Category
page 1People from Manchukuo
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Puyi
Puyi (; 7 February 190617 October 1967) was the last emperor of China, reigning as the eleventh monarch of the Qing dynasty from 1908 to 1912, and a brief return in 1917, when he was forced to abdicate. Later, he sided with Imperial Japan and was made ruler of Manchukuo—Japanese-occupied Manchuria—in hopes of regaining power as China's emperor. After over 10 years of imprisonment for war crimes following the end of World War II, Puyi worked for four years as a gardener in Beijing, China.
Yōsuke Matsuoka
Japanese politician (1880-1946)
Yoshiko Kawashima
Japanese spy in China (1907-1948)
Grigory Semyonov
Russian white Cossack general (1890–1946)
Konstantin Rodzaevsky
Russian Fascist (1907-1946)
Kanji Ishiwara
general in the Imperial Japanese Army (1889-1949)
Jewish settlement in the Japanese Empire
event that occurred around World War II
Luo Zhenyu
Qing Dynasty scholar (1866-1940)
Genrikh Lyushkov
Russian revolutionary (1900-1945)
Muhammed-Gabdulkhay Kurbangaliev
Islamic leader, public and political figure in Bashkortostan, Russia, and in Japan. 20th century
Tom Meschery
American basketball player-coach
Lev Okhotin
Russian fascist (1911-1948)
Masahiko Amakasu
Officer/Imperial Japanese army (1891-1945)

Zang Shiyi
Chinese collaborator with Japan
Shigeo Ōdachi
Japanese bureaucrat, cabinet minister (1892-1955)

Vladimir Kislitsin
Russian counter revolutionary (1883-1944)
Konstantin Petrovich Nechaev
Russian White émigré (1883–1946)

Yuyan
Yuyan (17 May 1918 – 18 January 1999), courtesy name Yanrui, nickname Xiaoruizi, was a Chinese calligrapher of Manchu descent. He was a member of the Aisin Gioro clan, the imperial clan of the Qing dynasty. He claimed that he was appointed by Puyi, the last Emperor of China, as the heir to the throne. His claim is the subject of the travel adventure book The Empty Throne by British journalist Tony Scotland.
Abraham Kaufman
doctor, zionist (1885–1971)

Ding Chao
Chinese general
Yuzhan
Yuzhan (, 28 November 1923 – 8 July 2016), courtesy name Jungu (), was a Chinese calligrapher of Manchu descent. He was a member of the Aisin Gioro clan, the imperial clan of the Manchu-led Qing dynasty. He was also the seventh son of Puwei () and a great-grandson of Yixin (Prince Gong).
Amleto Vespa
Italian mercenary

Sando
Qing dynasty and Republic of China official who was the last Qing viceroy of Mongolia
Ivan Adrianovich Mikhailov
Russian economist and politician (1891-1946)
Shiina Etsusaburo
Japanese bureaucrat and politician (1898-1979)

Harumichi Tanabe
Bureaucrat, Cabinet Minister (1879-1950)
Sasaki Tōichi
Japanese soldier and China expert