Communist Party 1 Yuan Cloth Bank Note 1933 Sichuan Shaanxi Soviet Republic Karl Marx and Lenin
The Chinese Soviet Republic Mao Zedong, Communist Party of China 1933 Sichuan Shaanxi Soviet Republic One Dollar Cloth Bank Note
The Chinese Soviet Republic: Hammer and sickle☭within★ The Communist currencies were illegal in Nationalist Nanking Goverment territories.
Obverse: 川陕省蘇維埃政府 工農銀行 Sichuan Shaanxi Soviet Republic 壹圎 One Yuan Karl Marx and Lenin 增加工農生產
Reverse: 全世界無產階級聯合起來 (Proletarier aller Länder, vereinigt euch!) Workers of the world, Unite! Hammer and sickle over star
The Chinese Soviet Republic The Chinese Soviet Republic (CSR, simplified Chinese: 中华苏维埃共和国; traditional Chinese: 中華蘇維埃共和國; ), also known as the Soviet Republic of China or the China Soviet Republic, is often referred to in historical sources as the Jiangxi Soviet (after its largest component territory, the Jiangxi-Fujian Soviet). It was established in November 1931 by future Communist Party of China leader Mao Zedong, General Zhu De and others, and it lasted until 1937. Discontiguous territories included the Northeastern Jiangxi, Hunan-Jiangxi, Hunan-Hubei-Jiangxi, Hunan-Western Hubei, Hunan-Hubei-Sichuan-Guizhou, Shaanxi-Gansu, Szechuan-Shensi, Hubei-Henan-Anhui, Honghu and Haifeng-Lufeng Soviets. |image_flag = Second War Flag of Chinese Soviet Republic.svg Mao Zedong was both CSR state chairman and prime minister; he led the state and its government. Mao's tenure as head of a "small state within a state" gave him experience in mobile warfare and peasant organization; this experience helped him accomplish the Communist reunification of China during the late 1940s.[2] The CSR was eventually destroyed by the Kuomintang (KMT)'s National Revolutionary Army in a series of 1934 encirclement campaigns. Following the Xi'an Incident of December 1936, the Communists and Kuomintang formed an uneasy "United Front" to resist Japanese pressure, which led to the Communists recognizing at least for the moment Chiang Kai-shek as China's leader and the official dissolution of the Soviet Republic on 22 September 1937.
Shipping policy: |