Zhang Youyi Explained

Zhang Youyi (Chang Yu-i)
Birth Date:1900
Birth Place:Shanghai, China
Death Place:New York City, United States
Occupation:Banker, educator
Spouse:Xu Zhimo
Su Jizhi (m.1954 wid.1972)
Children:Hsu Chi-kai (b. 1918)
Peter Hsu De-sheng (1922-1925)
Relations:Natasha Chang Pang-mei (grand niece)

Zhang Youyi (; 1900–1989)[1] [2] was a Chinese educator, banker, and the first wife of the Chinese poet Xu Zhimo. With assistance from her brother Chang Kia-ngau, who was the general manager of Bank of China, she ran her own bank, Shanghai Women's Savings Bank.

Early life

In 1912, when Zhang Youyi was aged 12, she found an advertisement in the newspaper Shen Bao about a girls' school in Suzhou called the Teachers' College Preparatory School. She proposed the idea of attending to her parents and they agreed. She was admitted after passing the entrance exam, along with her elder sister. However, in the 1913, her brother Zhang Gongquan arranged for her marriage with Xu Zhimo, a rising poet and son of a rich businessman. Upon her parents' urging, Zhang quit school and returned home in 1915 to prepare for her wedding.

Marriage

She married the prominent poet Xu Zhimo (Hsu Chih-mo), and gave birth to two sons, Hsu Chi-kai (born 1918) and Peter Hsu (1922  - 1925). After giving birth to Peter, Youyi received a letter from her estranged husband, declaring his intentions to divorce. In his letter, Xu reasoned that "marriage not based on love was intolerable." Zhang consented, and signed the divorce papers. Their separation was the first legal divorce based on the Civil Law in China.[3]

Career

Zhang settled in Berlin in 1922. She studied German intensively for a few months, then enrolled at the Pestalozzi Furberhaus, a kindergarten teachers' college that espoused the philosophy of Swiss educator Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi.

Her younger son died of peritonitis in 1925. Upon her return from Europe in early 1927, she worked as a German lecturer at the Soochow University, then opened Shanghai's first garments corporation, manufacturing and selling fashionable women's dresses. In 1928, she accepted her brother's offer to serve as the vice president of the Shanghai Women's Commercial and Savings Bank.[4] She traded actively in the stock market and managed the finances of the China Democratic Socialist Party (1946-) with the assistance of her elder brother, Carsun Chang (Zhang Junmai 张君劢).

After Zhimo Xu's death in a plane crash, Zhang participated in the editing and publication of his poetry anthology. She moved to Hong Kong in April 1949. In 1953, she married doctor Jizhi Su in Tokyo. Together they lived for 18 years.

On her struggle for independence, Zhang once said: "I always think of my life as 'before Germany' and 'after Germany'. Before Germany, I was afraid of everything. After Germany, I was afraid of nothing."[3]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.nytimes.com/1996/10/14/books/too-modern-for-old-china-and-paying-a-price.html "Too Modern for Old China, and Paying a Price"
  2. Web site: Chang Yu-Yi Is Dead; Bank Official Was 88. 2019-06-08. The New York Times. 2019-04-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20190608094927/https://www.nytimes.com/1989/01/24/obituaries/chang-yu-yi-is-dead-bank-official-was-88.html. live.
  3. Book: Chang . Pang-Mei Natasha . Bound feet and Western dress . 2011 . Random House . 9781446488607 . 26 November 2019 .
  4. Book: Zhaojin . Ji . A History of Modern Shanghai Banking: The Rise and Decline of China's Financial Capitalism: The Rise and Decline of China's Financial Capitalism . 2016 . Routledge . 9781317478072 . 26 November 2019.