First Sino-Japanese War
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| First Sino-Japanese War | |||||||||
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| Combatants | |||||||||
| Image:China Qing Dynasty Flag 1889.svg Qing Empire (China) | Image:Flag of Japan - variant.svg Empire of Japan | ||||||||
| Commanders | |||||||||
| Image:China Qing Dynasty Flag 1889.svg Li Hongzhang | Image:Flag of Japan - variant.svg Yamagata Aritomo | ||||||||
| Strength | |||||||||
| 630,000 men Beiyang Army, Beiyang Fleet | 240,000 men Imperial Japanese Army, Image:Naval Ensign of Japan.svg Imperial Japanese Navy | ||||||||
| Casualties | |||||||||
| 35,000 dead or wounded | 13,823 dead, 3,973 wounded | ||||||||
| First Sino-Japanese War |
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| Pungdo (naval) – Seonghwan –Pyongyang – Yalu River (naval) – Jiuliangcheng (Yalu) – Lushunkou – Weihaiwei – Yingkou |
The First Sino–Japanese War (Traditional Chinese: 中日甲午戰爭; pinyin: Zhōngrì Jiǎwǔ Zhànzhēng; Japanese: 日清戦争 Romaji: Nisshin Sensou) (1 August 1894 - April 1895) was a war fought between Qing Dynasty China and Meiji Japan over control of Korea. The Sino-Japanese War would come to symbolize the degeneration and enfeeblement of the Qing dynasty and demonstrate how successful westernization and modernization had been in Japan since the Meiji Restoration as compared with the Self-Strengthening Movement in China. The principal results were a shift in regional dominance in Asia from China to Japan and a loss of legitimacy both of the Qing Dynasty and of the Chinese classical tradition. These trends would result later in the 1911 Revolution.
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[edit] Background and Causes
Japan feared Russian expansion into northern China and Korea, and sought foreign conquests in emulation of the policies of imperialism hell-torn by its western mentors. Korea’s strategic location opposite the Japanese islands and its natural resources of coal and iron ore also attracted Japan's economic interest. In 1875, Japan imposed the Treaty of Ganghwa on Korea, forced Korea to open itself to Japanese trade and to proclaim its independence from China in its foreign relations.
Korea, under the Joseon Dynasty, had traditionally been a tributary state to China's Qing Dynasty. Public opinion in Korea was split, with conservatives wanting to retain the traditional subservient relationship with China, while reformists wanting to establish closer ties with Japan and western nations and to modernize. However, China continued to assert influence over the conservative officials gathered around the royal family.
In 1884 a group of pro-Japanese reformers attempted to overthrow the Korean government, but Chinese troops under General Yüan Shih-k'ai rescued the Emperor, killing several Japanese legation guards in the process. War was narrowly avoided between Japan and China by the Sino-Japanese Convention of Tientsin of 1885 the two sides agreed to: (a) pull their expeditionary forces out of Korea simultaneously; (b) not send military instructors for the training of the Korean army; and (c) notify the other side beforehand should one decide to send troops to Korea.
[edit] Status of Combatants
[edit] Japan
The reforms of Meiji government of Japan gave significant priority to naval construction and the creation of an effective modern national army and navy. Japan sent numerous military officials abroad for training, and evaluation of the relative strengths and tactics of European armies and navies. In addition, the government imported French and German advisors to assist with the Imperial Japanese Army and British and American advisors to assist the Imperial Japanese Navy. Many of Japan’s newer warships were built in British, French and German shipyards. By the start of the war, Japan could field a total force of 120,000 men in two armies and (although lacking in battleships) a fleet of 12 modern cruisers. In general, one could say that the Japanese military powers were much inferior to the Chinese. However, their spirited army and unified government pushed themselves towards victory.
[edit] China
The Ch'ing (Qing) Chinese military followed traditional policies, feeling secure in the strength of superior numbers. China did not have a national army or navy, but following the Taiping Rebellion had been segregated into separate Manchu, Mongol, Muslim and Han Chinese armies, which were further divided into largely independent regional commands. During the war, most of the fighting was done by the Beiyang Army and Beiyang Fleet while pleas calling for help to other Chinese armies and navies were completely ignored due to regional rivalry. Although the Beiyang (or "Peiyang" as it was commonly spelled in early Chinese romanizations) was the best equipped and symbolized the new modern Chinese military, morale and corruption were serious problems; politicians systematically embezzled funds, even during the war. Logistics were a huge problem, as construction of railroads in Manchuria had been discouraged. Morale of the Chinese armies was generally very low due to lack of pay and prestige, use of opium, and poor leadership which contributed to some rather ignominious withdrawals such as the abandonment of the very well fortified and defensible Weihaiwei.
[edit] Early Stages of the War
In 1893 a pro-Japanese Korean revolutionary, Kim Ok-kyun, was assassinated in Shanghai (most probably by agents of Yüan Shikai). His body was then put aboard a Chinese warship and sent back to Korea, where it was quartered and displayed as a warning to other rebels. The Japanese government took this as a direct affront. The situation became increasingly tense later in the year when the Chinese government, at the request of the Korean Emperor, sent troops to aid in suppressing the Tonghak Rebellion. The Chinese government informed the Japanese government of its decision to send troops to the Korean peninsula in accordance with the Convention of Tientsin, and sent General Yuan Shikai as its plenipotentiary at the head of 2,800 troops. The Japanese countered that they consider this action to be a violation of the Convention, and sent their own expeditionary force (the Oshima Composite Brigade) of 8,000 troops to Korea. The Japanese force subsequently seized the emperor, occupied the Royal Palace in Seoul by 8 June 1894, and replaced the existing government with the members from the pro-Japanese faction. The new Korean government then granted Japan the right to expel the Chinese troops. The legitimacy of the new government was rejected by China, and the stage was thus set for conflict.
[edit] Events during the war
War between China and Japan was officially declared on 1 August 1894, though some combat had already taken place. The Imperial Japanese Army defeated the poorly-equipped Chinese Beiyang Army at the Battle of Pyongyang on 16 September 1894, and quickly pushed north into Manchuria. The Imperial Japanese Navy destroyed 8 out of 12 warships of the Chinese Beiyang Fleet off the mouth of the Yalu River on 17 September 1894. The Chinese fleet subsequently retreated behind the Weihaiwei fortifications. However, they were then surprised by Japanese ground forces, who outflanked the harbor's defenses.
By 21 November 1894, the Japanese had taken the city of Lüshunkou (later known as Port Arthur). The Japanese army allegedly massacred thousands of the city's civilian Chinese inhabitants, in an event that came to be called the Port Arthur Massacre.
After Weihaiwei's fall on 2 February 1895 and an easing of harsh winter conditions, Japanese troops pressed further into southern Manchuria and northern China. By March 1895 the Japanese had fortified posts that commanded the sea approaches to Beijing.
- Video footage of a naval battle during the First Sino-Japanese war (1894)
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[edit] End of the war
Faced with defeat, China signed the Treaty of Shimonoseki on 17 April 1895. This treaty agreed to the total independence of Korea and ceded the Liaodong Peninsula in southern Fengtian Province, Manchuria (present-day Liaoning Province, China), Taiwan and the Pescadores Islands to Japan "in perpetuity". Additionally, China was to pay Japan 200 million Kuping taels (which were about the price of purchasing the German and British built modern battleships) as reparation, signed a commercial treaty permitting Japanese ships to operate on the Yangtze River, to operate manufacturing factories in treaty ports and to open four more ports to foreign trade. It symbolized the rise of Japanese imperialism. The victory proved Japan to be on equal grounds with the western powers and the dominant power in Asia. Its fast industrial and political developments and economical expansions are often compared to that of Germany, which was unified around the same time as the political revolution in Japan during the 1860s, and which surged to become the strongest nation in the world.
[edit] Aftermath of the war
With the conclusion of the Treaty of Shimonoseki, Japan expected to be recognized as Asia's first imperialist power, as an equal to the Western nations. However, Japan’s victory also encouraged imperialist demands on the Qing dynasty by western powers. Russia, France and Germany banded together in the Triple Intervention to prevent Japanese territorial encroachment in Manchuria, and then proceeded to carve up the territory for themselves. Russia moved almost immediately to occupy the entire Liaodong Peninsula and especially to fortify Port Arthur. France and Germany also took advantage and gained port and trade concessions. Qingdao in Shandong Province was acquired by Germany and Weihaiwei by Great Britain.The Triple Intervention embittered Japan, sowing the seeds for the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905. The relative ease of Japan's victory over China also encouraged further Japanese encroachments on Chinese territory.
The defeat of China and the terms of the Treaty of Shimonoseki enraged the Chinese gentry and students and intensified pressure for more radical modernization. The loss was particularly humiliating because it was against Japan, a nation which had been seen as traditionally subservient to China.
Frustration at the loss of the war among the Chinese gentry led to the abortive Hundred Days' Reform. Shortly after the war Sun Yat-sen founded the revolutionary republican movement which later became the politcal party, Kuomintang.
The war also caused a fundamental reorientation of Russian foreign policy away from Europe to Asia. The Russian government concluded that Japan constituted a major threat to its weakly-defended Siberian frontier. Therefore, it rapidly accelerated plans for Russian colonization of Manchuria, making the fateful decision to run the Trans-Siberian Railway straight through northern Manchuria to make a much shorter link between Lake Baikal and Vladivostok. When the Boxer Rebellion of 1900 heavily damaged the railway, Russia responded by deploying over 100,000 troops to occupy all of Manchuria. The Japanese could only interpret these enormous financial and military commitments to mean one thing: Russia intended to stay. The competing Russian and Japanese ambitions over Manchuria and Korea came to blows in the Russo-Japanese War. The Russo-Japanese war was a humiliation for Russia, as it was the first time that a European power was defeated by an Asian power. The entire mighty Russian fleet(compared to that of American and French, though below the might of British and Germany navy)was annhilated by the Japanese navy. The Japanese fleet could only do so because of their previous victory against China, in which they captured the majority of their most advanced and powerful German/British vessels. Their own vessels were much less reliable, and their own imported warships were limited due to lack of funding.
[edit] Chronicle of the war
[edit] Genesis of the war
Image:First Chinese Japanese war map of battles.jpg
1 June 1894 : The Donghak Peasant Revolution Army moves towards Seoul. The Korean government requests help from the Chinese government to suppress the rebellion force.
6 June 1894: The Chinese government informs the Japanese government under the obligation of Convention of Tientsin of its military operation. About 2,465 Chinese soldiers were transported to Korea within days.
8 June 1894: First of around 4,000 Japanese soldiers and 500 marines land at Chumlpo (Incheon) despite Korean and Chinese protests.
11 June 1894: End of Donghak Rebellion.
13 June 1894: Japanese government telegraphs Commander of the Japanese forces in Korea, Otori Keisuke to remain in Korea for as long as possible despite the end of the rebellion.
16 June 1894: Japanese Foreign Minister Mutsu Munemitsu meets with Wang Fengzao, Chinese ambassador to Japan, to discuss the future status of Korea. Wang states that Chinese government intends to pull out of Korea after the rebellion has been suppressed and expects Japan to do so the same. However, China also appoints a resident to look after Chinese interests in Korea and to re-assert Korea’s traditional subservient status to China.
22 June 1894: Additional Japanese troops arrive in Korea.
3 July 1894: Otori proposes reforms of the Korean political system, which is rejected by the conservative pro-Chinese Korean government.
7 July 1894: Mediation between China and Japan arranged by British ambassador to China fails.
19 July 1894: Establishment of Japanese Joint Fleet, consisting of almost all vessels in the Imperial Japanese Navy, in preparation for upcoming war.
[edit] Early stage of the war on Korean soil
23 July 1894: Japanese troops enter Seoul, seize the Korean Emperor and establish a new pro-Japanese government, which terminates all Sino-Korean treaties and grants the Imperial Japanese Army the right to expel Chinese Beiyang Army troops from Korea.
25 July 1894: Naval Battle of Pungdo, offshore Asan, Korea.
29 July 1894: Battle of Seonghwan near Asan, Korea; Asan itself falls to Japan the following day.
1 Aug 1894: Formal Declaration of War.
15 September 1894: Battle of Pyongyang, northern Korea.
17 September 1894: Naval Battle of the Yalu River (1894) on border of Korea and Manchuria.
[edit] Sino-Japanese War on Chinese soil
24 October 1894: Battle of Jiuliangcheng. The Japanese First Army, under the command of Field Marshal Yamagata Aritomo invades Manchuria.
21 November 1894: Battle of Lushunkou followed by Port Arthur Massacre.
10 December 1894: Kaipeng (modern Gaixian, Liaoning Province, China) falls to the Japanese 1st Army under Lieutenant General Katsura Taro.
12 February 1895: Battle of Weihaiwei, Shandong, China.
5 March 1895: Battle of Yingkou, Liaoning Province, China.
26 March 1895: Japanese forces invade and occupy the Pescadores Islands off of Taiwan without casualties.
29 March 1895: Japanese forces under Admiral Motonori Kabayama land in northern Taiwan.
17 April 1895: China signs Treaty of Shimonoseki ending the First Sino-Japanese War, granting the complete independence of Korea, ceding the Liaodong peninsula, the islands of Taiwan (Formosa), and the Pescadores Islands to Japan and paying Japan a war indemnity of 200 million Kuping taels.
[edit] See also
- Beiyang Army
- Beiyang Fleet
- History of China
- History of Japan
- History of Korea
- Imperial Japanese Navy
- Imperial Japanese Army
- Military history of China
- Military history of Japan
- New Army
- Port Arthur massacre (1894)
- Second Sino-Japanese War
- Sino-Japanese relations
- 1895 Japanese Conquest of Taiwan
[edit] References
- Chamberlin, William Henry. Japan Over Asia, 1937, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, 395 pp.
- Colliers (Ed.), The Russo-Japanese War, 1904, P.F. Collier & Son, New York, 129 pp.
- Kodansha Japan An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1993, Kodansha Press, Tokyo ISBN 4-06-205938-X
- Lone, Stewart. Japan's First Modern War: Army and Society in the Conflict with China, 1894-1895, 1994, St. Martin's Press, New York, 222 pp.
- Paine, S.C.M. The Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895: Perception, Power, and Primacy, 2003, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, MA, 412 pp.
- Sedwick, F.R. (R.F.A.). The Russo-Japanese War, 1909, The Macmillan Company, NY, 192 pp.
- Theiss, Frank. The Voyage of Forgotten Men, 1937, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1st Ed., Indianapolis & New York, 415 pp.
- Warner, Dennis and Peggy. The Tide At Sunrise, 1974, Charterhouse, New York, 659 pp.
- Military Heritage did an editorial on the Sino-Japanese War of 1894 (Brooke C. Stoddard, Military Heritage, December 2001, Volume 3, No. 3, p.6).
[edit] External links
- Under the Dragon Flag - My Experiences in the Chino-Japanese War by James Allan, available freely at Project Gutenbergbg:Китайско-японска война (1894-1895)
de:Erster Japanisch-Chinesischer Krieg es:Primera Guerra Sino-japonesa fr:Guerre sino-japonaise (1894-1895) ko:청일 전쟁 id:Peperangan Jiawu he:מלחמת סין-יפן הראשונה lt:Kinų - japonų karai nl:Eerste Chinees-Japanse Oorlog ja:日清戦争 no:Første kinesisk-japanske krig ru:Японо-китайская война 1894—1895 sl:Prva kitajsko-japonska vojna fi:Kiinan–Japanin sota (1894–1895) sv:Första sino-japanska kriget uk:Японсько-китайська війна 1894—1895 zh:甲午戰爭

