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  2. Red Guards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Guards

    He personally greeted 1,500 Red Guards and waved to 800,000 Red Guards and onlookers below. [1] The rally was led by Chen Boda and Lin Biao gave a keynote speech. [1] Red Guard leaders, led by Nie Yuanzi, also gave speeches. [1] A high school Red Guard leader, Song Binbin, placed a red armband inscribed with the characters for "Red Guard" on ...

  3. Red August - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_August

    [9] [18] At the same time, Red Guards launched a nationwide campaign to destroy the "Four Olds". [1] [9] In Beijing alone, a total of 4,922 historic sites were ruined, and the Red Guards burned 2.3 million books as well as 3.3 million paintings, art objects, and pieces of furniture. [4] [10] Red Guards on Tiananmen Square of Beijing (September ...

  4. Struggle session - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Struggle_session

    During the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), struggle sessions were widely conducted by Red Guards and various rebel groups across mainland China. [4] [5] [9] [10] Though there was no specific definition for the "targets of struggle", they included the Five Black Categories and anyone else who could be deemed an enemy of Mao Zedong Thought ...

  5. Conservative Faction (Cultural Revolution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Faction...

    When Mao Zedong launched the Cultural Revolution in 1966, the initial thrust was to attack the so-called "bourgeois reactionary authorities" and "white experts", and students who opposed their teachers and focused more on politics formed the Red Guards. However, after Red August, Mao began to have students attack the "capitalist roaders of the ...

  6. Rebel Faction (Cultural Revolution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebel_faction_(Cultural...

    Rebel groups of Red Guards marching in Shanghai, 1967. During the Cultural Revolution, a Rebel Faction (Chinese: 造反派; pinyin: Zàofǎn pài) was a group or a sociopolitical movement that was self-proclaimed "rebellious". Composed of workers and students, they were often the more radical wing of the Red Guards and grew around 1967, but ...

  7. Red Guard Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Guard_Party

    In 1969 when the Red Guard was formed, they mirrored themselves in many ways after the Black Panther Party. They favored militaristic garb which was adorned with a Mao jacket to show ties to their roots of the Red Guard in China. They also conducted themselves as a military organization, described by a former member as an "army" even.

  8. Guangzhou Uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guangzhou_Uprising

    On 11 December 1927, the political leadership of the CCP ordered about 20,000 communist-leaning soldiers and armed workers to organize a "Red Guard" [11] and take over Guangzhou. [1] The uprising occurred despite the strong objections of communist military commanders such as Ye Ting , Ye Jianying and Xu Xiangqian , [ citation needed ] as the ...

  9. Big Circle Gang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Circle_Gang

    The former Red Guards were imprisoned in squalid camps around the city of Guanghzhou to be "reeducated", where they formed a gang that competed with the millions of other prisoners for food. [4] In Chinese maps, prison camps were marked with red circle, which to the gang adopting the red circle as their symbol. [ 4 ]