Michael Fu Tieshan
Bishop Fu Tieshan | |
---|---|
傅铁山 | |
Bishop Michael Fu Tieshan | |
President of Catholic Patriotic Association | |
In office 10th National People's Congress | |
In office 1998–2010 | |
Preceded by | Joseph Zong Huaide |
Succeeded by | Anthony Liu (acting) John Fang Xingyao |
Vice Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress | |
In office 2003–2007 | |
Personal details | |
Born | (1931-11-03)November 3, 1931 Qingyuan County, Hebei Province, China |
Died | April 20, 2007(2007-04-20) (aged 75) Beijing, China |
Bishop Michael Fu Tieshan (Simplified Chinese: 傅铁山, Traditional Chinese: 傅鐵山; November 3, 1931 – April 20, 2007) of Beijing was a top leader of the Catholic Patriotic Association.
Biography
Fu was born in Qingyuan County,Hebei province. He served as a priest, and in 1979 was made a bishop by Beijing. The appointment lacked the approval of the pope. He was appointed chairman of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association in 1998. He was acting president of the government-recognized Bishops' Conference of the Catholic Church in China. He was named vice chairman of the standing committee of the National People's Congress, China's legislature, in 2003.
Fu died in Beijing Hospital from lung cancer. His death was announced in Beijing by the Xinhua news agency.
Anthony Liu Bainian, vice chairman of the Patriotic Association, told UCA News, an Asian church news agency, that Fu wanted to "see his priests, whom he hasn't met for a long time" due to his long illness.
He was succeeded by Joseph Li Shan.
References
- (April 22, 2007). Fu Tieshan, 76; bishop of Chinese church. The Los Angeles Times
External links
- Beijing Bishop Michael Fu Tieshan, 75, dies. Catholic News Service at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived 2007-05-08)
- Patriotic Church bishop critically ill. AsiaNews
- Fu Tieshan, "tragic" figure of the Chinese Patriotic Church, dies. AsiaNews
Catholic Church titles | ||
---|---|---|
Previous: Joseph Zong Huaide | President of the Catholic Patriotic Association 1998-2010 | Next: John Fang Xingyao |
- v
- t
- e
(1954–1959)
(1959–1964)
- Lin Boqu
- Li Jishen
- Luo Ronghuan
- Shen Junru
- Guo Moruo
- Huang Yanpei
- Peng Zhen
- Li Weihan
- Chen Shutong
Tenzin Gyatso, Dalai Lama(fled 1959; dismissed 1964)- Saifuddin Azizi
- Cheng Qian
Choekyi Gyaltsen, Panchen Erdeni(removed 1964)- He Xiangning
- Liu Bocheng
- Lin Feng
(1964–1975)
(1975–1978)
(1978–1983)
- Soong Ching-ling (died 1981)
- Nie Rongzhen (resigned 1980)
- Liu Bocheng (resigned 1980)
- Ulanhu
- Wu De (resigned 1980)
- Wei Guoqing
- Chen Yun
- Guo Moruo (died 1978)
- Tan Zhenlin
- Li Jingquan
- Zhang Dingcheng (resigned 1980; died 1981)
- Cai Chang (resigned 1980)
- Deng Yingchao
- Saifuddin Azizi
- Liao Chengzhi
- Ji Pengfei (secretary-general; resigned 1980)
- Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme
- Zhou Jianren (resigned 1980)
- Xu Deheng
- Hu Juewen
- Peng Zhen (added 1979)
- Xiao Jinguang (added 1979)
- Zhu Yunshan (added 1979; died 1981)
- Shi Liang (added 1979)
- Peng Chong (added 1980)
- Xi Zhongxun (added 1980)
- Su Yu (added 1980)
- Yang Shangkun (added 1980; secretary-general)
- Choekyi Gyaltsen, Panchen Erdeni (added 1980)
- Zhu Xuefan (added 1981)
(1983–1988)
(1988–1993)
(1993–1998)
(1998–2003)
- Tian Jiyun
- Xie Fei
- Jiang Chunyun
- Zou Jiahua
- Pagbalha Geleg Namgyai
- Wang Guangying
- Cheng Siyuan
- Buhe
- Tömür Dawamat
- Wu Jieping
- Peng Peiyun
- He Luli
- Zhou Guangzhao
Cheng Kejie(dismissed & executed 2000)- Cao Zhi
- Ding Shisun
- Cheng Siwei
- Xu Jialu
- Jiang Zhenghua
(2003–2008)
- Wang Zhaoguo
- Li Tieying
- Ismail Amat
- He Luli
- Ding Shisun
- Cheng Siwei
- Xu Jialu
- Jiang Zhenghua
- Gu Xiulian
- Raidi
- Sheng Huaren
- Lu Yongxiang
- Uyunqimg
- Han Qide
- Fu Tieshan
(2008–2013)
(2013–2018)
(2018–2023)
(2023–2028)
This article about a Chinese politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e