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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lu_MuzhenLu Muzhen - Wikipedia

    Lu Muzhen was born on 30 July 1867. She married Sun in 1885 and bore him a son, Sun Fo, and two daughters, Sun Yan ( 孫延) and Sun Wan ( 孫琬 ). Due to her bound feet, she rarely accompanied Sun on his revolutionary campaigns. After Sun divorced her in 1915 to marry Soong Ching-ling, she moved to Portuguese Macau, where she remained until ...

  2. Apr 20, 2012 · In 1915, Dr Sun Yat-sen fell in love with Soong Ching Ling in Japan, and he invited Lu Muzhen to Tokyo to discuss their divorce and his proposed marriage to Soong. It is thought that Lu agreed to the divorce because she felt she could render little assistance to her husband in his revolutionary campaign. Dr Sun married Soong in October of the ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sun_Yat-senSun Yat-sen - Wikipedia

    Lu Muzhen, Sun's first wife Kaoru Otsuki, Sun's Japanese teenage wife Fumiko, daughter of Sun and Kaoru. Sun Yat-sen was born to Sun Dacheng (孫達成) and his wife, Lady Yang (楊氏) on 12 November 1866. At the time, his father was 53, and his mother was 38 years old.

  4. Dr Sun Yat-sen Museum tells story of Dr Sun's first wife, Lu Muzhen (with photos) Picture shows an extremely rare family portrait of Dr Sun Yat-sen, Lu Muzhen and their children, taken in Guangzhou in 1912. From the left in the back row are Sun Yan, Sun Fo, Soong Ailing and Sun Wan. Soong Ailing was Dr Sun's English secretary at the time.

  5. Apr 22, 2024 · She was on good terms with Sun’s wife, Lu Muzhen, with whom she sailed to China to meet Sun after the events of 1911. At least, she made it as far as Macau; the audience was provided with scant information about her life after she abandoned the trip beyond that city, write Huang and Hong.

  6. May 8, 2013 · Sun had worked as a physician in Macau, while his first wife, Madam Lu Muzhen, also lived in the city, and her resistance later converted as the only Sun Yat-sen Memorial House in the city. All ...

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  8. Sun Yat-sen (born November 12, 1866, Xiangshan [now Zhongshan], Guangdong province, China—died March 12, 1925, Beijing) was the leader of the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang [Pinyin: Guomindang]), known as the father of modern China. Influential in overthrowing the Qing (Manchu) dynasty (1911/12), he served as the first provisional ...