Office1: | President of Beijing Normal University |
Term Start1: | July 1923 |
Term End1: | September 1924 |
Predecessor1: | Li Jianxun |
Successor1: | Zhang Yihui |
Office2: | Minister of Education |
Term Start2: | August 1920 |
Term End2: | December 1921 |
Predecessor2: | Fu Yuefen |
Successor2: | Ma Linyi (Acting) |
Term Start3: | July 1915 |
Term End3: | November 1917 |
Predecessor3: | Wu Kaisheng (Acting) |
Successor3: | Yuan Xitao (Acting) |
Term Start4: | July 1912 |
Term End4: | July 1913 |
Predecessor4: | Cai Yuanpei |
Successor4: | Liu Guanxiong |
Office5: | Minister of Internal Affairs |
Term Start5: | January 1917 |
Term End5: | July 1917 |
Office6: | President of Tsinghua University |
Term Start6: | January 1918 |
Term End6: | April 1918 |
Predecessor6: | Zhao Guocai |
Successor6: | Zhang Yuquan |
Fan Yuanlian | |
Native Name: | 范源濂 |
Native Name Lang: | zh |
Birth Date: | 1875 |
Birth Place: | Xiangyin County, Hunan, Qing Empire |
Death Place: | Tianjin, Republic of China |
Party: | Kuomintang |
Relations: | Fan Xudong (brother) |
Alma Mater: | Tokyo Normal College Hosei University |
Fan Yuanlian (; 1875 – 23 December 1927), courtesy name Jingsheng, was a Chinese educator and politician who served three separate terms as minister of Education of the Republic of China, from July 1912 to July 1913 and from July 1915 to November 1917, and briefly from August 1920 to December 1921. He also served as president of Tsinghua University from January 1918 to April 1918 and president of Beijing Normal University between July 1923 and September 1924.[1] He was the founding father of Nankai University.[2]
Fan was born in Xiangyin County, Hunan in 1875, during the late Qing dynasty. He had a younger brother named Fan Xudong (; 1883-1945). He attended the Qingquan School . After graduating from the School of Current Affairs in Changsha in 1898, he moved to Japan to commence graduate studies, where he studied at Datong School, Tokyo Normal College, Hongwen Academy, and Hosei University.[1] [3] During this period he befriended Yang Du.[4]
Fan returned China in 1904 and one year later he founded Tsinghua School with other educators in Beijing.[1] He established the Zhibian School in Beijing in 1909[3] with friends like Liang Qichao and Zhang Dongsun. It offered free classes and was capable of issuing diplomas.[5]
After establishment of the Republic of China in 1912, he was appointed vice-minister of Education in Tang Shaoyi's cabinet. In July of that same year, he succeeded Zhao Bingjun as the minister. He resigned in July 1913 and relocated to Shanghai as chief editor of Zhong Hua Book Company.[1] [3]
In the winner of 1915, he participated in the Anti-Yuan Shikai Movement. In July, he was named vice-minister of Education in Duan Qirui's cabinet. He put Cai Yuanpei forward as president of Tsinghua University. Fan concurrently served as minister of Internal Affairs between January 1917 and July 1917.[1] [3] In 1917, he became a supporting member of the Science Society of China.[6] In November 1917, he went to the United States on a countryside education investigation. In 1919 he founded Nankai University with Zhang Boling in Tianjin. In August 1920 he was appointed Ministry of Education, but having held the position for only three months. Then he went to the United States again and did a countryside education investigation. In July 1923, Beijing National Higher Normal School was renamed Beijing Normal University, Fan was unanimously chosen as its first president.[1] [3]
On 23 December 1927, he died of illness in Tianjin.[1] [3] Senior members of the Science Society commemorated him in the name of the, which established the Bulletin of the Fan Memorial Institute of Biology.[7]