally from Zhejiang, he became an apprentice in a pawnshop at the age of 18 and served as a clerk in the inspection department of Daxing. Joined the Tianli Sect in 1806, became the leader of Kan Gua, and preached throughout Hebei. In 1811, he and Li Wencheng discussed a joint operation, jointly took charge of the Nine Bagua Palaces with Li, and named him Emperor, agreeing to launch an army two years later. On September 14, 1813, 200 people were divided into two teams and concealed weapons to sneak into Beijing. The next day, guided by eunuchs, they entered the inner city in two groups and started a fierce battle with the Qing army at longzongmen. Due to being outnumbered, Li Wencheng's reinforcements failed to arrive. Both groups failed. 31 rebels died and 41 were killed. He was captured and killed in Huangcun on the 19th of the same year.
Lin Qing
18 Zhang Geer (1780-1828) whose real name was Hezhuo. Yahya, was born in the Kokand Khanate and was the leader of the Baishan sect of Islam in Xinjiang. Uyghur , the grandson of Dahe Zhuoporoni, his father Samsak, was born in a noble family. My grandfather was executed for treason, and my father fled overseas. He studied in Afghanistan in his early years and plotted to sneak back to Xinjiang. From 1820 to 1828, with the support of Kokand and the British colonists, he sneaked into southern Xinjiang and launched a rebellion. In 1826, he took advantage of the emotions of the people of all ethnic groups in southern Xinjiang to stage a rebellion and successively captured Kashgar, Yingjisar, Yarkand and other cities. The Qing court ordered Yili General Changling and Shaanxi-Gansu Governor Yang Yuchun to lead troops to put down the rebellion. He was captured by the Qing army in 1828 and taken to Beijing to be executed at the age of 49.
19 Zhong Renjie (1803-1842), also known as Zhongjiu, was born in Chongyang, Hubei Province and was the leader of the peasant uprising in the Qing Dynasty. Those who passed the examination became scholars and made teaching their profession. He was an upright person, supported the kiln residents to accuse the officials and gentry, and prohibited the masses from mining coal. He was assigned to the Xiaogan County , and soon fled back. In 1839, the government harvested grain and rice, humiliated the farmers who paid the grain, and Chen Baoming and Chen Baoming led a crowd to besiege the grain house. The following year Chongyang government officials arrested anti-grain peasants, gathered a crowd to beat the officials and destroyed grain houses, and published the tax reduction regulations on a stone tablet in the lobby of the county government office. He was immediately wanted.. In the first month of 1842, he and Chen Baoming and others led more than a thousand peasants to invade the county, opened warehouses to help the poor, broke prisons and set up prisoners, killed the county magistrate and commander, and was hailed as the Qin Wang Marshal. He was divided into county magistrates, Qian Zong and other officials. 20, Huguang Governor Yutai, Admiral Liu Yunxiao cooperated with Hunan Admiral Taiyong, deputy general Shuangfu and others led more than 20,000 Qing troops to attack the rebels in four directions. He divided his troops to meet the enemy and set up camps at Xiling, Heiqiao, Bainiqiao, etc., but was ultimately defeated because he was outnumbered. He, Wang Dun, Chen Baoming and others were captured and died in Beijing on April 28.
20Hong Xiuquan (1814-1864), formerly known as Renkun, was a native of Huaxian County, Guangdong and the leader of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom in the late Qing Dynasty. In his early years, he failed in the imperial examination and became superstitious about Christian teachings. In 1830, he was hired as a private school teacher and engaged in rural teaching career. Later, he came into contact with Western works, founded the God Worship Church in 1843, and wrote works such as "The Song of Salvation of the Original Way". In 1851, the Jintian Uprising was launched, and the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom was established. In 1853, Tianjing was established as the capital, and the troops were divided into the Northern Expedition, the Western Expedition, and the eastward march, destroying the Jiangnan and Jiangbei camps of the Qing army. In 1856, the Tianjing Incident was created, and Yang Xiuqing and Wei Changhui were killed, which caused the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom to turn from prosperity to decline. Subsequently, Chen Yucheng, Li Xiucheng, Hong Rengan and others were enabled to implement the New Deal reforms. In 1864, he died of illness in Tianjing at the age of 51.
Hong Xiuquan
21 Zhang Lexing (1810-1863) Luo Xing, whose nickname is Xiang'er, was born in Woyang, Anhui Province. He was born into a wealthy gentry and landlord family and was the leader of the peasant uprising army in the late Qing Dynasty. In 1837, he led the Nian Army to act chivalrously and eliminate the bully Hou Yongqing.In 1850, he fought with the wealthy gentry surnamed Song in Wuyang, Wuyang, and was later taken to the government to confront him. The following year, he led the Bozhou Nian Army to revolt for the first time. In 1852, they united with the leader of the white flag, Gong Deshu, led the crowd to besiege Yongcheng, and the momentum gradually grew. In November of the same year, he was elected as the leader of the Nian Army, known as Shibapu Juyi in history. In 1863, the Qing government lured his tribe to surrender, but he was betrayed by a traitor and captured in Xiyangji. He was later executed by Lingchi at the age of 53.
Zhang Lexing
22 Yang Xiuqing (1823-1856) named Silong, a native of Guiping, Guangxi, his ancestral home is Meizhou, Guangdong, one of the leaders of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, a Taiping Heavenly Kingdom politician, and a military strategist. He was born into a poor peasant and made charcoal as a profession. In 1846, he joined the God-Worshiping Association. The following year, he asked God to descend to earth and gain the leadership of the God-Worshiping Association. In December 1850, he launched the Jintian Uprising, worshiped as the commander-in-chief of the Central Army, assisted the main military division from the left, and was granted the title of Eastern King, with the title of nine thousand years old, and controlled the kings. Later, he formed a party to pursue private interests and established his capital in Tianjing in 1853. After established its capital in Tianjing, it even sidelined Hong Xiuquan and became the actual leader of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. After that, launched the Northern Expedition and the Western Expedition, defeated the Qing army's Jiangbei Camp and Jiangnan Camp, and stabilized the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom regime. In 1856, under the guise of Heavenly Father, he forced Hong Xiuquan to confer Long Live the title. Chen Chengrong reported him for plotting to kill Hong Xiuquan. Hong Xiuquan secretly summoned Wei Changhui to Tianjing to kill his party members, triggering the Tianjing Incident, in which his whole family and staff were killed.
Yang Xiuqing
23 Wei Changhui (1823-1856), formerly known as Zhizheng, was from Guiping, Guangxi, and one of the early leaders of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. Born into a landlord's family, he had little education and failed in examinations. In 1848, under the influence of Feng Yunshan, he joined the God Worshiping Society and later received support from Xiao Chaogui. In 1851, he was appointed as the rear protector and moved to the right army general. When Yong'an was established, he was granted the title of King of the North and was called Liuqiansui. Southern King Feng Yunshan and Western King After the death of Xiao Chaogui, they assisted Yang Xiuqing in managing internal affairs. Because Yang Xiuqing was domineering and slighted many times, he hated him deeply in his heart. In 1856, Wei Changhui was ordered to go to Jiangxi to supervise the war. Later, he went to Tianjing to receive Hong Xiuquan's edict and launched the Tianjing Incident to massacre Yang Xiuqing and his family, which greatly lost the hearts of the people. Hong Xiuquan issued an edict to kill Wei, and his power collapsed immediately. He was arrested by the Tianjing army and civilians while absconding, and was later executed by Hong Xiuquan.
Wei Changhui
24 Zhang Xiumei (1823-1872) was a native of Taijiang, Guizhou, and the leader of the Miao uprising in the late Qing Dynasty. He worked in Zhangjiazhai, Taijiang, to make a living, but a famine later occurred. In the early years of Xianfeng, due to regional famine, everyone united to launch an uprising. Subsequently, he besieged Tai Gongting City and killed Wu Fu, a state official. attacked Qing palaces and flood forts in various places and captured Danjiang Tingcheng. In 1856, they occupied Taigong, Huangping, Qingjiang and other counties, and the rebels controlled the Miao-inhabited areas in southeastern Guizhou. People's uprisings broke out across Guizhou, and they united with surrounding uprising forces to confiscate the land of the chieftains and garrisons and distribute it to landless peasants. In 1868, he united with the rebel army to fight against the Qing army's encirclement and suppression. In 1870, the Qing army captured Taigong, Danjiang, and retreated to defend Leigong Mountain. In 1872, he fought fiercely with Xi Baotian's tribe. He was defeated and captured. He was sent to Changsha and killed at the age of 50.
Statue of Zhang Xiumei
25 Shi Dakai (1831-1863), nicknamed Yada, nicknamed Shi Gandang, was born in Guixian County, Guangxi, and his ancestral home was Heping County, Guangdong. He was a famous general and military strategist of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. He was once conferred the title of King of Wings, the commander-in-chief of the Shen Shen Dian Tong Army. Be the Righteous King. In 1847, he followed Hong Xiuquan and joined the God-worshipping sect. In 1851, Yong'an was established, Jin was granted the title of King Yi, and claimed to be five thousand years old. In February 1855, Hukou severely damaged the Hunan Navy in Jiujiang. Taking advantage of the victory, they marched to Jiangxi in November and captured the territory of Anhui, Jiangxi and Hubei provinces. During the Tianjing Incident in 1857, Jin was granted the title of commander-in-chief of the Zuo Army and was forced to leave Tianjing on June 2. In October, they entered Jiangxi. After losing the battle, they gave up Jiangxi. They passed through Zhejiang and Fujian and moved to fight in the southern provinces. In May of the following year, he led his troops deep into the Yuexi Mountains and reached the south bank of the Dadu River, where he was finally captured by the enemy. He died in Chengdu on June 27 at the age of 32.
Shi Dakai
26 Feng Yunshan (1815-1852), also known as Yilong, Shaoguang, was a native of Huaxian County, Guangdong, a Han Hakka, originally from Longchuan County, Guangdong. He loved reading classics and history since he was a child, and took part in the imperial examinations. Later, he set up a school in the village to teach apprentices and became a private school teacher. One of the founders of the God Worship Association and one of the important leaders of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.In 1851, he was granted the title of King of the South, claiming to be seven thousand years old. In June of the following year, when he was crossing the coir raincoat, he was hit by artillery fire from Jiang Zhongyuan of the Qing army and died of serious injuries at the age of 38.
Feng Yunshan
27 Xiao Chaogui (1821-1852) was born in Wuxuan, Guangxi, one of the leaders of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom movement and an important general of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. joined the God Worshiping Society in 1846. In 1848, he returned to his hometown to recruit members and organized an uprising together with his brothers. He participated in the Jintian Uprising in 1850 and went out with the army the following year. He was granted the title of King of the West in Jin Dynasty and was known as Eight Thousand Years Old. In December 1852, he was hit in the chest by an enemy artillery shell and died unfortunately at the age of 32.
Xiao Chaogui
28 Li Kaifang (1811-1855) Zhuang nationality, a native of Nanning, Guangxi, a general during the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. In 1850, he was awarded the title of Wujianjun, and in July of the following year he was appointed as the chief commander. Xiao Chaogui, the king of the west, attacked Changsha and conquered Guiyang , Jiahe and other places. In September, he promoted Jin Guanzheng to general. In November, he captured Yuezhou and was promoted to the second commander on the right. He led his troops to conquer Hanyang and was promoted to the second inspector on the right. In the first month of 1853, Nanjing Jubaomen was captured, and together with Lin Fengxiang and Luo Gang, they captured Zhenjiang, and Yangzhou . In March, he issued an imperial edict for the Northern Expedition to the Central Plains and appointed him as a general. In December, he captured Wuchang and was promoted to local official and prime minister. In 1855, he led his troops to break out and was captured. He was killed in Beijing at the age of 45. He was posthumously named Prince Jing.
29 Lin Fengxiang (1825-1855) was born in Nanning, Guangxi and a famous general of the Taiping Army. In 1851, he joined the Taiping Army in Yong'an and was promoted to a local official general the following year. After capturing Wuchang in 1853, he was promoted to deputy prime minister of Tianguan.. In February 1855, the Qing army led an army to attack Lien Town, inflicting repeated defeats on the enemy. In March, Lien Town fell, and was wounded and captured. He was later transported to Beijing and died at the age of 31.
Lin Fengxiang
30 Hong Rengan (1822-1864) nickname Qianyi, No. Jifu, a native of Huaxian County, Guangdong, a politician during the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, and a younger brother of the Hongxiu clan. Since childhood, he loved to read classics and history, astronomy and calculus. After failing the imperial examination, he made a living by teaching in village schools. Hong Xiuquan founded the God Worship Association and was baptized into the church. He lived in Hong Kong in 1852 and returned to Tianjing in 1859. He was awarded the title of Military Advisor, King Qian, and was once the Prime Minister of the government. In 1864, he was captured and killed by Shen Baozhen, the governor of Jiangxi. He is the author of the book "New Chapter of Zizheng" and has a political program advocating the development of capitalism.
hongrengan