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The [[Red Eyebrows Uprising]] of [[18]]-[[27]] CE, as well as the [[Yellow Turbans Rebellion]] of [[184]]-[[205]] CE (during the [[Han Dynasty]]), the [[Huang Chao]] rebellion of the [[Tang Dynasty]], the [[Song Dynasty]] Bandit-Heroes of the famous story of the ''[[Water Margin]]'', and the [[Boxer Rebellion]] (c. [[1900]]) of the late [[Qing Dynasty]] were all based in Shandong.
 
The [[Red Eyebrows Uprising]] of [[18]]-[[27]] CE, as well as the [[Yellow Turbans Rebellion]] of [[184]]-[[205]] CE (during the [[Han Dynasty]]), the [[Huang Chao]] rebellion of the [[Tang Dynasty]], the [[Song Dynasty]] Bandit-Heroes of the famous story of the ''[[Water Margin]]'', and the [[Boxer Rebellion]] (c. [[1900]]) of the late [[Qing Dynasty]] were all based in Shandong.
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[[Yuan Shikai]], who became the first president of the [[Republic of China]] in [[1912]], had previously served as a military governor in Shandong. Following his death in [[1916]], however, a warlord named [[Zhang Zongchang]] ("the Dog Meat General") came to rule in the area.<ref>James Flath, "Managing Historical Capital in Shandong: Museum, Monument, and Memory in  Provincial China," ''The Public Historian'' 24:2 (2002) 44.</ref>
    
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Joseph Esherick, ''The Origins of the Boxer Uprising'', U California Press (1987), 39.
 
*Joseph Esherick, ''The Origins of the Boxer Uprising'', U California Press (1987), 39.
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<references/>
    
[[Category:Provinces]]
 
[[Category:Provinces]]
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