Luo Yixiu

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Luo YixiuTemplate:NoteTag (Template:Zh; 20 October 1889 – 11 February 1910) was the first wife of Chinese communist revolutionary and future leader of China, Mao Zedong, to whom she was married from 1908 until her death. Coming from the area around Shaoshan, Hunan, in south central China – the same region as Mao – her family were impoverished local landowners.

Most of what is known about their marriage comes from an account Mao gave to the American reporter Edgar Snow in 1936, which Snow included in his book Red Star Over China. According to Mao, he and Luo Yixiu were the subject of an arranged marriage organised by their respective fathers, Mao Yichang and Luo Helou. Luo was eighteen and Mao just fourteen years old at the time of their betrothal. Although Mao took part in the wedding ceremony, he later said that he was unhappy with the marriage, never consummating it and refusing to live with his wife. Socially disgraced, she lived with Mao's parents for two years until she died of dysentery, while he moved out of the village to continue his studies elsewhere, eventually becoming a founding member of the Chinese Communist Party. Various biographers have suggested that Mao's experience of this marriage affected his later views, leading him to become a critic of arranged marriage and a vocal feminist. He married three more times, to Yang Kaihui, He Zizhen and Jiang Qing, the last of whom was better known as Madame Mao.

Early life

Born on 20 October 1889, Luo Yixiu was the eldest daughter of Luo Helou (Script error: No such module "Lang".; 1871–1943), a shenshi (Script error: No such module "Lang".)Template:Spaced ndash or rural intellectual who earned his living as a farmerTemplate:Spaced ndash and his wife (1869–1912), whose surname was Mao and who was a distant great-aunt of Mao Zedong.Template:SfnmTemplate:NoteTag Although historian Lee Feigon stated that the Luo family was locally important,Template:Sfn Mao biographers Alexander V. Pantsov and Steven I. Levine claimed that they had fallen into poverty.Template:Sfn Luo Helou and his wife had five sons and five daughters, but seven of these children died, leaving them only three daughters. The couple's lack of adult sons diminished their social status, for in Chinese society at the time, only sons could continue the family lineage.Template:Sfn

Marriage to Mao Zedong

Preparation

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Mao Zedong had been born and raised at his father's farm in Shaoshanchong, a small rural village named for the nearby Shaoshan mountain.Template:Sfn His disciplinarian father, Mao Yichang, had decided to deal with Zedong's rebellious attitude in a manner typical of the time, by forcing him into an arranged marriage that would compel him to take family matters seriously.Template:Sfnm Yichang also desired a helper for his own wife, Wen Qimei, whose health had deteriorated through years of heavy agricultural labour.Template:Sfn He selected Luo Yixiu in either late 1907 or 1908.Template:Sfn Her kinship to the Maos may have helped in this selection, as Luo Yixiu's mother's four brothers, surnamed Mao, lived only two li (1 km) from Mao Yichang's home in Shaoshanchong.Template:Sfn Following traditional procedures, a matchmaker would have been sent to the Luo family house, and the Luo family would have been socially expected to not accept the marriage proposal immediately.Template:Sfn Luo Helou was happy to see his eldest daughter married.Template:Sfn The two families exchanged gifts and signed the marriage contract, after which the marriage was considered inviolable.Template:Sfn

Zedong first met Yixiu on the day that the contract was signed.Template:Sfn Years later, his granddaughter Kong Dongmei stated that Mao was unhappy with his father's choice, and that he instead was in love with his cousin, Wang Shigu. However, marriage to Wang had been ruled out by a local diviner because their horoscopes were incompatible.Template:Sfn Although displeased by the arrangement, Mao agreed to marry Luo.Template:Sfn At the time he was fourteen, and later erroneously informed Edgar Snow that Luo was aged twenty,Template:Sfn a claim independently accepted by Mao biographers Ross Terrill and Philip Short,Template:Sfnm but later challenged by biographers Jung Chang and Jon Halliday, and Alexander V. Pantsov and Steven I. Levine, who established that she was eighteen.Template:Sfnm

The wedding

The wedding took place in 1908.Template:Sfn According to a number of Mao's biographers, the ceremony would have likely followed traditional rural Hunanese custom. Thus, it probably would have begun with a feast in the groom's home on the day before the ceremony, to which friends and relatives were invited. The next day, the bride would have been dressed in red, with a red veil over her face, and carried by red palanquin to the groom's family home. There, her veil would have been removed, and she would have been expected to express unhappiness and dissatisfaction with the groom by publicly insulting him.Template:Sfnm According to tradition, a display of fireworks would probably have taken place, before both bride and groom would have kowtowed to each guest, to the groom's ancestral altar, to the spirits, and to one another, concluding the ceremony.Template:Sfnm

If traditional practices were adhered to, feasting would have continued for two days, while guests would have given gifts, mainly of money, to the newlyweds.Template:Sfn The wedding ceremony would have culminated with the guests entering the bridal chamber, where they would have made various sexual references and innuendos, led by a figure with his face painted black.Template:Sfn In Chinese rural tradition, the bride was expected to show the bloodstains on the bed sheets from her wedding night to prove that her hymen had been broken during sexual intercourse, and that she had therefore been a virgin.Template:Sfn

Married life

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Mao's Shaoshanchong home in 2010; Luo lived here after the wedding.

According to what he told Snow, Mao refused to live with his wife, and claimed that they had never consummated their marriage.Template:Sfnm Soon after the wedding, he ran away from home to live with an unemployed student in Shaoshan.Template:Sfnm There he spent much of his time reading, particularly historical works like Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian and Ban Gu's History of the Former Han Dynasty, and political tracts like Feng Guifen's Personal Protests from the Study of Jiao Bin.Template:Sfnm

Now considered part of the Mao family, Luo lived with Mao Yichang and Wen Qimei at their home, and Luo maybe was publicly humiliated by her husband's disappearance; some locals considered her to be Yichang's concubine.Template:Sfnm Luo Yixiu died of dysentery on 11 February 1910, the day after Chinese New Year.Template:Sfnm Mao Zedong returned home; his father forgave him for his disobedience, and in the autumn of 1910, agreed to finance his son's studies at the Dongshan Higher Primary School, and so Mao left Shaoshanchong.Template:Sfn When in 1936 Mao told Snow "I do not consider her my wife",Template:Sfn he made no mention of her death.Template:Sfn Luo Yixiu's grave is located on the mountain facing Mao Zedong's former residence in Shaoshanchong, a few steps away from the tomb of his parents.Template:Sfn

Aftermath

When Mao Zedong returned to Shaoshan in 1925 to organize a local peasant movement, he visited Luo Yixiu's relatives, including her father Luo Helou and his nephew Luo Shiquan (Script error: No such module "Lang".). Luo Shiquan joined the Chinese Communist Party in the winter of that year and was a peasant activist until the Chinese Communist Revolution.Template:Sfn Luo Yixiu had no offspring but was added to the Mao genealogy book in 1941; Mao Anlong (Script error: No such module "Lang".), Mao Zedong's third son with his second wife Yang Kaihui, was listed as Luo's descendant.Template:Sfn In 1950, Mao sent his eldest son Mao Anying to Shaoshan and instructed him to visit Luo Shiquan.Template:Sfn Mao also kept in contact with two men who had married Luo Yixiu's sisters, and met one of them when he returned to Shaoshan in 1959 for the first time since the 1920s.Template:Sfn

Influence on Mao

In Mao: A Reinterpretation, American historian Lee Feigon argued that Mao's experience with arranged marriage inspired him to become "a vehement advocate of women's rights" in the late 1910s, as he began to write articles for the left-wing press criticizing the traditional Chinese family system and arguing that love, rather than societal or family pressures, should be the primary determinant in marriage.Template:Sfn This idea had previously been expressed by journalist and sinologist Clare Hollingworth.Template:Sfn In their biography Mao: The Unknown Story, Jung Chang and Jon Halliday agreed, stating that it was this experience with Luo that turned Mao into a "fierce opponent" of arranged marriage.Template:Sfn

Mao later married three other women: Yang Kaihui in December 1920, He Zizhen in May 1928, and Jiang Qing in November 1939.Template:Sfn

Notes

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References

Citations

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Sources

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