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Tan Sitong 谭嗣同 | |
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Born | 10 March 1865 |
Died | 28 September 1898 | (aged 33)
Cause of death | Execution by beheading |
Occupation(s) | Government official, reformer, writer |
Era | Qing dynasty |
School | Reformist faction |
Tan Sitong | |||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 譚嗣同 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 谭嗣同 | ||||||||||
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Tan Sitong (simplified Chinese: 谭嗣同; traditional Chinese: 譚嗣同; pinyin: Tán Sìtóng; Wade–Giles: T'an2 Ssu4-T'ung2, March 10, 1865[1] – September 28, 1898[2]), courtesy name Fusheng (復生), pseudonym Zhuangfei (壯飛), was a well-known Chinese politician, thinker, and reformist in the late Qing dynasty (1644–1911). He was executed at the age of 33 when the Hundred Days' Reform failed in 1898.[3] Tan Sitong was one of the six gentlemen of the Hundred Days' Reform, and occupies an important place in modern Chinese history. To many contemporaries, his execution symbolized the political failure of the Qing dynasty's reformation, helping to persuade the intellectual class to pursue violent revolution and overthrow the Qing dynasty.
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