•
Wang Jiaxiang was eventually made Director of the CCP Central International Liaison Department after having also served for some time as the PRC's Ambassador to the
Soviet Union. He died in the
Cultural Revolution. •
Chen Changhao worked with
Zhang Guotao when he returned from
Moscow and became Zhang's Commissar, but lost power and influence in the struggle between Zhang and Mao. Chen Changhao went on to become a Communist Party historian, and committed suicide in the Cultural Revolution. •
He Kequan was General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Youth League, and later deputy director of the CCP Central Propaganda Department, and died in 1954. •
Xia Xi was sent to
Hunan and carried out the purges which took the lives of more than forty thousand Red Army soldiers. He was later regarded as a public enemy. Perhaps because of this, no one came to his aid when he fell into a river and drowned during the
Long March. •
Yang Shangkun survived the purges, including the Cultural Revolution. He later became the
President of the PRC in the 1980s. •
Shen Zemin, the younger brother of writer
Mao Dun, worked for
Zhang Guotao and the 4th Red Army. After Zhang's army was defeated, Shen remained at the Communist base in Anhui and died of tuberculosis in 1933. •
Zhang Qinqiu, Shen Zemin's wife, married Chen Changhao after Shen's death. She is often considered the only "woman general" of the Red Army (which never formally awarded military ranks). After 1949, she was appointed Deputy Minister of Textile Industry, but committed suicide in the
Cultural Revolution. • Yin Jian was arrested by
Kuomintang when he mobilized workers in Northern China, and was subsequently executed. • Li Zhusheng was promoted to the
Politburo after
Wang Ming's return to
Moscow in 1931, and put in charge of the daily affairs of the Communist Party in
Shanghai. He was later arrested, but defected to the Kuomintang, and informed on many of his former compatriots. After the KMT's defeat, Li was arrested by the Communists in Shanghai in 1951, and subsequently died in prison in 1973. • Chen Yuandao was appointed as senior leader for the
Jiangsu and
Henan Division of the Communist Party, but was later arrested and executed by the Kuomintang in
Nanjing. • Xu Yixin worked for Zhang Guotao's 4th Red Army and became his vice general commissar, surviving war and party purges. After the establishment of the
People's Republic of China, Xu held the position of ambassador in the Foreign Ministry. He died in the 1990s. • Yuan Jiayong was appointed General Secretary of the Jiangsu Division in the Communist Party. Following his arrest in 1934, he defected to the Kuomintang and worked for the secret police. • He Zishu worked for the
Northern China Bureau of the Communist Party, and was executed by the Kuomintang in 1929. • Wang Shengrong, a member of the first
Central Military Commission of the
Chinese Soviet Republic, survived both war and purges. He died on 1 September 2006 at the age of 99. • Wang Yuncheng succeeded
Wang Ming as General Secretary of the Jiangsu Division in the Communist Party. He was kidnapped by the Kuomintang and forced to work with Li Zhusheng in the secret police. • Sheng Zhongliang was senior leader of the Shanghai Division in the Communist Party, and was sold out by Li Zhusheng. He was coerced into informing for the Kuomintang's secret police. Sheng, after moving to the US, later wrote memoirs of his time at the Sun Yat-sen University and with the 28 Bolsheviks. • Song Panmin also worked for Zhang Guotao, but was executed when he objected to the purges being carried out by Xia Xi. • Sun Jiming, a senior Communist Party leader, was arrested and defected to the Kuomintang together with Wang Yuncheng. • Wang Shengdi and Zhu Agen left the Communist Party, though both had held senior positions. • Wang Baoli, Zhu Zisun, Li Yuanjue, and Du Zuoxian left public life and their fates are not known. ==References==