Zheng Yuxiu: Revolutionary, Assassin, and China's First Female Doctor of Law
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- Zheng Yuxiu, born in 1891, defied tradition by resisting foot-binding and pursuing modern education.
- She became a revolutionary, an assassin, and China's first female doctor of law, hailing from an influential family.
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Zheng Yuxiu was born in 1891 into an influential family and displayed a defiant independence from a young age, resisting traditional practices like foot-binding and pursuing modern education.
A revolutionary who once declared she was “no bird in a cage” became both an assassin and China’s first female doctor of law.
Born in 1891, Zheng Yuxiu grew up in an influential household. Her father served the Qing (1644–1912) government, her grandfather was a Hong Kong merchant, and her well-educated mother came from a military family.
From childhood, Zheng showed a defiant independence rare for her time.
After moving to Guangzhou in southern China, she attended a local school and successfully resisted her grandmother’s attempt to bind her feet, a painful practice rooted in the old belief that tiny feet were a mark of feminine beauty.
In 1903, Zheng moved to Beijing with her mother and received a modern education at a girls’ school.






