About the Emperor Du of Shanghai

Du should be judged by War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.

Before the Anti-Japanese War, he was indeed a desperate counter-revolutionary. The reason was 1927. In April, Du, Du, Du, Du and Du organized a meeting in China to act as thugs for Chiang Kai-shek to suppress the revolutionary movement. On the evening of April 1 1, he tricked and killed Wang Shouhua, the leader of the Shanghai workers' movement, and then ordered the hooligans to suppress the workers' pickets. He therefore won the support of Chiang Kai-shek.

After War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression started, he became a national hero again. Driven by the national anti-Japanese voice, Du participated in the anti-Japanese support clubs from all walks of life in Shanghai, serving as a member of the presidium and director of the fundraising committee. He took part in the activities of the army, raised a lot of towels, cigarettes and canned food, and sent them to the anti-enemy support club. He got some badly needed communication equipment and armored insurance vehicles for the generals in China. At the request of Pan Hannian, the representative of the Eighth Route Army in Shanghai, he presented 1000 pairs of gas masks imported from abroad to the Eighth Route Army. After the fall of Shanghai, Du refused to defeat the Japanese army and moved to Hong Kong in June +0937+065438+ 10. In Hong Kong, he used his gang connections to continue his activities. He used to be the vice president of China Red Cross Society, the standing committee member of the Relief Committee, and the chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Committee for the Unification of Party and Government, engaged in activities such as intelligence and plotting to assassinate traitors. One of the most famous is that his disciples in Shanghai helped the military spy chop up the big traitor and fake Shanghai mayor Fu Kuaian.

The seventh son of later generations is famous all over the world: Du's seventh son, who bombed the sea that year. Born in Shanghai in the 1930s, he studied calligraphy and ancient prose when he was young, and was deeply influenced by traditional culture. He studied geology in college, and after graduation, he worked in an office and was not keen on collecting. However, at the age of 32, the chance to get five coins at a time changed his life track. Mr Du Weishan is not only a coin collector, but also a scholar. He used money to prove history and traced, discovered and supplemented history from ancient money. What is even more rare is that he donated a large number of precious coins to domestic museums with his own collection, benefiting the whole world.