NO.1 Chiang Kai-shek, a native of Fenghua, Zhejiang, a special general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in April 1935), the leader of the Chiang faction, and the actual controller of the Nationalist Government.
In April 1975, he died of a heart attack in Taipei.
N0.2 Li Zongren, a native of Lingui, Guangxi, was a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (conferred in April 1935), a leader of the Xingui lineage, and the first vice president and acting president of the Republic of China.
In January 1969, he died of emphysema in Beijing.
N0.3 Chen Cheng, a native of Qingtian, Zhejiang, was a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in February 1947), the head of the Civil Engineering Department (Chen faction), and an important deputy of Chiang Kai-shek in the later period.
In March 1965, he died of liver cancer in Taipei.
N0.4 Bai Chongxi, a native of Lingui, Guangxi, was a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in October 1945), the second person in the Xingui lineage, and held the actual command of the Gui Army.
In December 1966, he died of a heart attack (one said that he was poisoned by Chiang Kai-shek's spies).
N0.5 He Yingqin, a native of Xingyi, Guizhou, was a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in April 1935), the leader of the Huangpu Instructor Department (He faction), and an important deputy of Chiang Kai-shek in the early middle and early periods.
In October 1987, he died of cardiopulmonary failure in Taipei.
N0.6 Gu Zhutong, a native of Lianshui, Jiangsu, was a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in July 1954), a confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, and one of the five tiger generals of the Central Army.
In October 1987, he died of cerebral microvascular embolism in Taipei.
N0.7 Chen Guofu, a native of Wuxing, Zhejiang, a close confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, and the head of the CC department.
In August 1951, he died in Taipei.
N0.8 Chen Lifu, a native of Wuxing, Zhejiang, Chen Guofu's brother, a close confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, and the head of the CC department.
In February 2001, he died in Taichung.
NO.9 Kong Xiangxi, a native of Taigu, Shanxi, Chiang Kai-shek's brother-in-law, and a representative of the Kong family.
He died in New York in August 1967.
NO.10 Song Ziwen, a native of Wenchang, Hainan, Song Meiling's brother, and a representative of the Song family.
He died in San Francisco in April 1971.
NO.11 Zhang Qun, a native of Huayang, Sichuan, is the head of the Department of New Political Science.
In December 1990, he died of kidney failure in Taipei.
NO.12 Weng Wenhao, a native of Yinxian County, Zhejiang, is a famous scholar and geologist, and the first executive premier after the constitution of the Kuomintang.
In January 1971, he died in Beijing.
NO.13 Sun Ke, a native of Xiangshan, Guangdong, the eldest son of Sun Yat-sen, the leader of the princeling faction, served as the premier of the National Government from November 1948 to March 1949.
In September 1973, he died of a heart attack in Taipei.
NO.14 Wu Tiecheng, a native of Jiujiang, Jiangxi, is the backbone of the Department of New Political Science, Vice President of the Executive Yuan and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sun Ke's Cabinet.
In November 1953, he died in Taipei.
NO.15 Wang Yunwu, a native of Shanghai, a modern publisher, was a member of the Executive Yuan and Minister of Finance, and under the instruction of Chiang Kai-shek, he proposed a currency reform plan.
In August 1979, he died of a heart attack.
NO.16 Dai Jitao, a native of Guanghan, Sichuan, a veteran of the Kuomintang, a Kuomintang theoretical propagandist, and a think tank of Chiang Kai-shek.
In February 1949, he committed suicide by taking sleeping pills.
NO.17 Wu Dingchang, a native of Wuxing, Zhejiang, is the backbone of the New Political Science Department, and served as the Secretary-General of the Presidential Office after the Constitution of the Kuomintang.
In August 1950, he died of cancer.
NO.18 Xiong Shihui, a righteous man in Jiangxi, the head of the New Political Science Department, and a second-level general of the National Revolutionary Army.
In June 1974, he died of illness in Taichung.
NO.19 Zhang Lisheng, a native of Leting, Hebei, the former head of the CC department, was friendly with Chen Cheng, and was named as a member of the Executive Yuan during the Sun Ke cabinet.
In April 1971, he died in Taipei.
NO.20 Zhu Jiahua, a native of Wuxing, Zhejiang, an educator, scientist, politician, and a representative of the Kuomintang Studying in Germany, served as vice president of the Executive Yuan of the National Government in Guangzhou in the summer of 1949.
In January 1963, he died of a heart attack in Taipei.
NO.21 Wang Shijie, a native of Chongyang, Hubei, a Kuomintang bureaucrat, once held Chongqing negotiations with Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and other CCP representatives as one of the representatives of the Kuomintang, during which he vigorously denied the legal status of the liberated areas and the people's army under the leadership of the Communist Party.
In April 1981, he died in Taipei.
NO.22 Gu Weijun, a native of Jiading (now Shanghai), Jiangsu, a diplomat, was the thirteenth head of state of the Beiyang government. When he was ambassador to the United States, he worked hard to win United States support for the Kuomintang's civil war policy.
He died of heart failure in New York in November 1985.
NO.23 Song Meiling, a native of Wenchang, Hainan, was born in Shanghai, Mrs. Chiang Kai-shek, and a representative of the Song family.
He died in New York in October 2003.
NO.24 Wu Guozhen, the founder of Hubei, Chiang Kai-shek's staff, in December 1949, the Nationalist government moved to Taipei, Chiang Kai-shek appointed him to replace Chen Cheng as chairman of Taiwan Province and commander of security, and political councilor of the Executive Yuan, in order to use Wu's image as "Mr. Democracy" to "go all out to win US aid."
In June 1984, he died in his apartment in Savannah, Georgia, United States.
NO.25 Liu Zhi, a native of Ji'an, Jiangxi, a second-class general of the National Revolutionary Army, a confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, one of the five tiger generals of the Central Army, and the commander-in-chief of Xuzhou's "suppression of the Communist Party" during the Liberation War.
In January 1971, he died in Taiwan.
NO.26 Cheng Qian, a native of Liling, Hunan, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in May 1939), a veteran of the Kuomintang, served as the director of the Hunan Pacification Office and the provincial chairman at the end of the Liberation War, and held the military and political power in Hunan.
In April 1968, he died in Beijing due to hemorrhage caused by pneumonia.
NO.27 Xue Yue, a native of Shaoguan, Guangdong, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in September 1965), the leader of the Guangdong Army, attached to Chen Cheng, successively served as the chairman of the Guangdong Provincial Government and the commander-in-chief of Hainan Defense after the Huaihai Campaign.
He died in Taiwan in May 1998.
NO.28 Wei Lihuang, a native of Hefei, Anhui Province, a second-class general of the National Revolutionary Army, one of the five tiger generals of the Central Army, served as the commander-in-chief of the Northeast "Suppression of the Communist Party" during the Liberation War.
In January 1960, he died of illness in Beijing.
NO.29 Yu Hanmou, a high-ranking person in Guangdong, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in September 1965), the leader of the Guangdong Army, attached to Chiang Kai-shek, successively served as the director of the Guangzhou Pacification Office, the military and political chief of South China, and the deputy director of the Hainan Special Administrative Region Administrative Office after the Huaihai Campaign.
In December 1981, he died in Taipei.
NO.30 Hu Zongnan, a native of Zhenhai, Zhejiang, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (posthumously presented in February 1962), the leader of the Whampoa Student Department (Hu faction), a close confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, served as the deputy military and political governor of the Northwest and the director of the Xi'an Pacification Office during the Liberation War.
In February 1962, he died of illness in Taipei.
NO.31 Fu Zuoyi, a native of Linyi, Shanxi, a second-class general of the National Revolutionary Army, the leader of the Fu Zuoyi faction of the Jin Army, and the commander of the "Suppression" in North China during the Liberation War.
In April 1974, he died in Beijing.
NO.32 Yan Xishan, a native of Wutai, Shanxi, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in April 1935), the leader of the Yan Xishan faction of the Jin Army, and a local powerful faction in Shanxi.
In May 1960, he died in Taipei.
NO.33 Zhou Zhirou, a native of Linhai, Zhejiang, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in May 1951), one of the four King Kongs of the Department of Civil Engineering, and the commander-in-chief of the Air Force during the Liberation War.
In August 1986, he died in Taipei.
NO.34 Wang Shuming, a native of Zhucheng, Shandong, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in December 1958), served as deputy commander-in-chief of the Air Force during the Liberation War.
In October 1998, he died in Taipei.
NO.35 Gui Yongqing, a native of Guixi, Jiangxi, a first-class general of the National Revolutionary Army (awarded in June 1954), a general of the civil engineering department, and the commander-in-chief of the Navy during the Liberation War.
In August 1954, he died in Taipei.
NO.36 Du Yuming, a native of Mizhi, Shaanxi, is a lieutenant general of the National Revolutionary Army, the head of the Fifth Army, and successively served as the commander of the Northeast Security Command and the deputy commander of the "Suppression" in Xuzhou during the Liberation War.
In May 1981, he died of kidney failure in Beijing.
NO.37 Tang Enbo, a native of Wuyi, Zhejiang, a second-class general of the National Revolutionary Army, the leader of the non-commissioned officer department (Tang faction), and the commander-in-chief of the Beijing-Shanghai-Hangzhou garrison at the end of the Liberation War.
In June 1954, he died at Keio University Hospital in Tokyo, Japan (one said to have been murdered by a Japanese doctor).
NO.38 Sun Liren, a native of Lujiang, Anhui, a second-class general of the National Revolutionary Army, a representative figure of the American faction, was appointed as the commander of Taiwan's defense at the end of the Liberation War, and ran Taiwan together with Chen Cheng.
In November 1990, he died in Taiwan.
NO.39 Ma Hongkui, Hui nationality, native of Hezhou, Gansu, lieutenant general of the National Revolutionary Army plus the rank of general, leader of Ningma, deputy military and political chief of Northwest China at the end of the Liberation War.
In January 1970, he died in Los Angeles, United States.
NO.40 Ma Bufang, Hui nationality, a native of Hezhou, Gansu, a lieutenant general of the National Revolutionary Army with the rank of general, the leader of the Qingma, and the chief of the Northwest Military and Political Affairs at the end of the Liberation War.
He died in Saudi Arabia in July 1975.
NO.41 Tao Xisheng, a native of Huanggang, Hubei, was an authoritative theoretician of the Kuomintang, and actively created public opinion for the Kuomintang to implement one-party dictatorship and implement reactionary policies.
In June 1988, he died in Taipei.
NO.42 Zeng Qi, a native of Longchang, Sichuan, is the leader of the Chinese Youth Party and the chairman of the presidium of the puppet "National Assembly".
In May 1951, he died in Washington, United States.
NO.43 Zhang Junmao, a native of Baoshan (now Shanghai), Jiangsu, is the leader of the Democratic Socialist Party of China.
In February 1969, he died in San Francisco, United States.