Cai Rukai

Cai Rukai (Chinese: 蔡儒楷; pinyin: Cài Rúkǎi; 1867 - 1923) was a Chinese politician and educator of the late Qing dynasty and early Republican period.

Cai Rukai
蔡儒楷
Cai Rukai
Minister of Education
In office
25 February 1914  1914
Preceded byWang Daxie
Succeeded byYan Xiu
President of National Peiyang University
In office
February 1913  March 1914
Preceded byXu Deyuan
Succeeded byZhao Tianlin
Supervisor of Imperial Peiyang University
In office
1909  November 1911
Preceded byCai Shaoji
Succeeded byXu Deyuan
Personal details
Born1867
Nanchang, Jiangxi, Qing China
Died1923 (aged 5556)
Beijing, Republic of China
Political partyCommunist Party of China
RelationsYing Qianli (Son-in-law)
ChildrenCai Baozhen (daughter)
ParentCai Yuan (father)

Biography

Cai was born in Nanchang, Jiangxi in 1867. During the reign of Guangxu Emperor in the Qing dynasty, he successfully achieved the rank of Juren (traditional Chinese: 舉人; simplified Chinese: 举人) on the imperial examination.

In January 1906 he became supervisor of Imperial Peiyang University, and served until December 1911. In 1912, after the establishment of the Republic of China, he became director of Zhili Education Bureau, a position at provincial level. Under the Beiyang government, he served as President of National Peiyang University between February 1913 and March 1914, and then he rose to become Minister of Education. In December 1915, after Yuan Shikai's accession to the throne, Yuan conferred the title of "Barons of the First Rank" (一等男) to him.[1] In 1921 he was appointed general manager of Nanchang–Jiujiang railway, serving in the post until he died in 1923.

Personal life

Cai has a daughter, Cai Baozhen (蔡葆真), who once served as president of Beijing Children's Library, she was married to Ying Qianli (19001969), a prominent Catholic layman and educator.[2]

References

  1. "List of president of Tianjin University" (in Chinese (China)). Tianjin University. 2010. Archived from the original on 2018-03-30. Retrieved 2018-03-30.
  2. 英氏家族成功奥秘:蒋介石为英千里题匾. Huaxia (in Chinese). 2010-01-25.

Additional sources

  • Lai Xinxia (2000). History of Peiyang Army. Tianjin: Nankai University Press. ISBN 7-310-01517-7.
  • Xu Youchun (2007). Dictionary of Republican Period Figures. Shijiazhuang, Hebei: Hebei People's Publishing House. ISBN 978-7-202-03014-1.
  • Liu Shoulin (1995). Official Chronology of the Republic of China (1912–1949). Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company. ISBN 7-101-01320-1.
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