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Topic: Xingzhonghui


In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Revive China Society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hsing-chung Hui flag was designed by Lu Hao-tung and is currently the KMT flag.
The Xingzhonghui (Chinese: 興中會, Pinyin: Xīngzhōnghuì), translated as the Revive China Society or the Society for Regenerating China, was founded by Dr. Sun Yat-Sen on 24 November 1894 to forward the goal of establishing prosperity for China and as a platform for future revolutionary activities.
Since Sun was an exile from China at the time, the society was founded in Honolulu, Hawaii.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Revive_China_Society   (170 words)

  
 PBS - "Ancestors in the Americas" : Timeline   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
He is fatefully influenced by growing up and being educated from teenage years into adulthood in Hawaii.
His Revolutionary Party, Xingzhonghui, is founded in Honolulu, Hawaii in 1894.
In the victory of the Chinese Revolution in 1911, Chinese men cut off their queues, a symbol of loyalty required by the Manchus.
www.pbs.org /ancestorsintheamericas/time_23.html   (305 words)

  
 [No title]
The aim of the society was to enlighten the public; yet members often held meetings in private to discuss affairs in China and the problems of reforms.
Sun Yat-sen ahd close contact with several of the members who later joined the Xingzhonghui (Revive China Society) founded by Sun in 1895.
Xingzhonghui, a revolutionary organization for the overthrow of the Qing government, was set up by Sun Yat-sen in 1895.
www.hkcwd.info /page/travel/p9_detail_en.html   (1181 words)

  
 Leisure and Cultural Services Department - Antiquities and Monuments Office   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
It was the place where revolutionaries frequented for meetings.
Some of the members of the Society had a close relationship with Dr. Sun Yat-sen and hence joined the Xingzhonghui (Revive China Society) which he organized.
Now, the entrance and steps of Pak Tsz lane, the way through which members went for meetings, are still retained.
www.lcsd.gov.hk /CE/Museum/Monument/en/trails_sheungwan2.php?tid=11   (149 words)

  
 Chinese History - Sun Yat-sen (Sun Wen, Sun Zhongshan) (www.chinaknowledge.org)
His help could mainly come from the Chinese overseas in America, Japan and Southeast Asia.
In 1894 he founded the Revive China Society (Xingzhonghui 興中會) whose goal was to overthrow the Manchus and to found a republic.
The symbol of the society was the blue sky-white sun flag later used by the Republic of China.
www.chinaknowledge.de /History/Rep/sunzhongshan.html   (1277 words)

  
 Leisure and Cultural Services Department - Antiquities and Monuments Office   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In 1895 Dr. Sun Yat-sen founded the Xingzhonghui as a revolutionary organization against the Qing Government, and made this site as its headquarters.
His father, Huang Sheng, had been an unofficial Chinese member of the Hong Kong Legislative Council.
After Xingzhonghui was founded, this site had become the place for planning revolutionary activities.
www.lcsd.gov.hk /CE/Museum/Monument/en/trails_sheungwan2.php?tid=4   (152 words)

  
 phorum - Chinese Culture Forum at Asiawind - Re: The "South" in Chinese History
The revolutionary Sun Wen (Sun Yat-sen as he is known to the world), born when the Taipings were quelled, came from Fragrant Hills (Xiangshang) and felt inspired by the exploits of Hong Xiuquan, perhaps a fellow Hakka.
San came to Hawaii (known to China as the Sandalwood Fragrance Mountains even to this day) in the 1870S for schooling and returned to Honolulu in the mid-1890s to found the Xingzhonghui (Revive China Society), ancestral organization of modern China's nationalist revolutionary party.
Sun Yat-sen enjoined the sentimentalities of the two fragrant hills, his country of birth and his overseas base of pioneer revolutionary aspirations.
www.asiawind.com /forums/read.php?f=2&i=2146&t=2126&v=f   (2931 words)

  
 JPRI Working Paper No. 47
It remains a quasi-public hybrid with multiple opportunities, historical burdens, and motivations that must be analyzed carefully and systematically.
Taiwan's Nationalist Party, whose Chinese-language ideographs are romanized in Taiwan as Kuomintang (KMT), has its roots in the Revive China Society (xingzhonghui), founded by Sun Yat-sen in 1894 as a vehicle for organizing opposition to the ruling Manchu dynasty of China.
Sun permanently renamed its successor organization the Nationalist Party in 1919, and in the following year began a four-year reorganization of the party under the tutelage of Lenin's Communist International and along the lines of Lenin's principle of democratic centralism.
www.jpri.org /publications/workingpapers/wp47.html   (4913 words)

  
 Hong Kong - Western District
Staunton's Cafe is a terrific venue to hang out and enjoy a Western-style cup before heading into the less neoteric Western District.
Beyond Staunton Road lies the former headquarters of the Xingzhonghui or Revive China Society, which was the revolutionary organization established by Dr Sun Yatsen.
Marked by a red sign, the institution was dedicated to the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty in China.
www.marimari.com /content/hong_kong/popular_places/hongkong_islands/western_district/main.html   (1121 words)

  
 chen/Being Chinese, Becoming Chinese American. Chapter 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
For a good analysis of the connection between Sun's revolutionary ideas and the West, see Wang, Chinese Intellectuals and the West, 245-46, 335-37; and Schiffrin, Sun Yat-sen and the Origins of the Chinese Revolution.
The secret organization was named Xingzhonghui, or the Revive China Society.
The purpose of the society was "to overthrow the Manchus, restore China, and establish a republican government." Li, Sun Zhongshan quanzhuan, 38.
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/chen/ch1.html   (14955 words)

  
 Heath Anthology of American Literature- Timeline
The Chicago Ship and Sanitary Canal is built.
The Xingzhonghui founded by Sun Yat-sen in Honolulu.
Japanese immigrant Saito’s application for U.S. citizenship denied because he is neither white nor fl.
college.hmco.com /english/lauter/heath/4e/students/timeline/1894.html   (158 words)

  
 IngentaConnect Grafton to Guangzhou: The Revolutionary Journey of Tse Tsan Tai   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
He was a foundation member of the Furen Wenshe (Literary Society for the Promotion of Benevolence) until its merger with Sun Yat-sen's Xingzhonghui (Revive China Society) in 1895.
Tse served as a strategist and fundraiser in the Xingzhonghui's 1895 and 1900 uprisings and negotiated with leaders of the reform movement for greater unity and cooperation.
Several leading reformers supported his 1903 Guangzhou uprising that brought together revolutionary, reformist and secret society interests.
www.ingentaconnect.com /content/routledg/cjis/2006/00000027/F0020001/art00007   (231 words)

  
 XINGZHONGHUI Articles from AMAZINES.COM - The Article Database and EZine Publishers Database
The Xingzhonghui (Chinese: ???, Pinyin: Xingzhonghuì), translated as the Revive China Society or the Society for Regenerating China, was founded by Dr. Sun Yat-Sen on 24 November 1894 to forward the goal of establishing prosperity for China and as a platform for future revolutionary activities.
It was later merged into the Tongmenghui, which in turn became the Nationalist Party of China.
Showing 1 to 25 of 0 Articles matching 'Xingzhonghui' in related articles.
www.amazines.com /Xingzhonghui_related.html   (362 words)

  
 The Bengal Club: Wild West Campaign News
Before returning to China in December 1911, Dr. Sun Yat-sen was heavily engaged in mobilizing Chinese ex-patriot support for the nationalist movement and in fundraising among the Chinese communities in the Americas.
As leader of the Chinese nationalist movement in exile, Dr. Sun was head of the Xingzhonghui (Revive China Society).
He eventually incorporated a number of other Chinese revolutionary groups, including the Guangfuhui (Restoration Society), into his movement, renaming it the Tongmenghui.
tdasys.com /the_bengal_club/bisrev10.asp   (8462 words)

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