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  1. The Long March (1934-1936) All movements — political, religious, social — have their foundation myths and stories about their beginnings that reach heroic proportions over time and that are used to inspire and unify followers. For the Chinese Communist Party, it is the story of the Long March. In 1934, the Communists left their base in ...

  2. Long March. The Long March refers to the relocation of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its Red Army, from their base in Jiangxi to the northern province of Shaanxi in 1934-35. Driven from Jiangxi by an expanded Nationalist army, the Red Army and the CCP leadership undertook a treacherous year-long journey through western and northern ...

  3. 1 de oct. de 2016 · The Long March has long been engraved in the Chinese collective consciousness as the country’s most glorious military feat. It is an epic story of self-sacrifice, patriotism and defying the odds which saw soldiers of the Red Army, the frontrunner of People’s Liberation Army, crossing rickety chain suspension bridges under enemy’s fire, fording frothy rivers without boats, climbing ...

  4. Reporting to the party at Wayaopao in December 1935, Mao Zedong paused from discussion of military tactics to explain why the Long March was a victory rather than a failure: “As you know, comrades, for almost a year and a half the three main contingents of the Chinese Red Army have carried out great shifts of position.

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  6. 6 de dic. de 2023 · Only a year after Mao’s success during The Long March, in 1936, the Xi’an incident took place. Since 1931, Japanese forces intensified their aggression towards China. Japan had quickly invaded northeastern China, and after the Long March, by 1936, The Communists declared they were sending troops to fight the Japanese invaders in Rehe and Hubei.

  7. Mao Zedong during Long March. 1934-1936. Image available under a Creative Commons License . The total number of people who took part in the Long March is hard to tie down as many left and many joined along the way. About 60,000 set out together with 20,000 non-combatants and only about 7,000 reached Shaanxi.