- Luo Bingzhang
Infobox Governor
name = Luo Bingzhang
honorific-suffix =
imagesize =
caption =
order = Viceroy ofSichuan term_start = 1860
term_end = 1867
predecessor =
successor =Governor of Hunan
1850--1853
term_end 1870
predecessorGuan Wen
successorLi Hongzhang birth_date = birth date|1793|1|9
birth_place =Xiangxiang ,Guangdong
death_date = death date and age|1867|9|1|1793|1|9
death_place =
occupation =Politician
nickname =Camel Luo Bingzhang (zh-ts|t=駱秉章|s=駱秉章;
Pinyin : ,Wade-Giles : , Styled Yuman 籲門 and variably Zuzai 儒齋;Posthumous name : Wenzong 文忠;( 1793 – , 1867) was an eminentHan Chinese official, military general, and devoutConfucian scholar of the lateQing Dynasty in China.Luo raised the
Green Standard Army and support aid Zen clarifyme|date=September 2008|reason=support aid Zen? createdXiang Army to fight effectively against theTaiping Rebellion and restore the stability of theQing Dynasty . He was known for his strategic perception, administrative skill, but also sometimes for his ruthlessness in the execution of his policies, he arrestedShi Dakai .Early life
Born as a native of
Huadu District ,Guangdong in 1793,interestingly the same homeland asHong Xiuquan . By 1832, at age 39, he had successfully passed the metropolitan examinations, a prestigious achievement in China. He had earned the "Jinshi " degree, which is the highest level in the civil service examinations, which led to his appointment to theHanlin Academy , a body of outstanding Chinese literary scholars who performed literary tasks for the imperial court. Luo served in Beijing for more than 16 years.Official Ranks
*In 1848 Vice Governor of
Hubei
*In 1850--1853 Governor ofHunan
*In 1860--1867 Viceroy ofSichuan Fame and military campaigns
*Promoted
Zuo Zongtang early.
*arrestedShi Dakai in 1863.Noted calligrapher
Luo was one of noted
calligrapher s inQing Dynasty . Now stored in the Museum ofFoshan .Doubt
If the
Taiping Rebellion was a giant ridiculoustragedy by someHan Chinese officials counting and direct that Luo must a key person known whole undertable clarifyme|date=September 2008|reason=undertable?.References
* Hummel, Arthur William, ed. "Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (1644-1912)." 2 vols. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1943.
*Porter, Jonathan. "Tseng Kuo-Fan's Private Bureaucracy." Berkeley: University of California, 1972.
*Wright, Mary Clabaugh. "The Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism: The T'ung-Chih Restoration, 1862 -1874." Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1957.
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