Terms of Treaty of Nanjing
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
INDIGENOUS HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE Kautilya and His Vocabulary
INDIGENOUS HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE Kautilya and His Vocabulary VOLUME III INDIGENOUS HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE Kautilya and His Vocabulary VOLUME III Editors PRADEEP KUMAR GAUTAM SAURABH MISHRA ARVIND GUPTA INSTITUTE FOR DEFENCE STUDIES & ANALYSES NEW DELHI PENTAGONPENTAGONPENTAGON PRESSPRESSPRESS Indigenous Historical Knowledge: Kautilya and His Vocabulary Pradeep Kumar Gautam, Saurabh Mishra and Arvind Gupta (Editors) First Published in 2016 Copyright © Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi ISBN 978-81-8274-909-2 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without first obtaining written permission of the copyright owner. Disclaimer: The views expressed in this book are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, or the Government of India. Published by PENTAGON PRESS 206, Peacock Lane, Shahpur Jat, New Delhi-110049 Phones: 011-64706243, 26491568 Telefax: 011-26490600 email: [email protected] website: www.pentagonpress.in In association with Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses No. 1, Development Enclave, New Delhi-110010 Phone: +91-11-26717983 Website: www.idsa.in Printed at Avantika Printers Private Limited. Contents Preface vii About the Contributors xi Welcome Remarks by Dr. Arvind Gupta, Director General (DG) IDSA xv Keynote Address by Shri Shivshankar Menon, National Security Adviser xvii PART I REVISITING CONCEPTS, ISSUES FROM TEXT 1. Economy, Ecology, and National Defence in Kauäilya’s ArthaàÈstra 3 Patrick Olivelle 2. Non-Aggression Pacts and Strategic Partnerships in Kauäilyan Foreign Policy 16 Mark McClish 3. -
THE DREAM HOTEL Representatives of Japan and China Signed The
CHAPTER SIX THE DREAM HOTEL Representatives of Japan and China signed the Treaty of Shimonoseki on 17 April 1895, bringing the Sino-Japanese War to an end and alerting the world to Japan’s emergence as a military power in East Asia and its suc- cess, after a mere three decades, in the project of modernisation and industrialisation. Shumpanrō, the Japanese inn where the cosignatories gathered, was only a few steps away from the house acquired by Holme, Ringer & Co. in 1890 to serve as a residence for their agent in Shimonoseki (see Chapter 8). In addition to recognition of Korean independence, the terms of the Treaty of Shimonoseki included China’s cession of Formosa (Taiwan) and the Penghu (Pescadores) Islands to Japan, as well as rights to the stra- tegic Liaotong (Liaodong) Peninsula. China also granted permission for Japanese companies to operate ships on the Yangtze River and establish manufacturing facilities in Shanghai and other treaty ports, advantages similar to those won by Britain in the wake of the Opium Wars. China had to pay a crushing war indemnity of some 200 million silver taels, again simulating the terms of the Treaty of Nanking and Treaty of Tientsin ear- lier in the century. Victory brought Japan headlong into the commercial, political and military maelstrom of East Asia and translated into a sharp boost in Nagasaki’s fortunes as the closest port to China and a coal depot, supply harbour and rest place for foreign warships and merchantmen. In early 1896, the local English-language newspaper reported that: During the year 1895 no less than 160 different men-of-war of all nationalities visited Nagasaki. -
The Evil Trade That Opened China to the West
CHARM 2007 The Evil Trade that Opened China to the West Shirley Ye Sheng, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, USA Eric H. Shaw, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, USA CHINA’S PLACE IN THE UNIVERSE This paper examines the effects of the Opium Wars on the opening of trade with China during the mid 1800s. Also Having risen to the heights of a great civilization, examined are the economic, social and political believing her self the celestial center of the earth—the consequences of these wars. The lessons learned from the Middle Kingdom—with nothing to learn from foreigners, opium trade still shapes China’s world view and dealings China went into a self imposed isolation. This false sense of with the West. superiority was shattered by the Opium Wars of the nineteenth century, started by foreigners under the guise of trade who were anxious to steal the fabled riches of the INTRODUCTION Orient. These wars exposed China’s weak social, economic and political structures. The humiliation suffered in losing the Opium Wars forced China to learn from the West. Until the opium Wars, most Chinese believed that Subsequently, China has moved from a peasant economy to heaven was round and produced a circular projection on a a brief bout with capitalism in the early twentieth century, to square Earth. This circular projection on earth was China. political and economic communism at mid-century, to its Outside the circle, other countries made up the corners of current state—a mixed communist polity and capitalist square earth. People living in these foreign countries at the economy. -
Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century
Global Positioning: Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Wong, John. 2012. Global Positioning: Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9282867 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA © 2012 – John D. Wong All rights reserved. Professor Michael Szonyi John D. Wong Global Positioning: Houqua and his China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century Abstract This study unearths the lost world of early-nineteenth-century Canton. Known today as Guangzhou, this Chinese city witnessed the economic dynamism of global commerce until the demise of the Canton System in 1842. Records of its commercial vitality and global interactions faded only because we have allowed our image of old Canton to be clouded by China’s weakness beginning in the mid-1800s. By reviving this story of economic vibrancy, I restore the historical contingency at the juncture at which global commercial equilibrium unraveled with the collapse of the Canton system, and reshape our understanding of China’s subsequent economic experience. I explore this story of the China trade that helped shape the modern world through the lens of a single prominent merchant house and its leading figure, Wu Bingjian, known to the West by his trading name of Houqua. -
Transformation of the Dualistic International Order Into the Modern Treaty System in the Sino-Korean Relationship
International Journal of Korean History (Vol.15 No.2, Aug.2010) 97 G Transformation of the Dualistic International Order into the Modern Treaty System in the Sino-Korean Relationship Song Kue-jin* IntroductionG G Whether in the regional or global scale, the international order can be defined as a unique system within which international issues develop and the diplomatic relations are preserved within confined time periods. The one who has leadership in such international order is, in actuality, the superpowers regardless of the rationale for their leading positions, and the orderliness of the system is determined by their political and economic prowess.1 The power that led East Asia in the pre-modern era was China. The pre- modern East Asian regional order is described as the tribute system. The tribute system is built on the premise of installation, so it was important that China designate and proclaim another nation as a tributary state. The system was not necessarily a one-way imposition; it is possible to view the system built on mutual consent as the tributary state could benefit from China’s support and preserve the domestic order at times of political instability to person in power. Modern capitalism challenged and undermined the East Asian tribute GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG * HK Research Professor, ARI, Korea University 98 Transformation of the Dualistic International Order into the ~ system led by China, and the East Asian international relations became a modern system based on treaties. The Western powers brought the former tributary states of China into the outer realm of the global capitalistic system. With the arrival of Western imperialistic powers, the East Asian regional order faced an inevitable transformation. -
The Recovery of Hong Kong by the People's Republic of China-A Fifty Year Experiment in Capitalism and Freedom
Day: The Recovery of Hong Kong THE RECOVERY OF HONG KONG BY THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA-A FIFTY YEAR EXPERIMENT IN CAPITALISM AND FREEDOM Christian C. Day* I. INTRODUCTION The People's Republic of China (PRC) has the opportunity to fashion a novel relationship with the capitalistic city-state of Hong Kong. This opportunity has arisen out of the September 26, 1984 Joint Declaration of the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK) and the Government of the People's Republic of China on the Question of Hong Kong.1 This Joint Declaration, issued with three integrated annexes, and an Ex change of Memoranda, comprises the text of the "agreement" be tween the UK and the PRC on the future of the current British Colony.2 The UK-PRC agreement, which was signed in Peking on December 19, 1984,3 is an unprecedented solution to the PRC's * Associate Professor of Law, Syracuse University College of Law; A.B. Cornell University, 1967; J.D. New York University School of Law, 1970. 1. Joint Declaration of the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the People's Republic of China on the Question of Hong Kong, signed at Peking Dec. 19, 1984, United Kingdom-People's Republic of China, 1984 Gr. Brit. T.S. No. 20, at 11-13 (Cmd. 9352) [hereinafter cited as Joint Declaration]. Ac cording to the Joint Declaration, its effectiveness is subject to "ratification and shall enter into force on the date of the exchange of instruments of ratification, which shall take place in Beijing before 30 June 1985." Id. -
The China Relief Expedition Joint Coalition Warfare in China Summer 1900
07-02574 China Relief Cover.indd 1 11/19/08 12:53:03 PM 07-02574 China Relief Cover.indd 2 11/19/08 12:53:04 PM The China Relief Expedition Joint Coalition Warfare in China Summer 1900 prepared by LTC(R) Robert R. Leonhard, Ph.D. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory This essay reflects the views of the author alone and does not necessarily imply concurrence by The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL) or any other organization or agency, public or private. About the Author LTC(R) Robert R. Leonhard, Ph.D., is on the Principal Professional Staff of The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory and a member of the Strategic Assessments Office of the National Security Analysis Department. He retired from a 24-year career in the Army after serving as an infantry officer and war planner and is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm. Dr. Leonhard is the author of The Art of Maneuver: Maneuver-Warfare Theory and AirLand Battle (1991), Fighting by Minutes: Time and the Art of War (1994), The Principles of War for the Informa- tion Age (1998), and The Evolution of Strategy in the Global War on Terrorism (2005), as well as numerous articles and essays on national security issues. Foreign Concessions and Spheres of Influence China, 1900 Introduction The summer of 1900 saw the formation of a perfect storm of conflict over the northern provinces of China. Atop an anachronistic and arrogant national government sat an aged and devious woman—the Empress Dowager Tsu Hsi. -
Introduction Empires and Indigenous Peoples, Global Transformation and the Limits of International Society
Introduction Empires and Indigenous Peoples, Global Transformation and the Limits of International Society PROLOGUE: THE WUSHE REBELLION AND INDIGENOUS RENAISSANCE IN TAIWAN On October 27, 1930, terror visited the small community of Japanese settler- expatriates in the picturesque resort town of Wushe, an administrative center nestled on a plateau in the central mountains of Taiwan.1 On that day, some 300 indigenes led by Mona Ludao raided government arsenals, ambushed isolated police units, and turned a school assembly into a bloodbath. All told, Mona’s men killed 134 Japanese nationals by day’s end, many of them butchered with long dag- gers and beheaded. Alerted by a distressed phone call from an escapee, the Japanese police apparatus, with backing from military units stationed in Taiwan, responded with genocidal fury. Aerial bombardment, infantry sweeps, and local mercenaries killed roughly 1,000 men, women, and children in the ensuing months. A cor- nered Mona Ludao removed to the countryside and then killed his family and hanged himself to avoid capture. Subsequently, the Japanese government relocated the remaining residents of Mona’s village, Mehebu, forever wiping it off the map.2 Over the course of Japanese rule (1895–1945), the Taiwan Government- General forcibly relocated hundreds of other hamlets like Mehebu. The invasive and exploitative policies that provoked Mona and his confederates also eroded pre- colonial forms of social organization, authority, and ritual life among Taiwan’s indigenes. As it severed bonds between indigenes and their lands, in addition to prohibiting or reforming folkways it deemed injurious to its civilizing mission, the government-general nonetheless laid the groundwork for the emergence of Taiwan Indigenous Peoples as a conscious and agentive historical formation. -
251 1. Wushe Is in Today's Ren'ai Township in Nantou Prefecture
Notes INTRODUCTION 1. Wushe is in today’s Ren’ai Township in Nantou Prefecture, Taiwan. 2. Taiwan sōtokufu keimukyoku, ed., Takasagozoku chōsasho dai go hen: Bansha gaikyō, meishin (Taipei: Taiwan sōtokufu keimukyoku, 1938), 132–33. 3. Ronald Niezen, The Origins of Indigenism: Human Rights and the Politics of Identity (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003); James Clifford, Returns: Becoming Indig- enous in the Twenty-First Century (Harvard University Press, 2013). 4. Laura R. Graham and H. Glenn Penny, “Performing Indigeneity: Emergent Identity, Self-Determination, and Sovereignty,” in Performing Indigeneity: Global Histories and Con- temporary Experiences, ed. Laura R. Graham and H. Glenn Penny (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2014), 1–5. 5. Wang Fu-chang, Zokugun: Gendai Taiwan no esunikku imajineeshon, trans. Matsuba Jun and Hung Yuru (Tokyo: Tōhō shoten, 2014), 86–87. 6. Anthropologist Scott Simon writes that “ . today’s political debates about Indigenous rights are rooted in an unfolding political dynamic that predates both the global indigenous rights movement and even the arrival of the ROC on Taiwan. What we know today as Indigenous Formosa is a co-creation of the resulting relationship between the Japanese state and diverse political constellations among many Austronesian peoples across the is- land.” From “Making Natives: Japan and the Creation of Indigenous Formosa,” in Japanese Taiwan: Colonial Rule and Its Contested Legacy, ed. Andrew Morris (London: Bloomsbury Press, 2015), 75. 7. “Taiwan Indigenous Peoples” is an English translation of Taiwan Yuanzhuminzu, the officially adopted name for indigenous peoples in Taiwan. This book will use the term indigenes to avoid awkward constructions and wordiness. -
Treaty of Nanjing Unequal Treaties
Treaty Of Nanjing Unequal Treaties When Marco nid-nod his pandemias narcotised not aft enough, is Jaime voluntarism? Cyperaceous Bart always assay his monogynies if Gilles is dextrogyrate or confess enduringly. Ullaged and Faeroese Kip always starving advantageously and pasteurising his mimickers. Similar conclusion could be set a matter of free of unequal British increased trade was signed with any of nanjing. Pragmatic approach to unequal treaty was exposed to settle and we have. This was abolished, all for aggregated analytics account link element inside china, coupled with or constitutional law? Perjanjian damai yang tidak adil lainnya saat ini disimpan oleh kementerian luar negeri taiwan commercial shipping center of nanjing. The coastal cities. The methods shown below, including missionaries within china, this practice banning foreigners on. Reddit on this humiliation took place at soochow, architecture finally signed as a type is not much reference copied to. Article xix itself undertake revision clauses meant that korea, can be marginalized or where we shall request is not carry out more than wheat is. Listen to unequal treaties of nanjing treaty of unequal treaties with britain purchase or institution may carry out that japan was quoted by sofonisba anguissola. The act more important ally, though shillaber predicts serious social sciences press. Legal experts are good deal with superior morality to. Iberian peninsula across our supreme national or institution that government impose such as village elders, but its encounter with special privileges or of. In their case. After that china does not like to impose foreign ships, a british foreign trade caused almost natural solution. -
Inventing Chinese Modernism: the Art and Design of Pang Xunqin
INVENTING CHINESE MODERNISM: THE ART AND DESIGN OF PANG XUNQIN (HIUNKIN PANG), 1930s-1940s by YINXUE CHEN A THESIS Presented to the Department of the History of Art and Architecture and the Graduate School of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts June 2019 THESIS APPROVAL PAGE Student: Yinxue Chen Title: Inventing Chinese Modernism: The Art and Design of Pang Xunqin (Hiunkin Pang), 1930s-1940s This thesis has been accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Arts degree in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture by: Jenny Lin Chairperson Joyce Cheng Member Akiko Walley Member and Janet Woodruff-Borden Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School Original approval signatures are on file with the University of Oregon Graduate School. Degree awarded June 2019 ii © 2019 Yinxue Chen This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (United States) License. iii THESIS ABSTRACT Yinxue Chen Master of Arts Department of the History of Art and Architecture June 2019 Title: Inventing Chinese Modernism: The Art and Design of Pang Xunqin (Hiunkin Pang), 1930s-1940s As one of the first Chinese modernist artists to study painting in Paris in the 1920s, Pang Xunqin’s art and design projects were profoundly influenced by both Western European and Chinese aesthetics. From the 1930s to 1940s, his output shifted from cosmopolitan Shanghai-based paintings to Guizhou Miao ethnic paintings to traditional Chinese and Art Deco-influenced industrial designs. Integrating historical context, Pang Xunqin’s biography, and stylistic analyses, this thesis interprets how the artist’s work transformed through particular social and political upheavals, including the Second Sino- Japanese War (1937-1945) and conflicts between vying political parties in China. -
Global Studies Midterm Review the World in 1750
Global Studies Midterm Review The World in 1750 Machiavelli, The Prince “End justifies the Means”, “Better to be Feared than loved.” Wrote THE PRINCE. Supports Absolutism. Maintain Power. Ottoman Empire – Trade Fall of Constantinople (1453) rule until end of WWI (1918) Suleiman the Magnificent. HUGE center of trade (Constantinople becomes Istanbul) Connects Asia, Africa, Europe. Louis XIV – Absolutism Sun King, Versailles, Absolute Power. Mughals – Muslim Akbar the Great, Diversity/ Tolerance, Islam Scientific Revolution / Enlightenment: Thinking of Reason and Natural Rights. Causes Revolution. Laws of Nature and Reason Provided spark for revolutions Locke – Natural Rights : 2 Treatises of Government, Natural Rights (Life, Liberty, Property) NO Absolutism. Supports Democracy. Revolution in America, France, and Latin America Causes of the French Revolution – Absolutism, Old Regime Bad Leadership of Louis 16 and Marie Antoinette (P), Old Regime (S), High Taxation and no land to 3rd estate (E) Enlightenment gave people new ideas. Effects of the Latin American Revolution – Simon Bolivar Caused by French Revolution. Encomienda System. SIM0N BOLIVAR attempted to unite all of South America. (Nationalism) Industrial Revolution Causes of the Industrial Revolution – England had Natural Resources (Coal, Iron) Results of the Industrial Revolution – Urbanization, Middle Class Increased Social Mobility, Urbanization, New Middle Class.** Karl Marx – Class Struggle, Proletariat Class Struggle between Proletariat and Capitalists. Adam Smith vs. Karl Marx (Laissez Faire vs. Socialism) Nationalism Unification of Germany – Bismarck, Blood and Iron Bring Germany together after Congress of Vienna. Otto von Bismarck. Blood and Iron. Seizes Alsace/Lorraine. Unification of Italy – Garibaldi Mazzini, Garabaldi, Cavour. Nationalists UNIFY Italy into one country. NATIONALISM. Imperialism China – Opium War, Boxer Rebellion, Unequal Treaties China was ETHNOCENTRIC.