Huang Jun (author)
Huang Jun (1890–1937), courtesy name Qiuyue, art name Huangsuirensheng An, was a Chinese writer and spy. He is best known for Huasuirensheng An Zhiyi, a collection of late Qing dynasty anecdotes.
Born into a prestigious Fuzhou family, his father Huang Yanhong was a juren. After Taiwan was ceded to Japan, the family moved to Beijing. At 17 he graduated from the Imperial University of Peking (later Peking University) with a juren degree and studied at Waseda University in Japan.
In 1932 he became secretary of the Executive Yuan. In 1935, with Lin Sen's backing, he joined confidential government meetings. Early in the war, he spied for Japan, providing information that aided their advance and disrupted Chiang Kai-shek's plans. Investigator Gu Zhenglun linked him to the case.
In August 1937 he was convicted of treason and executed, along with his son Huang Sheng and others who helped him obtain confidential information.
His collection Huasuirensheng An Zhiyi is regarded as a credible and valuable source on late Qing history; historians Fang Zhaoying and Chen Yinke praised his work, and even his death.
This page was last edited on 3 February 2026, at 06:03 (CET).