Da jiang 大將 | |
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![]() ![]() ![]() Army, navy and air force* insignia *never conferred | |
Country | ![]() |
Service branch | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Rank group | General officer |
Rank | Four-star rank |
Formation | 1955 |
Abolished | 1965 |
Next higher rank | Yuan shuai |
Next lower rank | Shangjiang |
Da jiang (simplified Chinese: 大将; traditional Chinese: 大將; pinyin: dà jiàng; lit. 'grand general') was a rank conferred in 1955 to ten veteran leaders of the People's Liberation Army. It was never conferred again and the rank was abolished in 1965 along with all other ranks in the PLA. It was considered equivalent to the Soviet rank of Army General (генера́л а́рмии; general armii) and may be considered a five-star rank, although the insignia itself had only four due to the fact that China does not have brigadier general as a rank.
When ranks were reintroduced in 1988, the equivalent rank was given a different name Yiji Shangjiang (lit. 'first grade general'), perhaps so as to differentiate it from the ten original holders of the rank. Deng Xiaoping was offered the rank, which he, like he did with the rank of Marshal in 1955, declined, citing Chairman Mao's refusal to take the rank of Grand Marshal. Two of the original ten da jiang were still alive when ranks were reintroduced in 1988, Tan Zheng and Xiao Jingguang, but both had by then retired and therefore were not given the rank of Yiji Shangjiang. Thus ultimately, no one was ever named to the new rank and it was discontinued in 1994.
List of the ten da jiang
In the order of the official rank made in 1955: