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Kang Youwei

(Redirected from K'ang Yu-wei)
Kang Youwei
Chinese Name
PinyinKāng Yǒuwéi
Wade-GilesK'ang Yu-wei
Traditional Chinese康有為
Simplified Chinese康有为
Family nameKang
Courtesy name (zi) Guǎngsh๠(廣廈)
  • Chángsù (長素)
  • Míngyí (明夷)
  • Gēngshēng (更生) or 更甡
  • Xīqiáo Shānrén (西樵山人)
  • Yóucúnsǒu (游存叟)
  • Tiānyóu Huàrén (天游化人)
 
Notes:¹K'ang Yu-wei: A Biography and a Symposium gives Guǎngxià 廣夏
Edit

Kang Youwei (March 19, 1858 – March 31, 1927) was a Chinese scholar and political reformist.

He was a mentor of Liang Qichao, and the two of them participated in the Hundred Days' Reform. Both fled abroad when the program was unsuccessful.

Chinese government officials ordered him executed by the method of Leng Tche or "death by a thousand cuts", and he fled to Hong Kong, which was then controlled by the British Empire. After China became a republic in 1912 he remained an advocate of constitutional monarchy, and for this aim he launched a failed coup d'etat in 1917.

Kang's daughter, Kang Tongbi (康同壁) was a student at Barnard College.

Reference

  1. Jung-pang Lo. K'ang Yu-wei: A Biography and a Symposium. Library of Congress number 66–20911.

External links








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