Family history It was said by American scholar Louis M. J. Schram that Ma Fuxiang himself was of Sant'a descent, who had assimilated into the Hui community. The Santa (San-t'a) are known as the
Dongxiang people. They are Mongol Muslims. Schram reported that Ma Fuxiang's Sant'an ancestors belonged to a group of Mongols who converted to Islam under threat of death during the
Qianlong Emperor's reign (1736–1796), since the area where they lived, around
Hezhou, was dominated by Muslim
Salar rebels at the time. Another separate group of Mongol Muslims existed in Hezhou's east. Their leaders claimed a lineage from the Yuan dynasty royal family. However, no other source mentions this. He is just said to be a
Hui with no mention of San-t'a/Dongxiang Mongol ancestors.
Qing Dynasty Ma Fuxiang was the son of
Ma Qianling. His elder brothers were
Ma Fushou,
Ma Fulu and Ma Fucai (馬福財). He was the 4th son. He was educated in the
Quran and
Spring and Autumn Annals. He started studying with Ma Fulu at a martial arts hall in 1889; he and Ma Fushou then studied military school three years later. In 1895 he served under Gen.
Dong Fuxiang, leading loyalist Chinese Muslims to crush a revolt by rebel Muslims in the
Dungan revolt (1895–1896). The rebel Muslims were slaughtered and beheaded by the thousands by Ma Fuxiang's forces and his commanding officers received the severed heads from Ma. In 1897 a military Juren degree was awarded to Ma Fuxiang after he completed his military studies, and took the military exam. Ma graduated in military science, having passed provincial examinations. Under the Qing dynasty he was promoted to Brigadier General at Palikum, New Dominion. (Xinjiang). He received his military training at Military School in Kansu. Ma was transferred along with his brother Ma Fulu and several cousins as officers under Gen.
Dong Fuxiang to
Beijing in 1898. During the
Boxer Rebellion, the Muslim troops came to be known as the "Kansu Braves" and fought against the
Eight Nation Alliance. Ma Fuxiang killed many foreigners in combat. Ma led a cavalry charge against the foreign Eight Nation Alliance army at the
Battle of Langfang, defeating them and forcing the Europeans to flee. He and Ma Fulu personally planned and led the attack, encircling the foreign troops with a pincer movement. The foreign invasion of Beijing was derailed by their efforts for another month. The Muslim troops engaged in fierce fighting at
Zhengyang Gate in Beijing. Ma Fulu, and four of his cousins were killed in action in 1900 in Beijing during the
Battle of Peking (1900), in total one hundred soldiers from his home village died in that battle at Zhengyang. He had commanded a brigade, and Ma Fuxiang took over the position after his brother's death. He escorted the imperial family to
Xi'an. In March 1909 at Palikun, Xinjiang, he served as a "Brigade General". From July to August 1912 Ma was "Acting Chief Executive Officer of Kokonur" (de facto governor of Kokonor, later
Qinghai Province). On 10 October 1912, he was in
Altai as the "Commander of the Guards Division".
Beiyang During the
Xinhai Revolution in 1912, Ma Fuxiang protected a Catholic mission from attacks by the
Gelaohui in the Sandaohe district and he also protected another Catholic mission from attacks in 1916. He and his nephew
Ma Hongbin received the
Order of Leopold (Belgium) ("King Leopold decoration") for their work. Some Gansu Hui led by Ma Fuxiang joined the republicans. Gansu Hui general Ma Fuxiang did not participate with Ma Anliang in the battles with Shaanxi revolutionaries and refused to join the Qing Manchu Shengyun and Changgeng in their attempts to defend the Qing before the Qing abdication, instead the independence of Gansu from Qing control was jointly declared by non-Muslim gentry with Hui Muslim Ma Fuxiang. Ma Anliang, Changgeng and Shengyun failed to capture Shaanxi from the revolutionaries. In Ningxia, Qing forces were attacked by both Hui Muslim Gelaohui and Han Gelaohui members, while Hui general Ma Qi and Ma Yuanzhang were in the Qing forces fighting against them but Ma Yuanzhang defected to the republicans after Ma Anliang gave up on the Qing. The Beiyang government and Yuan Shikai received Ma Fuxiang's steadfast support once he has accepted that the Qing dynasty's time had ended. The Republic appointed him to several military positions. Ma Fuxiang was named military commander of
Ningxia by president
Yuan Shikai. Ma captured a Mongol separatist in
Baotou and executed another Mongol prince who tried to declare himself emperor, a Buddhist monk named Ta-er Lilu-chi (Wu Daer Liufi). He was supported by the bandit Kao Shih-hsiu (Gao Shixiu). Ma Fuxiang defeated Kao in Ningxia in 1916 and the Mongol princes of Otoy, Üüsin and Qanggin pledged their allegiance to the fake emperor, presenting him with rifles. On 19 June 1916, Kao arrived with his Emperor, badly defeated by
Ma Fushou, the brother of Ma Fuxiang and withdrew through Otoy to Sandaohe. In 1917, Kao was defeated at Shizzuizi, the Emperor and Kao's underlings were executed and Kao fled. Ma Fuxiang's book, "Shuofang Daozhi", portrays these events. An account written by Frenchman Harry Serruys describes them. "Ma Fuxiang, the commander of the Protective Army, dispatched
Ma Fushou, chief of staff of the Brilliant Military Army, to attack the robbers in Zuuqa temple. Ma Fuxiang dispatched Fushou with an army to attack Kao's army at Zuuqa temple and destroyed the band. In the second month of 1917 Ma Fuxiang executed Wu Daer Liuji. Ma Fuxiang dispatched his nephew
Ma Hongbin to attack Kao and Wu at Shizuishan. When Liu-chi was defeated, Ma Fuxiang ambushed him and defeated him again. Ma Fuxiang captured Yu Ling-yun, Su Xuefeng, Yao Zhankui, Zhang Zhenqing, Li Zongwen and several others; in all 18 men were executed. Ma Fuxiang wrote a commemorative inscription for men from Ningxia who died in the expedition against the bogus Emperor. In the third month of the sixth year of the Republic [1917], Ma Fuxiang was at the burial of his mother. As he reached Ning'anbu Ma Hongbin sent him a telegram stating that the bogus emperor and the other bogus generals had mounted an invasion from Suiyuan. After the victory, officers in charge of military headquarters and regular soldiers were honored." Ma Fuxiang defeated brigands near Sandaohe (San-Tao-Ho) and expelled them from Ningxia, according to Belgian Catholic missionary J. Terstappen in 1915. Ma Fuxiang and the
Jahriyya Sufi leader
Ma Yuanzhang became enemies after Ma Fuxiang got very angry that Ma Yuanzhang refused to help him remove
Zhang Guangjian as governor of
Gansu and telegraphed Beijing that Zhang should remain as governor. Ma Fuxiang and other Gansu generals believed that a native of Gansu province should be governor rather than an outsider. Ma Fuxiang himself was considered the most eligible person to serve as Governor of Gansu after Zhang's unsuccessful term, because of his military service under the Qing and Republic of China and his rule over Ningxia. He invested in the wool trade and a factory that made matches. Ma Fuxiang effectively took Ma Anliang's place as de facto leader of Muslims in northwest China when Ma Anliang died in 1918. Ma Fuxiang was involved in relief efforts in
Lanzhou during the
1920 Haiyuan earthquake. Ma was appointed Military Governor of
Suiyuan by the
Beiyang government and served in that position from 1921 to 1925. Suiyuan had a river valley and a railroad. American businessmen reported that Ma Fuxiang considered modernizing infrastructure in the region with motorized transport. A Department of Industry and a Department of Education were established in Suiyuan by Ma Fuxiang while he was military governor there. Ma Fuxiang, a member of the
Zhili clique, signed a denunciation of the
Anhui clique and its military arm, the
Anfu Club led by
Xu Shuzheng and
Duan Qirui. The denunciation was circulated through a telegram called Paoting-fu, on 12 July 1920. The Zhili clique was led by
Wu Peifu. At the time Ma was Defense Commissioner of
Ningxia,
Gansu. This led to the
Zhili–Anhui War. The
Gelaohui and Ma Fuxiang came to an agreement in 1922, in which Ma Fuxiang agreed to allow the Gelaohui to extort protection money from wool merchants in
Baotou. Ma Fuxiang controlled Baotou militarily while the central government in Beijing controlled Baotou's jurisdiction. Ma Fuxiang, as supervisor in Suiyuan, sent telegrams regarding the uniting of
Rehe and
Chahar for defense purposes from January–September 1924. Ma Fuxiang allied with Gen.
Wu Peifu and acquired land from the political separation of Inner Mongolia from
Zhang Zuolin. Ma Fuxiang's nephew Ma Hongbin was in charge of his army, and his civil administrator was a non-Muslim. Ma Hongbin read to Upton Close the revelations of a preacher in Shandong who advocated the union of Buddhism, Islam, Daoism, Catholicism and Protestantism in China under Confucianism. According to
The Trans-Pacific, Volume 6, Ma Fuxiang "religiously tolerant" and "materially progressive", since when he was served food cooked by non-Muslims or even presented with wine, while he was amidst with non-Muslims, he was willing to eat and drink. According to Upton Close, he did not drink wine or smoke tobacco, but he served them to guests. She was one of his multiple wives. , Gen.
Zhang Zuobao, Gen.
Chen Diaoyuan, Gen.
Chiang Kai-shek, Gen.
Woo Tsin-hang, Gen.
Wen Xishan, Muslim Gen. Ma Fuxiang, Gen.
Ma Sida and Muslim Gen.
Bai Chongxi.
Kuomintang In 1924, Ma Fuxiang met with Kuomintang leader Dr.
Sun Yat-sen in Beijing and informed him that he would welcome the leadership of Dr. Sun. Ma Fuxiang then joined the
Kuomintang during the
Northern Expedition in 1928. He and his son
Ma Hongkui were originally generals in
Feng Yuxiang's army. He became a member of the Kuomintang Central Committee, member of the State Council, Mayor of
Qingdao, Governor of
Anhui and chairman of the
Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission. Ma Fuxiang founded Islamic organizations sponsored by the Kuomintang, including the China Islamic Association (Zhongguo Huijiao Gonghui). Ma Fuxiang and other Muslim warlords like
Ma Qi broke with
Feng Yuxiang's
Guominjun during the
Central Plains War and pledged allegiance to Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang in the name of nationalism. In his involvement in national politics, Ma was alone among the Muslim warlords. Ma was governor of
Anhui from March–September 1930. In
Nanjing in April 1931 Ma Fuxiang attended a national leadership conference with
Chiang Kai-shek and
Zhang Xueliang, in which Chiang and Zhang dauntlessly upheld that Manchuria was part of China in the face of the Japanese invasion. Prominent Muslims like
Ma Liang (general), Ma Fuxiang and
Bai Chongxi met in 1931 in Nanjing to discuss inter communal tolerance between Hui and Han. Ma gave explorer
Sven Hedin permission to enter
Gansu. Ma was also appointed as a member of the Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang.
Army Ma Fuxiang recruited
Salars for his army, classifying them into five inner clans and eight outer clans. He designated the assimilated Tibetan-speaking Salars as the "outer" group. Dongxiang people were also known as Santa (San-t'a) people, and many of them reportedly served in Ma Fuxiang's army. Ma Fuxiang's Santa troops maintained an old Mongol and Qing custom of distributing specially marked arrows as tokens to officers to show their status. Among the posts he held was Commander of the 6th Mixed Brigade of Gansu Army in 1922 and 7th Division of the Northwest Army in 1926. Ma Fuxiang had inherited his army from his family, from Ma Fulu and Ma Qianling. He then bequeathed it on to his son Ma Hongkui. == Drug trafficking ==