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Zhang Chunqiao | |
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Vice Premier of China | |
In office January 1975 – July 1977 | |
Premier | Zhou Enlai Hua Guofeng |
Leader | Mao Zedong |
Director of the Shanghai Revolutionary Committee[a] | |
In office February 1967 – July 1977 | |
Preceded by | Cao Diqiu (as mayor) |
Succeeded by | Su Zhenhua |
Personal details | |
Born | Heze, Shandong, Republic of China | 1 February 1917
Died | 21 April 2005 Beijing, China | (aged 88)
Political party | Chinese Communist Party (1938–1977; expelled) |
Zhang Chunqiao | |||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 张春桥 | ||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 張春橋 | ||||||||||
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Part of a series on |
Maoism |
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Zhang Chunqiao (Chinese: 张春桥; 1 February 1917 – 21 April 2005) was a prominent Chinese political theorist, writer, and politician. He came to the national spotlight during the late stages of the Cultural Revolution, and was a member of the ultra-Maoist group dubbed the "Gang of Four".
Zhang joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1938, later becoming a prominent journalist in charge of Jiefang Daily after the establishment of the People's Republic. He rose to prominence after his October 1958 article entitled "Destroy the Ideology of Bourgeois Right" caught the attention of Mao Zedong, who ordered its reproduction in People's Daily.
With the onset of the Cultural Revolution, he was appointed as a member of the Cultural Revolution Group. In 1967, Zhang organized the Shanghai People's Commune and briefly became its chairman, effectively overthrowing the local Shanghai government and local party structures. Afterwards, he was appointed as the director of the Shanghai Revolutionary Committee. He joined the Politburo in 1969, and its inner Standing Committee in 1973, reaching his zenith as the country's second-ranking vice premier in 1975.
After Mao's death in 1976, Zhang was arrested along with the other members of what would become known as the Gang of Four. He was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve, later commuted to life imprisonment, and then further reduced to 18 years. He was released from prison in 1998 to undergo medical treatment, and died in 2005.
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