释义 |
Examples:Military Commission of the Communist Party Central Committee—Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971), secretary-general of Soviet communist party 1953-1964—Central Propaganda Department (of the Chinese communist party)—Zhu De (1886-1976), communist leader and founder of the People's Liberation Army—Agnes Smedley (1892-1950), US journalist and activist, reported on China, esp. the communist side—Young Pioneers (primary school league, a preparation for Communist Youth League)—CPC central committee's external affairs department (i.e. Chinese communist party's foreign office)—He Long (1896-1969), important communist military leader, died from persecution during the Cultural Revolution—princelings, descendants of senior communist officials (PRC)—Zhang Tailei (1898-1927), founding member of Chinese communist party—Li Gongpu (-1946), communist killed by Guomindang in Kunming in 1946—Leonid Kravchuk (1934-), first post-communist president of Ukraine 1991-1994—Zhang Guotao (1897-1979), Chinese communist leader in the 1920s and 1930s, defected Guomindang in 1938—Peng Dehuai (1898-1974), top communist general, subsequently politician and politburo member, disgraced after attacking Mao's failed policies in 1959, and died after extensive persecution during the Cultural Revolution—Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands (Socialist Unity Party of Germany 1949-1990), the ruling communist party of the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany)—Ulanhu (1906-1988), Soviet trained Mongolian communist who became important PRC military leader—Bo Gu (1907-1946), Soviet-trained Chinese Communist, journalist and propagandist, 1930s Left adventurist, subsequently rehabilitated, killed in air crash—Liao Mosha (1907-1990), journalist and communist propagandist, severely criticized and imprisoned for 10 years during the Cultural Revolution—political commissar (during Russian and Chinese communist revolutions)—Border Region currency, issued by the Communist Border Region governments during the War against Japan and the War of Liberation—The Mass Line, Communist Party of China (CPC) policy aimed at broadening and cultivating contacts with the masses—Li Dazhao (1889-1927), early Chinese Marxist and founding member of the communist party—Yan'an prefecture level city in Shaanxi, communist headquarters during the war—Zhou Enlai (1898-1976), Chinese communist leader, prime minister 1949-1976—Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China—Joris Ivens (1898-1989), Dutch documentary filmmaker and committed communist—Chen Yi (1901-1972), communist general and politician, Marshal of PLA from 1955, Mayor of Shanghai in 1950s, PRC foreign minister 1958-1972—Chen Duxiu (1879-1942), Chinese Marxist and leading communist, blamed for the failures of Chinese communism from 1927, posthumously rehabilitated—the opening sentence of Marx and Engels' "Communist Manifesto"—Deng Xiaoping (1904-1997), Chinese communist leader, de facleader of PRC 1978-1990 and creator of "socialism with Chinese characteristics"—collectivization of agriculture (disastrous policy of communist Russia around 1930 and China in the 1950s)—communist attack against the Guomindang's encircle and annihilate campaign—formal program of the communist party after 1949, that served as interim national plan—Zhao Ziyang (1919-2005), PRC reforming politician, general secretary of Chinese Communist Party 1987-1989, held under house arrest from 1989 his death, and non-person since then—Nong Duc Manh (1940-), general secretary of the Vietnamese Communist Party 2001-2011—Wu Yuzhang (1878-1966), writer, educator and communist politician—consultative conference (political venue during early communist rule)—Liu Shaoqi (1898-1969), Chinese communist leader, a martyr of the Cultural Revolution— |