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| | Mao Zedong - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Mao Zedong (♫) (December 26, 1893 – September 9, 1976; Mao Tse-tung in Wade-Giles) was the chairman of the Politburo of the Communist Party of China from 1943 and the chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China from 1945 until his death. |  | | The eldest son of four children of a moderately prosperous peasant farmer, Mao Zedong was born in the village of Shaoshan in Xiangtan county (湘潭縣), Hunan province. |  | | It was during this period that Mao chose Lin Biao to become his successor. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mao_Zedong
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| | A Biography of Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | Mao was reinstated as leader and his greatest ally, the Army, made up half of the party leadership elected at the Ninth Congress. |  | | Study Chairman Maos writings, follow his teachings and act according to his instructions. |  | | Despite Maos successes in the south, Chiang Kai-Shek defeated nearly all the northern warlords, and set up a stable united government that was to last until the Sino-Japanese war erupted in 1937. |
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http://www.geocities.com/franith
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| | CNN Cold War - Profile: Mao Tse-tung |
 | | Son of a prosperous peasant, Mao was born in Hunan province on December 26, 1893. |  | | After the bloody communist fallout with Nationalist Chiang Kai-shek in 1927, Mao established a base in the southern Kiangsi province. |  | | Although Beijing continued to resent Washington's support for Taiwan, in 1972 Mao welcomed U.S. President Richard Nixon in Beijing. |
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http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/profiles/mao
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| | Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung |
 | | Mao Tse-Tung was born on December 26, 1893 in Shao-shan, Hunan Province, China, and died on September 9, 1967 in Beijing. |  | | One of Mao's last acts before he died in September 1976, was the Cultural Revolution. |  | | He had been sent because when he was dusting a cabinet, a bust of Mao fell and broke. |
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http://www.princeton.edu/~ferguson/adw/mao.shtml
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| | Mao Tse-tung |
 | | Mao Zedong, pronounced mow zeh dawng (1893-1976), also spelled Mao Tse-tung, led the long struggle that made China a Communist nation in 1949. |  | | Mao was born to a peasant family in Shaoshan, a village in Hunan Province. |  | | In 1934, Mao led the Communists to Shaanxi (Shensi) province, in what is called the Long March. |
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http://www.puhsd.k12.ca.us/chana/staffpages/eichman/Adult_School/world/spring/postwwii/4/mao.htm
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| | Mao Zedong |
 | | Mao became an active member of both parties and was nominated director of the Peasant Commissions for both the CCP and KMT in 1926. |  | | Thus Mao became an essential member of the party, although unwanted. |  | | For Mao Zedong that step was taken at Tongado (on the Long March of 1934) where Mao’s proposal for the Communist army’s route was accepted for the first time since his dismissal from military command in 1932. |
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http://www.hyperhistory.net/apwh/bios/b3maozedong.htm
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| | CNN In-Depth Specials - Visions of China - Profiles: Mao Tse-tung |
 | | Throughout Mao's life the Chinese government promoted his image and that of his comrades at Yan'an as warm-hearted revolutionaries. |  | | Mao joined a provincial unit of the revolutionary army. |  | | Mao left home at age 13 to attend an advanced school in a nearby district and in 1911 arrived in Changsha, the provincial capital, to attend secondary school. |
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http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/china.50/inside.china/profiles/mao.tsetung
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| | Mao Tse-tung Biography |
 | | Mao Tse-tung served briefly in the republican army. |  | | Mao Tse-tung was born December 26, 1893, in Shao-shan, Hunan province. |  | | During the early 1950s, Mao Tse-tung served as chairman of the Communist party, chief of state, and chairman of the military commission. |
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http://www.paralumun.com/warmao.htm
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| | Mao Tse-tung |
 | | The page is about Mao Tse-tung and his wife JiangQing. |  | | "Chairman Mao Tse-tung, our great teacher, great leader, great suprime commander and great helmsman, greets a million members of the revolutionary masses at a meting celebratin the great proletarian cultural revoulution", China Reconstructs, 1966-October-Cover |  | | "Mao and Mehmet Shehu great each other during the Albanian Party and Government Delegation's visit to China", China Reconstructs, 1966-July-cover |
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http://www.union.edu/PUBLIC/HSTDEPT/HST198/mao/mao.htm
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| | Who is Mao Tse Tung? |
 | | After the Mao had no choice but to resign himself to the failures of "The Great Leap Forward" and the "Socialist Education Movement", he began to become increasingly less important in Chinese Government, acting almost solely as a figurehead. |  | | Mao used the influence he had over its governing Defense Committee to instigate The Cultural Revolution, which lasted from 1966 to 1976. |  | | The Mao was suspicious almost to the point of paranoia, fearing that those who had sworn loyalty to him were turning against him in droves. |
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http://ma.essortment.com/maotsetung_rrbu.htm
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| | Modern China: Mao Tse-tung |
 | | While the Communist Party underwent a series of conflicts over ideology and practice, after the Long March, Chinese Communism would be synonymous with Maoism, the political philosophy of Mao Tse-tung (1893-1976). |  | | Mao was born of a peasant family that was more or less prosperous. |  | | Mao believed that the peasant were, by the very nature of their lives, the most free of clan, theocratic, and patriarchal authority; this was one further argument why the Chinese revolution needed to be a peasant revolution. |
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http://www.wsu.edu:8001/~dee/MODCHINA/MAO.HTM
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| | Mao Tse-tung |
 | | Mao Tse-tung was an inaugural member of the Chinese Communist party and the founder of the People's Republic of China. |  | | Mao's success lay in his genius for guerrilla warfare and his recognition that a Communist revolution in China would stem from the peasants, not the urban working class. |  | | From 1970 until his death in 1976 he held the title "supreme commander |
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http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/Mao/a68.html
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| | Modern History Sourcebook: Editorial of the Liberation Army Daily (Jiefangjun Bao) Mao Tse-Tung's Thought is the Telescope and Microscope of Our Revolutionary Cause, June 7, 1966 |
 | | Facts show that those armed with Mao Tse-tung's thought are the bravest, wisest, most united, most steadfast in class stand and have the sharpest sight. |  | | The attitude towards Mao Tse-tung's thought, whether to accept it or resist it, to support it or oppose it, to love it warmly or be hostile to it, this is the touchstone to test and the watershed between true revolution and sham revolution, between revolution and counter-revolution, between Marxism-Leninism and revisionism. |  | | Mao Tse-tung's thought has proved to be the invincible truth through the practice of China's democratic revolution, socialist revolution and socialist construction, and through the struggle in the international sphere against U.S. imperialism and its lackeys and against Khrushchev revisionism. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1966-mao-culturalrev1.html
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| | Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | Mohanty, Deba R. State as Permanent Revolution: The Role of Military Principles of Mao- Tse-tung in China's Revolutionary War. |  | | Mao Tse-tung on Guerrilla Warfare, translated and with an introduction by Samuel B. Griffith. |  | | Johnson, Jon D. The Tiger and the Elephant: Mao Tse-tung's Classical Guerilla Warfare Theory and the War in Indochina. |
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http://www.au.af.mil/au/aul/bibs/great/mao.htm
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| | The American Experience Nixons China Game People & Events Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | A founding member of the CCP in 1921, Mao's involvement with the peasant movement in Hunan profoundly shaped his political thinking. |  | | Under Mao, China underwent enormous social transformation, most notably the liberation of the peasants from centuries-old domination by landlords, and the liberation of Chinese women through the reform of oppressive marriage laws. |  | | Unlike the traditional Marxist leaders of the CCP who sought to organize the urban working class, Mao was convinced that Communist revolution could only succeed in China with the active involvement of the peasants, who made up eighty percent of the population. |
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/china/peopleevents/pande03.html
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| | Tse-tung Mao at LiteratureClassics.com -- essays, resources |
 | | The Communists were outnumbered and in 1934 Mao Tse-tung led the Communists through the desert in what is known as The Long March to a safer location to administer their plans. |  | | Mao Tse-tung is founder and first leader of the Chinese communist party. |  | | After Sun Yat-sen's death (leader of the Nationalist party) died, distrust between the two parties led to warfare. |
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http://www.literatureclassics.com/authors/Mao
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| | Amazon.com: Books: On Guerrilla Warfare |
 | | This book was written by Mao Zedong (1893-1976) in 1937, as he was waging a guerrilla war against the occupying army of Imperial Japan. |  | | Through the text, Mao does reference several campaigns that buttress his arguments, but chances are they will be unfamiliar to a non-military history buff. |  | | Mao was widely read in Chinese and world history and it would have been his style to display this knowledge in a work like this had he chosen to do so. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0252068920?v=glance
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| | Mao Tse- Tung |
 | | Mao Tse-Tung studied at Peking University, where he first encountered Marxism, and was converted to its cause. |  | | In 1934, Mao organized the "Long March." He and his followers marched 6,000 miles, arriving in Shensi and establishing a new government at Yenan. |  | | In the 1970's Mao helped steer China's course in re-establishing relations with the United States. |
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http://www.multied.com/Bio/people/TseTung.html
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| | MAO TSE-TUNG |
 | | Mao remained loyal to the CCP and became a significant leader within the movement during the 1920's. |  | | At this time Mao was merely a member of the party although he would soon rise to an unequaled position of power. |  | | Mao's degree of success at integrating a form of communism into his society can be disputed, but his influence specifically on China, and more generally, on our ideas of applied communism is undisputable. |
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http://ouray.cudenver.edu/~mbbrandt/maoreport.html
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| | Mao |
 | | Leveraging his newfound popularity among the youth, Mao called for students to abandon their studies and form militia groups, to aid the army in the ouster of undesirables. |  | | Mao's defense minister told the mobs that their mission was destroy every throwback of traditional culture and philosophy. |  | | Mao had a dream of bringing anarchism to China, and as quickly as possible. |
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http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/dictators/mao
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| | Mao Tse-tung |
 | | By juxtaposing the history of Maos success and his failure, Schram highlights the paradox that drives Maos desperation to close his career and life in greatness. |  | | An expert on Maos proclamations and political shifts, Schram annotates his biography with political insights and highlights parallels between contemporary political thought and Maos own writings. |  | | Mao, and China, are alive and active as Schram writes and the international community should, according to Schram, actively engage with China. |
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http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/pgp/schram.htm
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| | Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | The result was much more vigorous debate than Mao had expected and the period ended with an abrupt crackdown against those who had raised their voices in opposition. |  | | Mao had every reason to let the world think he was not afraid of the bomb no matter what his private thoughts might have been. |  | | Mao was widely ridiculed abroad for stating that the U.S. and its nuclear arsenal were "paper tigers." Many supposed that Mao would have willingly plunged the world into a nuclear war out of sheer ignorance. |
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http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/mao.html
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| | Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | Mao led his guerrilla army on a 6,000 miles 'Long March' from Hunan in the South to Yenan in northern China. |  | | After the break with the Kuomintang in 1927, his forces were driven out from Hunan. |  | | In Yenan he organized a revolutionary base strong enough to fight the Japanese invaders and later the Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-check. |
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http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/people_n2/persons6_n2/mao.html
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung |
 | | Mao seems to encourage dissent and analysis as the basis for revoutionary improvement on the one hand, but the record reveals that his rule was as an iron dictator. |  | | That is why Edward Bellamy is known as the American Mao. |  | | Mao is similar to Marx and Hitler in that Mao uses the word "socialist" a lot. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/083512388X?v=glance
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| | Alibris: Tse-Tung Mao |
 | | by Mao, Tse-tung, and Griffith, Samuel B., and United States. |  | | Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Tsetung |  | | by Roberts, Moss (Translated by), and Tse Tung, Mao, and Mao, Tse-Tung |
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http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Tse-Tung_Mao
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| | Mao Tse Tung Founder of the People’s Republic of China Mao Zedong Questia.com Online Library |
 | | It was left to Mao Tse- tung to employ the ancient Confucian...authority of Confucius for a world state, Mao Tse-tung was almost certainly right... |  | | Customize your search: Mao Tse-tung [refine search][refine search][refine search] |  | | MAO TSE-TUNG EMPEROR OF TBE BLUE ANTS By the same author: THE UNDEFEATED KHRUSHCHEV George Paloczi-Horvath MAO TSE-TUNG EMPEROR OF THE BLUE ANTS Doubleday Company...Peoples... |
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http://www.questia.com/library/history/asian-history/china/mao-tse-tung.jsp
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| | ColoradoSenate.com :: Dinner With Chairman Mao |
 | | To put the Chairmans overall death toll statistics in perspective, the Mao restaurant, which seats 220, would have to be filled to capacity every night for over 700 years to account for all of his victims. |  | | One can only imagine the extent of Maos disappointment when but 34,000 American soldiers were killed, and a free, democratic South Korea went on to become an economic powerhouse. |  | | Defenders of Mao might argue that he held China together, against the odds, and forged it into something of a superpower. |
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http://www.coloradosenate.com/results.php3?news_id=552
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| | Reference Archive: Mao Zedong |
 | | “Mao Tse-tung”), MIA has not converted these documents and they are presented here in their original form. |  | | However, in the case of older transcriptions from publications that predominantly use the Wade-Giles transliteration (i.e. |
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http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao
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| | MAO TSE-TUNG |
 | | V.I. Mao Ze-dong was the leader of the Chinese Communist Party after World War II, in 1949-1950. |  | | The Peoples Republic of China still stands today, but Mao's brutality is not present in today's China. |  | | The Period of Resistance War Against the Japanese. |
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http://freelao.tripod.com/id41.htm
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