19th Route Army
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![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f6/General_Cai_Ting-kai%2C_the_commander_of_the_19th_Route_Army%2C_encouraging_his_men_in_the_first_line_of_the_battle.jpg/220px-General_Cai_Ting-kai%2C_the_commander_of_the_19th_Route_Army%2C_encouraging_his_men_in_the_first_line_of_the_battle.jpg)
Cai Tingkai as commander of the 19th Route Army
19th Route Army (simplified Chinese: 十九路军; traditional Chinese: 十九路軍; pinyin: Shíjiǔ lù jūn) was an army in the Republic of China led by General Cai Tingkai. It gained a good reputation among Chinese for fighting the Japanese in Shanghai in the January 28 Incident in 1932. In 1933-34 it was the main force in the Fuijan Rebellion, which opposed Chiang Kai-shek and unsuccessfully sought an alliance with the Chinese Communists in the Jiangxi Soviet.
A "Route Army' was a type of military organization used in the Chinese Republic. It usually exercised command over two or more Corps or a large number of Divisions or Independent Brigades.
Sources[]
- First Battle of Shanghai
- The Mausoleum of the 19th Route Army
- Did Chiang Kai-shek Trigger the Fujian Rebellion?
- The CCP and the Fujian Rebellion
See also[]
Categories:
- Armies of the National Revolutionary Army
- Conflicts in 1932
- Battles of the Second Sino-Japanese War
- History of Shanghai
- 1932 in China
- 1933 in China
- Military history of the Republic of China (1912–1949)
- History of Fujian
- Chinese military stubs
- Military unit and formation stubs