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Old Guangxi clique

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Old Guangxi Clique (simplified Chinese: 旧桂系; traditional Chinese: 舊桂系; pinyin: Jiù Guìxì), was a powerful warlord clique in China based in Guangxi that grew after the founding of the Republic of China. Led by Lu Rongting, the clique was able to take control of neighbouring Hunan and Guangdong provinces as well. Along with the Yunnan clique, they formed the core of opposition to Yuan Shikai's monarchist ambitions during the National Protection War. With Yunnan and Sun Yat-sen's Chinese Revolutionary Party, they started the Constitutional Protection Movement. They quickly came to disagree with Sun and squeezed him out of power. Sun, Chen Jiongming, and the Yunnan clique defeated them in the Guangdong-Guangxi War.[1][2] With the defeat of Lu Rongting by the Guangdong Army, the Old Guangxi Clique crumbled in the early 1920s, and was replaced by the pro-Sun New Guangxi Clique.[3]

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References

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  1. ^ Lew, Christopher R.; Leung, Edwin Pak-wah (2013-07-29). Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Civil War. Scarecrow Press. pp. xix. ISBN 978-0-8108-7874-7.
  2. ^ Baumler, Alan (2001). Modern China and Opium: A Reader. University of Michigan Press. pp. 111–123. ISBN 978-0-472-06768-8.
  3. ^ Jin, Chongji (2023-09-27). Survey of Chinese History in the Twentieth Century. Springer Nature. p. 85. ISBN 978-981-99-5223-6.