Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - How to evaluate Qiu Qingquan, a madman and a Confucian general?

How to evaluate Qiu Qingquan, a madman and a Confucian general?

Qiu Qingquan is a famous general of the Kuomintang. He is a madman and a Confucian general. After his death, he was able to enter the Martyrs' Temple in Taiwan Province Province. He was an anti-Japanese patriotic general who risked his life in the face of Japanese invaders, and also an irreconcilable Kuomintang officer with China.

Qiu Qingquan has many contradictions. He loved his motherland and fought bravely against Japan, but he regarded China as his enemy. He is knowledgeable, has received advanced education from the West and is proficient in English and German, but he is still superstitious about feudalism.

At the age of 22, Qiu Qingquan passed the second phase of Huangpu Military Academy with excellent results. A year later, he had the opportunity to participate in the Eastern Expedition and the Northern Expedition, with outstanding performance and outstanding military ability. At the age of 32, he passed the qualification of studying in Germany and systematically learned a lot of advanced military knowledge abroad, which laid a solid foundation for him to resist Japanese aggression against China in the future.

Qiu Qingquan is famous for his brave, accurate and ruthless fighting. Often, when the Japanese army has not reacted, it is surprised, and it is very good at adjusting the strategic plan according to the terrain advantage, which often causes a lot of casualties to the Japanese army. Because he is good at fighting, he is ruthless, and he is brave and invincible in the battle, so he got one? Qiu madman? Nickname.

During the War of Liberation, Qiu Qingquan became more and more arrogant, and he hated the PLA. Even when the Huai Hai Campaign was besieged, our army promised not to kill him, but he shot himself.

Ironically, Qiu Qingquan was so loyal to Chiang Kai-shek because of superstition. It is said that when he was in college, the fortune teller said that all his nobles were in the south, so he took refuge in Chiang Kai-shek and remained loyal all his life. Even if Chiang Kai-shek didn't pay attention to his period, he never thought about changing the flag.

As a senior intellectual who has been familiar with the Four Books and Five Classics since he was a child and studied abroad when he grew up, it is ridiculous to be so feudal and superstitious that he even risked his life.