. . . . . "1946-07-30"^^ . . . . . . "Chen Xiaolu"@en . . . . "2018-02-28"^^ . . "2018"^^ . . "Chen Xiaolu (simplified Chinese: \u9648\u5C0F\u9C81; traditional Chinese: \u9673\u5C0F\u9B6F; pinyin: Ch\u00E9n Xi\u01CEol\u01D4; 30 July 1946 \u2013 28 February 2018) was a Chinese military officer and businessman. As a son of Marshal Chen Yi, he was one of China's most prominent princelings, or children of high officials. He held the rank of colonel when he quit his military and government posts in 1992 and entered business. His military background and princeling status helped his businesses expand to great sizes. He was an early director of privately held Anbang, which grew into an insurance giant. In 2013, he made national headlines when he publicly confessed and apologized for torturing and persecuting his teachers during the Cultural Revolution. He has been called the \"conscience\" of princelings."@en . . "\u9648\u5C0F\u9C81"@en . . . "1946"^^ . . ""@en . . . . . . . "zh-hans"@en . . . . . . . "Military officer, entrepreneur"@en . "1106573876"^^ . . . "\u9648\u5C0F\u9C81\uFF081946\u5E747\u670830\u65E5\uFF0D2018\u5E742\u670828\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u66FE\u5316\u540D\u9648\u536B\u4E1C\uFF0C\u56DB\u5DDD\u4E50\u81F3\u4EBA\uFF0C\u7956\u7C4D\u6E56\u5357\u65B0\u5BE7\uFF0C\u751F\u4E8E\u5C71\u4E1C\u4E34\u6C82\uFF0C\u4E2D\u534E\u4EBA\u6C11\u5171\u548C\u56FD\u4F01\u4E1A\u5BB6\uFF0C\u7236\u4EB2\u4E3A\u4E2D\u534E\u4EBA\u6C11\u5171\u548C\u56FD\u5F00\u56FD\u5143\u5E05\u4E4B\u4E00\u7684\u9648\u6BC5\u3002"@zh . . . . . "Chen Xiaolu"@en . . . . . . . . . "\u9648\u5C0F\u9C81"@en . . . . . "\u9648\u5C0F\u9C81\uFF081946\u5E747\u670830\u65E5\uFF0D2018\u5E742\u670828\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u66FE\u5316\u540D\u9648\u536B\u4E1C\uFF0C\u56DB\u5DDD\u4E50\u81F3\u4EBA\uFF0C\u7956\u7C4D\u6E56\u5357\u65B0\u5BE7\uFF0C\u751F\u4E8E\u5C71\u4E1C\u4E34\u6C82\uFF0C\u4E2D\u534E\u4EBA\u6C11\u5171\u548C\u56FD\u4F01\u4E1A\u5BB6\uFF0C\u7236\u4EB2\u4E3A\u4E2D\u534E\u4EBA\u6C11\u5171\u548C\u56FD\u5F00\u56FD\u5143\u5E05\u4E4B\u4E00\u7684\u9648\u6BC5\u3002"@zh . . . "Ch\u00E9n Xi\u01CEol\u01D4"@en . . "2018-02-28"^^ . . "Chen Xiaolu (simplified Chinese: \u9648\u5C0F\u9C81; traditional Chinese: \u9673\u5C0F\u9B6F; pinyin: Ch\u00E9n Xi\u01CEol\u01D4; 30 July 1946 \u2013 28 February 2018) was a Chinese military officer and businessman. As a son of Marshal Chen Yi, he was one of China's most prominent princelings, or children of high officials. He held the rank of colonel when he quit his military and government posts in 1992 and entered business. His military background and princeling status helped his businesses expand to great sizes. He was an early director of privately held Anbang, which grew into an insurance giant. In 2013, he made national headlines when he publicly confessed and apologized for torturing and persecuting his teachers during the Cultural Revolution. He has been called the \"conscience\" of princelings."@en . . . . . . "Sanya, Hainan, China"@en . . . . . "56772459"^^ . . . . . . . . "1946-07-30"^^ . "1975"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "9369"^^ . . . "Chen Xiaolu"@en . . . "\u9648\u5C0F\u9C81"@zh . "Linyi, Shandong, China"@en . "Beijing No. 8 High School"@en . . . . . . . . . . "2018"^^ . . . . . "\u9673\u5C0F\u9B6F"@en . "Su Huining"@en .