NationStates Jolt Archive


The REAL General Tso(56k warn @ bottom though)

Sel Appa
29-09-2005, 23:38
I was wondering if there really was a General Tso, who the popular chinese food is named after. So a short wikisearch ande here we go:
Zuǒ Zōngtáng (November 10, 1812-September 5, 1885), spelled Tso Tsung-t'ang in Wade-Giles and known simply as General Tso to Westerners, was a gifted Chinese military leader born in Wenjialong, north of Changsha in Hunan province, during the waning of the Qing Dynasty. He served with brilliant distinction during China's most important (and the world's largest) civil war, the 14-year-long Taiping Rebellion, in which at least 30 million people lost their lives.

Zuo's career got an inauspicious start when as a young man he flunked the official court exams three times. All but giving up on public life, Zuo returned to his home by the River Hsiang in Hunan and resigned himself to a quiet life farming silkworms and tea. It was during the period that he first directed his attention to the study of Western sciences and political economy.

When the Taiping Rebellion broke out in 1850, Zuo, then 38 years old, was hired as an adviser to the governor of Hunan. In 1856, he was formally offered a position in the provincial government of Hunan. In 1860, Zuo was given command of a force of 5,000 volunteers, and in September of that year he drove the Taiping rebels out of Hunan and Guangxi provinces, into coastal Zhejiang. Zuo captured the large city of Shaoxing, and from there pushed south into Fujian and Guangdong provinces, where the revolt had first begun. In 1863, Zuo was appointed Governor of Zhejiang and Undersecretary of War. In August of 1864 Zuo, together with Zeng Guofan, dethroned the Taiping king, Hong Tianguifu, and brought an end to the rebellion. He was created an Earl for his part in suppressing the Rebellion.

In 1865, Zuo was appointed Viceroy and Governor-General of Fujian and Zhejiang. As Commissioner of Naval Industries, Zuo oversaw the erection of China's first modern shipyard and naval academy in Fuzhou the following year.

Zuo's successes would continue. In 1867, he became Viceroy and Governor General of Shaanxi and Gansu and Imperial Commissioner of the Army in Shaanxi. In these capacities, he succeeded in putting down another uprising, the Nian Rebellion in 1868. After this success, he marched west with his hundred-and-twenty-thousand strong army, winning many victories against the Muslims of Northwestern China including today's Shaanxi, Ningxia, Gansu and Qinghai provinces and Chinese Turkestan in the 1870s. In 1878, he successfully suppressed the Muslim uprising in Xinjiang and helped to negotiate an end to Russian occupation of the border city of Ili. For all his contributions to his nation and monarch, Zuo was appointed a Grand Secretary/Archchancellor of the Cabinet in 1874 and created a Marquess in 1878.

Now in his seventies, Zuo was appointed to the Board of War, the de facto Cabinet of the Chinese Empire at the time, in 1880. Uneasy with bureaucratic politics, Zuo asked to be relieved of his duties and was appointed Viceroy and Governor General of Jiangnan and Jiangxi instead in 1881. In 1884, upon the outbreak of the Sino-French War, Zuo received his fourth and last commission as commander-in-chief and Imperial Commissioner of an expedition force (this time Lord Admiral of the Navy as well, as the war with the French was fought in Fujian, a coastal province.) He died shortly before a truce was signed between the two nations, in Fuzhou (Foo-chow), 1885.

The Tso in General Tso is often mispronounced "Cho". This confusion arises because "Ts'" in Postal Pinyin is pronounced as "Ch". The correct pronunciation in Mandarin is "tswo".

http://www.projo.com/food/chefssecret/L_IMAGE.f9ffd119ea.93.88.fa.80.813ca939.jpghttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/ae/Zuo_Zongtang.jpg/200px-Zuo_Zongtang.jpg
Drunk commies deleted
29-09-2005, 23:41
Ok, now who was Sesame Chicken?
H N Fiddlebottoms VIII
29-09-2005, 23:52
Ok, now who was Sesame Chicken?
That was Corporal Sesame, who served alongside Lieutenants Stir-Fry and Mooshu.
If an army marches on its stomach, then Tso's marched very far indeed.