Tcheng Yu-hsiu
Lawyer, judge, diplomat, legislator, and women's-rights advocate
of 100 · stable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
50/100
Raw Score
43/85
Confidence
65%
Evidence
Medium
About
Tcheng Yu-hsiu, also known as Zheng Yuxiu or Soumay Tcheng, became one of Republican China's most visible women jurists and public figures.
Strong public evidence supports legal practice, judicial service, diplomacy, civil-code reform, women's rights, education, and wartime relief. The record is complicated by early revolutionary violence and limited worship evidence.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Strong public evidence supports courage, women's-rights legal reform, professional barrier-breaking, and wartime relief. The score is constrained by violent revolutionary episodes, coercive tactics, and sparse evidence for worship or explicit theistic discipline.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
No strong public evidence of personal theistic practice; not treated as proof of absence.
Public record emphasizes civic duty more than eschatological accountability.
Mission-school exposure is documented, but sources say she was not interested in its religious program.
No clear evidence of scripture-guided public life.
No clear evidence of prophetic or scriptural modeling.
Contribution to Others
Family-related courage is documented, but direct help to relatives is not well evidenced.
Supervised Chinese girls from Sichuan studying in France and supported women's education.
Wartime relief and legal reform supported vulnerable populations indirectly.
Student and wartime relief contexts support help for displaced or cut-off people.
Not enough direct case-level evidence beyond public advocacy and relief roles.
Strong evidence of legal advocacy freeing women from marriage and professional constraints.
Personal Discipline
No reliable evidence of regular worship discipline in public sources.
Charitable relief is documented, but religiously obligatory charity is not.
Reliability
Long public service and legal roles support reliability, but coercive and violent revolutionary tactics constrain the score.
Stability Under Pressure
Student and exile periods suggest steadiness, though financial-pressure evidence is limited.
Early defiance of foot-binding and arranged marriage shows strong personal-pressure resilience.
Paris activism and wartime relief show courage under conflict, tempered by coercive methods.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Refused foot-binding as a child
Biographical accounts describe her refusal of foot-binding, an early act of resistance against a harmful practice imposed on girls.
→ Became part of a lifelong public identity of resistance to restrictive gender norms.
mediumRejected an arranged marriage
Accounts report that she personally broke off a family-arranged engagement, asserting a woman's right to refuse an incompatible marriage.
→ Foreshadowed later legal advocacy for marital choice and divorce rights.
mediumJoined anti-Qing revolutionary activity
Sources connect her with Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary movement and accounts of transporting bombs for anti-Qing activity.
→ Contributed to her revolutionary reputation while creating a significant integrity and harm-risk concern.
highOpposed China's signing of the Treaty of Versailles
At the Paris Peace Conference, she worked with Chinese student activists against transfer of former German rights in Shandong to Japan.
→ China became the only Allied nation not to sign the Treaty of Versailles; the episode remains a contested mix of nationalist courage and coercive pressure.
highEarned a doctorate in law in Paris
She completed a University of Paris law doctorate with a dissertation on constitutionalism in China.
→ Helped establish the credibility behind her later legal practice and law-reform work.
mediumPracticed law and became a pioneering woman judge
After returning to Shanghai, she and Wei Tao-ming established a law firm. Sources identify her as China's first woman lawyer and a pioneering woman judge.
→ Created a visible precedent for women in Chinese legal practice and judicial office.
highHelped draft civil-code reforms affecting women
Her work on the Republican-era Chinese civil code is credited by scholarship with helping bring gender equality under law for Chinese women.
→ Advanced legal recognition of women's rights through national law rather than symbolic advocacy alone.
highOrganized civilian assistance during the Sino-Japanese War
During the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War, she helped organize civilian assistance in Shanghai.
→ Shows public-service continuity under danger and national crisis.
mediumSupported wartime China relief in the United States
In the United States, she participated in war relief and public affairs, lending her name to United China Relief and China Aid Council work.
→ Extended her public service beyond law and politics into humanitarian support during war.
mediumDied in Los Angeles
Biographical sources record that she died of cancer in Los Angeles on December 16, 1959.
→ Closed a public life spanning revolution, law, diplomacy, civil-code reform, and wartime relief.
lowPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Family gender constraints
1897Refused foot-binding and later an arranged marriage.
Response: Asserted bodily and marital autonomy at personal cost.
positiveParis Peace Conference Shandong crisis
1919Chinese activists opposed acceptance of treaty terms transferring German rights in Shandong to Japan.
Response: Helped pressure the delegation; the rosebush-gun episode shows courage but also coercion.
mixedSino-Japanese War
1937War disrupted Shanghai and Nationalist institutions.
Response: Helped organize civilian assistance and continued public service in wartime government and relief contexts.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Showed wartime civic service and relief work under national pressure.
improvingcurrent stage
Legacy is a high-impact but morally mixed legal pioneer.
stableearly years
Rejected foot-binding and arranged marriage.
improvinggrowth years
Moved from militant nationalism into legal training and institutional reform.
mixedBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Turned personal resistance to gender constraints into public legal reform.
- • Moved from revolutionary activism into institutional law, diplomacy, education, and relief.
Concerns
- • Early political action accepted or approached violence as a tool.
- • Religious formation and worship discipline are unclear in the public record.
Evidence Quality
3
Strong
3
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile evaluates public evidence of observable behavior and commitments. It does not judge hidden intention, the soul, or ultimate standing with God.