Sun Yat-sen in Beijing: Life, Death, and Legacy
Sun Yat-sen (1866-1925) was born in Guangdong, and is considered the "Father of Modern China" for his role in the revolution which toppled the Qing Dynasty
In 1894, a young Sun Yat-sen traveled to the northern cities of Tianjin and Beijing, unsuccessfully applying for a job on the staff of the famous Qing Dynasty official Li Hongzhang
The Beijing Hotel (Grand Hotel de Pekin) was the place to stay back in the day. The older sections can still be visited and are currently managed by the Nuo Hotel group
While in Beijing, Sun felt ill. He had been unwell for months, and doctors at the Peking Union Medical College (today the Xiahe Hospital on Dongdan Beidajie, although a few of the original medical school buildings can be seen around the corner on Dongdan Santiao) confirmed that Sun was suffering from cancer. Despite Peking Union being the top medical school in China, the doctors concluded Sun was beyond treatment.
Some of the original buildings of the Peking Union Medical College can be seen on the street behind today's Xiehe Hospital
Sun Yat-sen passed away at the home of his friend, Wellington Koo, on March 12, 1925. Koo lived at what is today #23 Zhangzizhong Road
After a family ceremony at the chapel of the Peking Union Medical College on Mar 18, Sun’s coffin was transported in a solemn procession to what was then “Central Park.” It was later renamed Zhongshan Park in Sun’s honor. (Most Mandarin speakers refer to Sun Yat-sen as Sun Zhongshan, following the Chinese pronunciation of Sun’s Japanese alias "Nakayama" = Middle Mountain = Zhongshan).
Over 120,000 people turned out to watch the procession, including many members of the foreign community. Thousands more visited the main hall at Central Park to pay their respects to Sun.
In 1925, Sun Yat-sen's body lay in state in the main hall of what is today Zhongshan Park (named in Sun Yat-sen's honor) and was visited by thousands of mourners
In Apr 1925, Sun’s body was moved again and interred in a temporary grave at the Biyun Temple (Temple of the Azure Clouds) in the Western Hills of Beijing. The temple has a memorial hall for Sun Yat-sen with a few artifacts from Sun’s life and his temporary interment on the temple grounds.
Before being transported to Nanjing and Sun's final resting place, his body was temporarily kept at the Temple of the Azure Clouds in the Western Hills of Beijing
Finally, in 1929, the government of Chiang Kai-shek, Sun’s former protege and successor as head of the Kuomintang Party, transported Sun’s remains to Nanjing and Sun’s final resting place in Zijun Mountain. Today, the Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum is one of Nanjing's most famous and visited sites.
A set of home movies filmed by the American minister to China, John Van Antwerp MacMurray (https://universityarchives.princeton.edu/2010/08/trip-to-attend-the-interment-of-sun-yat-sen-1929/), contains some footage of the elegant procession of Sun’s coffin as it traveled from the Western Hills (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjSTBSmDw5Q&t=390s) across the city and through Zhengyang Gate (Qianmen) to the Old Railway Station (http://www.chinarhyming.com/2010/06/17/the-old-peking-railway-station/) where a specially decorated train waited to convey the coffin to Nanjing.
Still from a film shot by an American diplomat which captured the procession of Sun's body as it was moved from the Western Hills to the train station in 1929
Beijing Railway Museum (the former train station, eastern terminal) today
Sun’s widow, Soong Ch’ing-ling, lived in Beijing from 1962 until her death in 1981. One of the famous “Soong Sisters of Shanghai” (her younger sister, Mei-ling, married Chiang Kai-shek), Ch’ing-ling remained after the establishment of New China even as the rest of her extended family was moving out and moving on.
Sun Yat-sen and his wife Soong Ch'ing-ling in 1915. Soong Ch'ing-ling was 27 years younger than her new husband
Her presence was seen as a form of legitimacy for the new government, establishing a link through Sun connecting 1911, which ended the imperial system, and 1949, which ushered in the PRC era. Today, Soong Ch’ing-ling’s residence on the northern shores of Houhai is open to the public. It features a very good museum of her life and that of her husband, Sun Yat-sen, with artifacts of their time together (including the German pistol Sun gave his young bride as a wedding present when they married in 1915).
Part of Soong Ch'ing-ling's residence on the northern shore of Houhai
Sun Yat-sen's fame and legacy transcend any particular place or city, but if you're wandering the lanes and parks of Beijing this chilly weekend, have a thought for one of China's most famous figures on the 157th anniversary of his birth.
About the Author
Jeremiah Jenne earned his Ph.D. in Chinese history from the University of California, Davis, and taught Late Imperial and Modern China for over 15 years. He has lived in Beijing for nearly two decades and is the proprietor of Beijing by Foot (http://beijingbyfoot.com/), organizing history education programs and walking tours of the city, including deeper dives into the route and sites described here.
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Images: Wikimedia Commons