Honorific Prefix: | First Class adaha hafan |
Luo Bingzhang | |
Office: | Assistant Grand Secretary |
Term Start: | 1867 |
Term End: | 1867 |
Office1: | Viceroy of Sichuan |
Term Start1: | 1860 |
Term End1: | 1867 |
Predecessor1: | Chongshi |
Successor1: | Wu Tang |
Office2: | Governor of Hunan |
Term Start2: | 1853 |
Term End2: | 1860 |
Predecessor2: | Pan Yi |
Successor2: | Zhai Gao |
Term Start3: | 1850 |
Term End3: | 1852 |
Predecessor3: | Feng Dexin |
Successor3: | Zhang Liangji |
Education: | Jinshi degree in the Imperial Examination |
Birth Date: | 9 January 1793 |
Birth Place: | Xiangxiang, Guangdong, China |
Death Place: | Chengdu, Sichuan, China |
Occupation: | Statesman, general, scholar |
Allegiance: | Qing Empire |
Branch: | Xiang Army |
Battles: | Taiping Rebellion |
Luo Bingzhang (courtesy names Yumen 籲門 and Ruzhai 儒齋; posthumous name: Wenzhong 文忠; (January 9, 1793 – September 1, 1867) was a Han Chinese official, military general, and devout Confucian scholar of the late Qing Dynasty in China.
Luo raised the Green Standard Army and helped create the Xiang Army to fight effectively against the Taiping Rebellion and restore the stability of the Qing Dynasty. He was known for his strategic perception, administrative skill, but also sometimes for his ruthlessness in the execution of his policies, he arrested Shi Dakai.
Luo was born in Hua County, Guangdong in 1793. In 1832, at age 39, he earned the Jinshi degree, the highest level of the imperial examinations, which led to his appointment to the Hanlin Academy, a body of outstanding Chinese literary scholars who performed literary tasks for the imperial court. Luo served in Beijing for more than 16 years.
Luo was one of noted calligraphers in Qing Dynasty. Now stored in the Museum of Foshan.