1958 in China
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| See also: | Other events of 1958 History of China • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Events in the year 1958 in the People's Republic of China.
Incumbents
- Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party: Mao Zedong
 - President of the People's Republic of China: Mao Zedong
 - Premier of the People's Republic of China: Zhou Enlai
 - Chairman of the National People's Congress: Liu Shaoqi
 - Vice President of the People's Republic of China: Zhu De
 - Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China: Chen Yun
 
Governors
- Governor of Anhui Province: Huang Yan
 - Governor of Fujian Province: Ye Fei
 - Governor of Gansu Province: Deng Baoshan
 - Governor of Guangdong Province: Chen Yu
 - Governor of Guizhou Province: Zhou Lin (politician)
 - Governor of Hebei Province: Lin Tie then Liu Zihou
 - Governor of Heilongjiang Province: Ouyang Qin then Li Fanwu
 - Governor of Henan Province: Wu Zhipu
 - Governor of Hubei Province: Zhang Tixue
 - Governor of Hunan Province: Cheng Qian
 - Governor of Jiangsu Province: Hui Yuyu
 - Governor of Jiangxi Province: Shao Shiping
 - Governor of Jilin Province: Li Youwen
 - Governor of Liaoning Province: Du Zheheng then Yuan Renyuan
 - Governor of Qinghai Province: 
- until month unknown: Sun Zuobin
 - month unknown: Sun Junyi
 - starting month unknown: Yuan Renyuan
 
 - Governor of Shaanxi Province: Zhao Shoushan
 - Governor of Shandong Province: Zhao Jianmin then Tan Qilong
 - Governor of Shanxi Province: Wang Shiying then Wei Heng
 - Governor of Sichuan Province: Li Dazhang
 - Governor of Yunnan Province: Guo Yingqiu (until November), Ding Yichuan (starting November)
 - Governor of Zhejiang Province: Huo Shilian (until January), Zhou Jianren (starting January)
 
Events
- February 11 – Marshal Chen Yi succeeds Premier Zhou Enlai as Chinese Minister of Foreign affairs.
 - May 23 – Chairman Mao Zedong started his "Great Leap Forward" movement in the People's Republic of China.
 - July 31 – Chinese–Tibet Uprising.
 - August 23 – Chinese Civil War: The Second Taiwan Strait crisis begins with the People's Liberation Army's bombardment of Quemoy.
 - October Unknown date — Sichan Radio Manufacturing, as predecessor of home appliance and visual electronic brand Changhong was founded.
 
Births
January
- January 20 — Huo Jianqi, film director
 
February
- February 1 — Tony Leung Ka-fai, Hong Kong actor
 - February 5 — Huang Yubin, head coach of the Men's Artistic Gymnastics Team of China
 - February 15 — Li Youbin, actor
 - Wang Dongfeng, 16th Mayor of Tianjin
 
March
- March 5 — Yi Gang, 12th Governor of the People's Bank of China
 - March 18 — Feng Xiaogang, film director, screenwriter, actor, producer and politician
 
May
June
- June 18 — Michael Miu, Hong Kong actor and businessman
 
August
- August 17 — Chip Tsao, Hong Kong-based columnist, broadcaster and writer
 - August 21 — Cora Miao, Hong Kong actress
 - August 23 — Wang Shuo, writer
 - August 30 — Yu Rongguang, actor and martial artist
 - Bu Xiaolin, 11th Chairwoman of Inner Mongolia
 - Che Dalha, 10th Chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region
 
September
- September 2 — Hu Mei, film director, television director and producer
 - September 7 — Danny Chan, Hong Kong singer, songwriter and actor (d. 1993)
 - Chen Xuefeng, politician and mining executive from Henan
 
October
- October 2 — Dilber Yunus, Uyghur lyric soprano
 - October 9 — Hui Ka Yan, former billionaire businessman
 
November
- November 6 — Bai Baoshan, serial killer (d. 1998)
 - November 10 — Yang Liping, dancer and choreographer
 
December
- December 24 — Wang Luoyang, actor
 - December 27 — Xu Shaohua, actor
 - Guo Mingyi, philanthropist
 
Dates unknown
- Di Li Feng, contemporary artist[1]
 
Deaths
- February 10 
- Huang Jing, 1st Mayor of Tianjin (b. 1912)
 - Yang Baosen, Peking opera singer (b. 1909)
 
 - February 16 — Situ Qiao, oil painter and graphic artist (b. 1902)
 - March 9 — Cheng Yanqiu, Peking opera singer (b. 1904)
 - March 15 — Wang Chonghui, jurist, diplomat and politician (b. 1881)
 - June 21 — Liu Yazi, poet and political activist (b. 1887)
 - August 26 — Ji Xingwen, nationalist lieutenant general (b. 1908)
 - September 30 — Tang Feifan, medical microbiologist (b. 1897)
 - October 17 — Zheng Zhenduo, journalist, writer, archaeologist and scholar (b. 1898)
 - December 13 — Luo Changpei, linguist (b. 1899)
 
See also
References
- ^ "DI LI FENG BIOGRAPHY". ArtBrokerage.com. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
 
