Tang De-Jhang
Tang De-jhang | |
---|---|
Born |
January 6, 1907 Tapani Subprefecture, Tainan Chō, Japanese Taiwan |
Died |
March 13, 1947 40) Tainan, Taiwan | (aged
Occupation | lawyer |
Tang De-Jhang (Chinese: 湯德章; January 6, 1907 – March 13, 1947) was a Taiwanese lawyer born in Tainan during Japanese rule. He was killed in the February 28 Incident.[1]
Life
Tang grew up poor, and received some financial help from a traditional Chinese physician named Yang. He graduated from Tapani Elementary School, but dropped out of Tainan Normal School (now the National University of Tainan) due to his father's death, and worked on his family's farm, and then later at a sugar refinery. At that time, he enhanced his knowledge and fighting skills by learning Chinese language, Four Books and Five Classics, Chinese martial arts and Japanese martial arts. In 1927, he passed the formal civil service examination and became a Tainan Prefecture Patrol deployed to Tōseki District (東石郡). He got married a year later.
February 28 Incident
Tang De-jhang was elected mayoral candidate by all Tainan senators, leaders of villages citizen organizations, and student representatives in 1947, when the February 28 Incident occurred.
After troops of the 21st Division descended on Tainan, about twenty gendarmes broke into Tang's house on March 11, 1947, to arrest him for the crime of rebellion. During his arrest, Tang burned a list containing the names of people on the Settlement Committee, an action regarded to have saved their lives.[2][3] The next day, Tang was hung upside down, tortured and paraded. On March 13, Tang was shot at Taishō Park (大正公園, now Tang De-jhang Memorial Park).[4]
References
- ↑ Wang, Chun-chung; Chung, Jake (23 Feb 2014). "Sun Yat-sen statue toppled". Taipei Times. p. 3.
- ↑ Chung, Jake (26 Aug 2013). "Tainan delays relocation of statue of Sun Yat-sen". Taipei Times. p. 3. Retrieved 17 Sep 2016.
- ↑ "KMT condemns statue vandalism". Taipei Times. 24 Feb 2014. p. 3. Retrieved 17 Sep 2016.
- ↑ Huang, Wen-huang; Hsu, Stacy (24 Jan 2014). "FEATURE: Artist commemorates 228 to educate nation's youth". Taipei Times. p. 3. Retrieved 17 Sep 2016.