Answer:
The Long March
Step-by-step explanation:
The Great March was a withdrawal of troops from the Chinese Communist Party, People's Liberation Army, to escape the pursuit of the Kuomintang army.
The Communist army, led by Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai, consisting of 100,000 men (30,000 soldiers, 20,000 wounded, and 70,000 peasants) ran between October 16, 1934 and October 20, 1935, 9,650 km in extremely harsh conditions. The march continued until Communist troops established themselves in the Shensi region, far north of China.
In the end, only some 8,000 troops under Mao's command, the First Front Army, ultimately made it to the final destination of Yan'an in 1935. Of these 8,000 men that arrived, it is said that less than 7,000 were part of the original 100,000 soldiers who had started the march.