Song Qingling
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Wade-Giles romanization:
- Sung Ch’ing-ling
- Song also spelled:
- Soong
- Died:
- May 29, 1981,Beijing (aged 88)
- Political Affiliation:
- Nationalist Party
- House / Dynasty:
- Soong family
- Notable Family Members:
- spouseSun Yat-sen
- brotherT. V. Soong
- sisterSoong Mei-ling
Song Qingling (born January 27, 1893,Shanghai, China—died May 29, 1981, Beijing) was the second wife of the Chinese revolutionary leaderSun Yat-sen (Sun Zhongshan). She became an influential political figure inChina after her husband’s death.
A member of the prominentSoong family, Song Qingling was educated in theUnited States. She married Sun Yat-sen, who was 26 years her senior, in 1914. After Sun’s death in 1925, Song Qingling assumed an active role in politics. She supported the left wing of theNationalist Party (Kuomintang, which had been founded by Sun) when it split with the right wing of the party, later headed byChiang Kai-shek. In 1927, when the left-wing Nationalists purged their communist members and reunited with the right-wing Nationalists, shedenounced the organization as having betrayed the ideals of her husband, and she left China for theSoviet Union, where she remained for two years.
After the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War in 1937, Song Qingling organized the China Defense League, which did medical andchild welfare work, especially in the communist-controlled areas of thecountry. During that period she also became temporarily reunited with her sisterSoong Mei-ling (the wife of Chiang Kai-shek) and her brotherT.V. Soong, one of China’s leading industrialists and a powerful official in the Nationalist government.
In 1948 she became honorary chairman of theKuomintang Revolutionary Committee, a splinter group organized inHong Kong to oppose Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang. After the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, Song remained on the mainland, where she was held in greatdeference by the communists because she symbolized a link between the People’s Republic and the older revolutionary movement of Sun Yat-sen. She became an important official within the new government, and in 1951 she was awarded the Stalin Peace Prize for her work on welfare and peace committees. In 1966, early in theCultural Revolution, she was criticized by theRed Guards, but she retained her position. She was named honorary Chairman of the People’s Republic in 1981, shortly before her death.