Qiao Guanhua was born in
Yancheng in 1913; his father was a local land-owner, considered relatively illuminated. Since his childhood, Qiao Guanhua showed a great intelligence, especially remarkable memory, so he repeatedly skipped school grades, and was admitted to the
Tsinghua University at the age of 16. While he was studying philosophy there, he came in contact with
Marxism and engaged in several activities led by the
Communist Party of China (CPC). Qiao Guanhua graduated in 1933 and went to Japan to continue his studies at the
Tokyo Imperial University. He joined the
Japanese Communist Party, leading to his expulsion from the university. He was then forced to travel to Germany, where he obtained a PhD at the
University of Tübingen in 1937, when he was 24 years old. As he returned in China,
Second Sino-Japanese War had broken out. Qiao Guanhua engaged mainly in journalism with the pen name of
Qiaomu (喬木, meaning
Tree, also the pen name of
Hu Qiaomu), working on the international review of several newspapers in Hong Kong. Admitted to the CPC in the autumn of 1942, Qiao Guanhua was called to
Chongqing to take charge of ''The Masses' Weekly
and the international column of the Xinhua Daily''. In Chongqing, he worked directly under
Zhou Enlai, who recognized his interest in foreign affairs and took him as his personal assistant for international matters. With Zhou's encouragement, he married
Gong Peng, another of Zhou's protegees. After the war, he accompanied Zhou Enlai to Shanghai with the CPC delegation, and there he established the English-language
Xinhua Weekly. At the end of 1946, he returned to Hong Kong as president of the local
Xinhua News Agency branch. ==After the establishment of the People's Republic of China==