Though Chairman Mao Tse-Tung set off the Cultural Revolution as his own political strategy, his fourth wife, former actress Jiang Qing, quickly became a formal head of power in the Chinese Communist party.
She rid China of political opponents, intellectual and artistic elite, and those who Jiang felt had opposed her marriage to Mao.
After Mao's death in 1976, Jiang was arrested and deemed a counter-revolutionary, famously blaming Mao for her harsh record. She was sentenced to death, a verdict later commuted to life imprisonment, but she committed suicide in 1991.
"I was Chairman Mao's dog," she said during trial after Mao's death. "Whoever he told me to bite, I bit."
Source: Los Angeles Times