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In the modern history of China, there were several warlords in Shaanxi.
Liu Zhenhua and Yang Hucheng were warlords in Shaanxi during the period of modern national government.

Yang Hucheng (1893165438+1October 26th-1September 6th, 949) was a general and swordsman of Shaanxi Army during the Republic of China. Yang Hucheng took part in Pucheng Uprising, fought against Qing and violence, begged Yuan to protect the law, moved to Guanzhong, stuck to An, set out for the Northern Expedition, and returned to Shaanxi to take charge. He was forced into a civil war and called for an anti-Japanese war.

Liu Zhenhua (1883— 1956), a native of gongyi city, was once under the command of Song Jun, a former town. After Liu Zhenhua entered Shaanxi, he apparently cooperated with Chen, such as opening up no-smoking areas and selling opium. When Liu Zhenhua first arrived in Shaanxi, there were only three soldiers and two thousand guns, which grew to tens of thousands in more than two years.

The word "warlord" in the modern sense was translated by Liang Qichao from Japan. The modern word "warlord" is different from the ancient word "warlord", but its meaning also existed in ancient times, only in the form of "buffer region", "gathering of heroes" and "reading by valve", rather than a literal expression.

Extended data:

Definition of warlord:

1. Because of the concept of "the winner is king, and the loser is kou", many regimes or separatist forces that were destroyed or failed due to lack of strength were regarded as warlords, such as Zuo Liangyu in the late Han Dynasty and the late Ming Dynasty.

2. Master the military affairs of a political power, such as the Changzhou faction, the Imperial People faction, the control faction and other forces in the Japanese imperial army.

3. It refers to the regime where one party is separated by force, which is mainly used in the early years of the Republic of China, such as Beiyang warlords such as Zhang and Duan, or Japanese famous soldiers during the Warring States Period.

4. Taking military power as political capital, supporting soldiers' self-esteem, occupying national land resources, and taking territorial expansion as the sole purpose, usually has little effect in other construction.

5, often from military and economic celebrities evolved into warlords. Because the central power is weak, some people can monopolize the power.

6. Even in modern democratic countries, local leaders or forces who do not listen to the central command and govern on their own are sometimes dubbed warlords or "local vassal economy".

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-warlord