Wade-Giles romanization:
Yen-an

Yan’an, city, northern Shaanxi sheng (province), north-central China. It became famous as the wartime stronghold of the Chinese Communist Party from the mid-1930s to 1949. Yan’an is on the heavily dissected Loess Plateau, which consists of loess (windblown soil) that is deeply etched by gullies. The city stands on the south bank of the Yan River in a basin surrounded by hills. It is a road junction for northeast Shaanxi and was a strategic town in historical times, being located near the border between the part of Shaanxi where agriculture is practicable and the arid lands to the north that merge into the Ordos Plateau.

The name Yan’an was first given to the commandery (district controlled by a commander) set up there in 607 ce by the Sui dynasty (581–618). It was a vital frontier post under the Tang dynasty (618–907). It served as part of the defenses of the Song dynasty (960–1279) against the northwestern Xi (Western) Xia dynasty (1038–1227) and was the scene of a crucial victory by Mongol armies over the forces of the Jin (Juchen) dynasty in 1221. Since the 15th century the importance of the area has declined. It was badly affected by Muslim uprisings of 1864–75; by droughts and famines of the 1870s, which decimated the population; and by the almost equally disastrous droughts of the 1920s and ’30s, which depopulated whole counties in the area.

The communist armies, driven from their bases in the Jiangxi Soviet areas by the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) in 1934, eventually reached Yan’an after their epic 6,000-mile (9,600-km) Long March (1934–35). They made the town their headquarters during the Sino-Japanese War (1937–45) and during the subsequent civil war that brought communist victory in 1949. Yan’an has thus come to represent a symbol of the heroic phase of the Chinese communist revolution, when the leadership of Mao Zedong was firmly established and the communists mastered both guerrilla warfare and the peasant-based reform policies that were to bring them to power in 1949. Remote Yan’an stands as a national shrine for the communist government, which recalls the spirit and example of its pioneer period.

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The contemporary city itself is a relatively minor place. The original walled settlement was ruined by Japanese bombing in 1938–39. Yan’an is at the center of a district that has suffered seriously from soil erosion but which has begun to be reclaimed as part of the vast scheme for the development of the Huang He (Yellow River) drainage region. The surrounding area has been increasingly devoted to livestock, and the town has a long-established woolen textile industry.

The whole area lies in a rich coal- and oil-bearing plain. Oil was discovered at Yanchang about 22 miles (35 km) to the east early in the 20th century, and a small amount was produced in the 1930s. The oil field has been further developed since 1949 but still remains small. Nonetheless, oil production and coal mining have become mainstays of the city’s economy, along with cigarette making and the generation of electric power.

Yan’an has become the communications center of northern Shaanxi. A rail line from the city south to Xi’an (the provincial capital) has been extended to Shenmu in the northern part of Shaanxi and from there eastward into Shanxi province and northward into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The airport provides regular flights to Xi’an, Beijing and other Chinese cities. There is a good network of highways in the region; an expressway from Xi’an has reached the city and also has been extended northward into Inner Mongolia. There are some 100 historical sites north of the old walled town that are related to the communists’ wartime presence there, and the area is a popular tourist destination. Pop. (2020) 488,216.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Ethan Teekah.
Quick Facts
Date:
October 15, 1934 - October 1935
Location:
China
Participants:
Chinese Communist Party

Long March, (1934–35), the 6,000-mile (10,000-km) historic trek of the Chinese communists, which resulted in the relocation of the communist revolutionary base from southeastern to northwestern China and in the emergence of Mao Zedong as the undisputed party leader. Fighting Nationalist forces under Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) throughout their journey, the communist troops crossed 18 mountain ranges and 24 rivers to reach the northwestern province of Shaanxi. The heroism attributed to the Long March inspired many young Chinese to join the Chinese Communist Party during the late 1930s and early 1940s.

Between 1930 and 1934 Chiang Kai-shek launched a series of five military encirclement campaigns against the Chinese communists in an attempt to annihilate their base area (the Jiangxi Soviet) on the border between Jiangxi and Fujian in southeastern China. The communists successfully fought off the first four campaigns using tactics of mobile infiltration and guerrilla warfare developed by Mao. In the fifth campaign Chiang mustered about 700,000 troops and established a series of cement blockhouses around the communist positions. The Chinese communist Central Committee, which had removed Mao from the leadership early in 1934, abandoned his guerrilla warfare strategy and used regular positional warfare tactics against the better-armed and more-numerous Nationalist forces. As a result, the communist forces suffered heavy losses and were nearly crushed.

In October 1934 the remaining 86,000 troops in the Jiangxi-Fujian border base—including administrative personnel and some 30 women—broke through the Nationalist lines at their weakest points and fled westward. Mao, at the time of the communists’ departure, was not in control of events; Zhu De was the commander of the army, and Zhou Enlai was the political commissar of the party. The first three months of the march were disastrous for the communists: subjected to constant bombardment from Chiang’s air force and repeated attacks from his ground troops, they lost more than half of their army. Morale was low when they arrived in Zunyi, in the southwestern province of Guizhou, but at a conference there in January 1935 Mao was able to gather enough support to establish his dominance of the party.

The march then headed toward northwestern China, near the safety of the Soviet border and close to the territory occupied by the Japanese in northeastern China. In June 1935 a force that had been in the Sichuan-Shaanxi border area under Zhang Guotao, a longtime communist leader, joined the main army, and at Mao’ergai in northern Sichuan a power struggle ensued between Mao and Zhang. Zhang’s group, accompanied by Zhu De, headed toward the extreme southwestern part of China. The main body under Mao proceeded toward northern Shaanxi, where the communist leaders Gao Gang and Liu Zhidan had built up another base. Mao arrived at this destination in October 1935 along with only about 8,000 survivors. Along the route, some communists had left the march to mobilize the peasantry, but most of the missing had been eliminated by fighting, disease, and starvation. Among the missing were Mao’s two small children and his younger brother, Mao Zetan, who, although he had not been on the Long March, had been a guerrilla fighter in Jiangxi before dying in April 1935.

Mao’s troops joined the local Red Army contingent of 7,000 men. The subsequent arrival of other units (including that of Zhu De) swelled their total strength by late 1936 to about 30,000 troops. In December 1936 the communists moved to the nearby district of Yan’an in Shaanxi, where they remained throughout the Sino-Japanese War (1937–45). The Long March had decisively established Mao’s leadership of the Chinese Communist Party and had enabled the embattled communists to reach a base area beyond the direct control of the Nationalists. From their base at Yan’an, the communists grew in strength and eventually defeated the Nationalists in the struggle to control mainland China.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.