Chinese Communist Revolution in AP World History: Modern

The Chinese Communist Revolution (1927-1949) was the struggle in which Mao Zedong's Chinese Communist Party defeated Chiang Kai-shek's Guomindang and established the People's Republic of China in 1949, replacing the nationalist government with a communist state.

Verified for the 2027 AP World History: Modern examLast updated June 2026

What is the Chinese Communist Revolution?

The Chinese Communist Revolution was the roughly two-decade fight (1927-1949) between the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), led by Mao Zedong, and the nationalist Guomindang (GMD), led by Chiang Kai-shek, over who would control China after the collapse of the Qing dynasty. The two sides had briefly worked together, but the alliance shattered in 1927 when the GMD turned on the communists, kicking off a civil war. The CCP survived near-destruction (most famously through the Long March), built support among China's massive peasant population by promising land reform, and gained credibility fighting Japan during World War II. When the civil war resumed after 1945, the communists won, and Mao proclaimed the People's Republic of China in October 1949.

For AP World, this revolution is a textbook example of what the CED calls peoples and states "challenging the existing political and social order." The Qing, one of the great land-based empires, had already collapsed in 1911. The communist revolution answered the question of what would replace it, and the answer reshaped global politics. A communist victory in the world's most populous country meant the West no longer fully dominated the global order, which is exactly the shift Unit 7 asks you to explain.

Why the Chinese Communist Revolution matters in AP® World

This term lives in Topic 7.9 (Causation in Global Conflict) and reappears in Topic 9.5 (Calls for Reform and Responses after 1900). It directly supports learning objective AP World 7.9.A, explaining the relative significance of the causes of global conflict from 1900 to the present. The CED's essential knowledge points to the collapse of land-based empires (including the Qing) and challenges to the existing political order as drivers of 20th-century conflict, and the Chinese Communist Revolution is the payoff of both. It also feeds AP World 9.5.A on how social categories and roles were challenged over time, since the CCP attacked old hierarchies of class and gender (land redistribution, campaigns against Confucian family structures). If you're building an argument about why the 20th century looked nothing like the 19th, China going communist is one of your strongest pieces of evidence.

How the Chinese Communist Revolution connects across the course

Mao Zedong (Units 7-9)

Mao is the figure who adapted Marxism to a peasant society. Classic Marxist theory said revolution would come from industrial workers, but China barely had any, so Mao built his revolution on the countryside instead. That adaptation is why communism spread to agrarian societies across the Cold War world.

Guomindang (GMD) and Chiang Kai-shek (Unit 7)

You can't explain the revolution without its loser. The GMD's failure to deliver land reform, plus corruption and the exhaustion of fighting Japan, pushed peasants toward the CCP. After 1949, Chiang's government retreated to Taiwan, a tension that still shapes geopolitics today.

Collapse of the Qing Empire (Unit 7)

The CED groups the Qing with the Ottoman and Russian empires as old land-based empires that fell early in the century. The communist revolution is the second act of that collapse. The 1911 revolution removed the emperor; the 1927-1949 struggle decided what kind of state would fill the vacuum.

Calls for Reform after 1900 (Unit 9)

Topic 9.5 frames the 20th century around challenges to old assumptions about race, class, and gender. The CCP's revolution was a class-based challenge on a massive scale, redistributing land and overturning social hierarchies, which makes it strong comparative evidence alongside other reform movements like the African National Congress.

Is the Chinese Communist Revolution on the AP® World exam?

Multiple-choice questions tend to test causation and comparison. One common move is pairing the Chinese Communist Revolution with the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) and asking what cause they shared. The answer centers on land inequality and peasant discontent with an unresponsive government. You may also see questions on what event started the revolution (the 1927 GMD-CCP split) or how a communist China challenged Eurocentric assumptions about who shapes the global order. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but it is high-value evidence for LEQs and DBQs on 20th-century revolutions, the collapse of empires, or challenges to the political and social order. The skill the exam wants is causation: don't just say the revolution happened, explain WHY the CCP won (peasant support, land reform promises, GMD weakness, the disruption of the Japanese invasion).

The Chinese Communist Revolution vs Chinese Revolution of 1911

These are two different revolutions. The 1911 Revolution overthrew the Qing dynasty and ended over two thousand years of imperial rule, producing a shaky republic under nationalist leadership. The Chinese Communist Revolution (1927-1949) came afterward, when the CCP fought and beat that nationalist government. Quick check for the exam: 1911 ends the emperor, 1949 begins the People's Republic.

Key things to remember about the Chinese Communist Revolution

  • The Chinese Communist Revolution was the struggle from 1927 to 1949 in which Mao Zedong's CCP defeated Chiang Kai-shek's Guomindang and founded the People's Republic of China.

  • The revolution grew out of the collapse of the Qing empire, which the CED lists alongside the Ottoman and Russian empires as land-based empires that fell early in the 20th century.

  • Mao won by adapting communism to China's conditions, building support among peasants with promises of land reform instead of relying on an industrial working class.

  • Like the Mexican Revolution, the Chinese Communist Revolution was driven largely by land inequality and rural discontent, making it a go-to comparison on the exam.

  • A communist victory in the world's most populous country shifted global power away from Western dominance, which is central to causation arguments in Topic 7.9.

  • The revolution also connects to Unit 9 because the CCP challenged old class and gender hierarchies, fitting Topic 9.5's theme of calls for reform after 1900.

Frequently asked questions about the Chinese Communist Revolution

What was the Chinese Communist Revolution?

It was the 1927-1949 struggle in which the Chinese Communist Party under Mao Zedong defeated the nationalist Guomindang under Chiang Kai-shek. It ended with Mao proclaiming the People's Republic of China in October 1949.

Did the Chinese Communist Revolution overthrow the emperor of China?

No. The last Qing emperor fell in the Revolution of 1911, more than a decade earlier. The communist revolution overthrew the nationalist (GMD) government that had emerged after the empire collapsed.

How is the Chinese Communist Revolution different from the Revolution of 1911?

The 1911 Revolution ended imperial rule and created a republic led by nationalists. The Chinese Communist Revolution (1927-1949) was a later civil war in which the CCP defeated those nationalists and created a communist state. Think of 1911 as ending the old order and 1949 as deciding what replaced it.

Why did the communists win the Chinese Civil War?

The CCP built deep support among China's huge peasant majority through land reform promises, survived the Long March, and gained legitimacy fighting Japan from 1937 to 1945. Meanwhile the GMD was weakened by corruption, inflation, and the costs of the war with Japan.

Is the Chinese Communist Revolution on the AP World exam?

Yes. It appears in Topic 7.9 (Causation in Global Conflict) and Topic 9.5 (Calls for Reform after 1900), and it shows up in comparison questions, often paired with the Mexican Revolution as a 20th-century revolution rooted in land inequality.