Tang Bowen (1September 20, 900 ~1June 29, 954), a native of Tangcun, Wuyi, Jinhua, Zhejiang, was a senior general of the Kuomintang army.
Tang 1920 joined the Fujian-Zhejiang Military Lecture Hall and served as the platoon leader of Zhejiang Army 1 Division after graduation; 1923, under the sponsorship of his good friend Bao, he went to Japan together at the invitation of his primary school classmates and the richest boy in Wuyi. The following year, he was admitted to the Faculty of Law of Tokyo University, and then dropped out of school because the tuition fee was less than March 1925. In the same year, under the recommendation of Chen Yi, Tang entered the artillery department of the Japanese Army NCO School to study. /kloc-in the summer of 0/926, Tang Xuecheng returned to China and served as the main staff of Chen Yi's department.
1926 10 Tang went to the National Revolutionary Army with Chen Yi. From 65438 to 0928, Tang served as an instructor in the Central Army Military Academy. While at school, he wrote a study on Coach of Infantry Squadron (Company), which was deeply appreciated by Chiang Kai-shek. During the Northern Expedition, Tang worked for Chiang Kai-shek and made a fortune from then on. After the outbreak of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, Tang fought bravely and led 400,000 soldiers to occupy the Central Plains. However, due to military discipline, the people are deeply dissatisfied. After 1949, Tang went to Taiwan Province Province, where he no longer worked, and died in Japan on 1954.