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Revolution in China

© Student Handouts, Inc.

Fall of the Qing (Manchu) Dynasty

Empress Dowager Cixi (1835-1908)

De facto Chinese monarch (1861-1908)

“Make me unhappy for a day and I will make you unhappy for a lifetime.”

Conservative and anti-foreign

Blamed by many Chinese for foreign imperialist power in China

Fall of the Qing (Manchu) Dynasty

Emperor Puyi – the “Last Emperor”

Lived 1906-1967

Ruled China 1908-1912, and as a puppet for 12 days in 1917

Puppet emperor of Manchukuo (Japanese-ruled Manchuria), 1932-1945

Spent ten years in a Soviet prison after WWII

Lived a quiet life as a regular citizen in communist China

Died of disease during the Cultural Revolution (1967)

Republican Revolution (1912)

Sun Yat-sen (Sun Yixian)

Founded Kuomintang (KMT) – Nationalist party

Overthrew Manchu (Qing) dynasty

Established a republic

President of Chinese Republic who succeeded him – Yuan Shih-k’ai

Kuomintang symbol

Republic of China: Weaknesses

Disunity

Local warlords fought Kuomintang for control

Wars raged between 1912 and 1928

Foreign imperialists

Americans, Europeans, and Japanese

Poor transportation

1914 – only 6,000 miles of railroad track

225,000 miles in the smaller United States

Few decent roads

Foreign Imperialists

Twenty-One Demands (1915)

Japan attempted to make China a Japanese protectorate

Action condemned and stopped by other leading world powers

World War I and the Treaty of Versailles

China attempted to abolish concessions and extraterritoriality

Attempt failed

China did not sign the Treaty of Versailles

Japan gained mandate over most of Germany’s Asian possessions and rights

Three Principles of the People

Book published by Sun Yat-sen before his death in 1925

Principle of Mínquán

Democracy – the people are sovereign

Principle of Mínzú

Nationalism – an end to foreign imperialism

Principle of Mínshēng

Livelihood – economic development, industrialization, land reform, and social welfare – elements of progressivism and socialism

Growth of Communism

Sun Yat-sen appealed for Russian (Soviet) aid following the Versailles Conference

1921-1925 – China received advisors, arms, communist propaganda, and loans

Russia revoked its imperialist rights in China

Chinese flag, 1912-1928

The Kuomintang (KMT) is Split

Right wing

Business people

Politicians

Left wing

Communists

Intellectuals

Radicals

Students

Nationalist Revolution

Sun Yat-sen succeeded by Chiang Kai-shek

Communists expelled by Kuomintang

1926-1928 – war to control the warlords

Capital moved from Peiping (a.k.a. Peking, today’s Beijing) to Nanking (Nanjing)

Presidential Palace under Kuomintang Government in Nanjing

Possible anecdote: The Kuomintang changed the name of Peking/Beijing to Peiping (or Beiping) in 1928.

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Civil War in China

1927-1932 and 1933-1937 – war between Communists and Nationalists

Communists – Mao Tse-tung (Mao Zedong)

Nationalists – Chiang Kai-shek

War halted 1932-1933 and 1937-1945 to fight Japanese aggression

Communists were victorious in 1949

Nationalists retreated to Formosa (Taiwan)

End of imperialism in China

Hong Kong returned to China in 1997

Japanese Aggression

Japan was a threat to China – 1894-1941

1937 – Japanese invasion

Japanese took control of north and areas along the coast

Rape of Nanking

Chinese Communists and Nationalists

Intermittently were at peace as they united to fight against the Japanese

Guerrilla and scorched earth tactics

Received American aid against the Japanese

World War II

U.S. interest in China increased after Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941

Cairo Conference (1943)

Chiang Kai-shek met with Allied leaders

Discussed war in eastern Asia

Westerners gave up imperialist rights in China

U.S. Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 repealed in 1943

Communists in Control – 1949

Communists and Nationalists resumed civil war following World War II

Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist government wasted foreign economic aid

Many Kuomintang deserted to Communists

Manchuria – taken over by Communists in 1948

December, 1949 -- Communists in control

Chiang Kai-shek and Nationalists retreated to Formosa (Taiwan)

Geographical Changes

Communist China gained control over:

Chinese

Turkestan (Xinjiang)

Inner Mongolia

Manchuria

Tibet

PRC = People’s Republic of China (Communists) / ROC = Republic of China (Nationalists)

Political Changes under Mao

Communist government on mainland China

Mao Tse-tung (Mao Zedong)

Chairman Mao – chairman of the Communist party and leader of China – 1943-1976

Mao Zedong 毛泽东

Possible anecdote: Other men served as chairman of the republic (as opposed to both the party and the republic) as well as premier, but Mao was the de facto leader of China until his death in 1976.

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Economic Changes under Mao

First Five-Year Plan (1953-1957)

Advances in agriculture and coal, electricity, iron, and steel production

Second Five-Year Plan (1958-1962)

“Great Leap Forward”

China became a leading industrial country

Peasants organized into communes

Widespread catastrophe – famine – at least 14,000,000 deaths

Propaganda Poster for the Great Leap Forward

Note: Chairman Mao’s role as China’s leader became less significant following the failure of the Great Leap Forward.

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Foreign Relations

Russia (Soviet Union)

Growing split between USSR and China

“Peaceful coexistence” policy of USSR viewed as surrender

1960 – end of Soviet economic aid

Tibet

Seized in 1962

Korea

Aided North Korea in the Korean War (1950-1953)

Vietnam

Supported North Vietnam and aided Viet Cong during Vietnam War (1959-1975)

Foreign Relations

Cold War

Economic aid to Africa, Asia, and Latin America

“Atomic Club” (1964)

Fifth overall, and first non-white, country to develop nuclear weapons

United Nations

One of five permanent members of U.N. Security Council (1971, replacing Taiwan)

Relations with United States

1972 – U.S. President Richard Nixon opened diplomatic relations with China

Mao’s Little Red Book

The Chinese Communist Party is the core of the Chinese revolution, and its principles are based on Marxism-Leninism. Party criticism should be carried out within the Party.

The revolution, and the recognition of class and class struggle, are necessary for peasants and the Chinese people to overcome both domestic and foreign enemy elements. This is not a simple, clean, or quick struggle.

War is a continuation of politics, and there are at least two types: just (progressive) and unjust wars, which only serve bourgeois interests. While no one likes war, we must remain ready to wage just wars against imperialist agitations.

Note: Mao’s Quotations were published by the Chinese government from 1964 to 1976.

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Mao’s Little Red Book

Fighting is unpleasant, and the people of China would prefer not to do it at all. At the same time, they stand ready to wage a just struggle of self-preservation against reactionary elements, both foreign and domestic.

China's road to modernization will be built on the principles of diligence and frugality. Nor will it be legitimate to relax if, 50 years later, modernization is realized on a mass scale.

A communist must be selfless, with the interests of the masses at heart. He must also possess a largeness of mind, as well as a practical, far-sighted mindset.

Women represent a great productive force in China, and equality among the sexes is one of the goals of communism. The multiple burdens which women must shoulder are to be eased.

Cultural Revolution (1966-1969)

“Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution”

Effort to revive interest in Mao’s ideas (and for Mao to regain power) after the failed Great Leap Forward

Mao claimed that reactionary bourgeoisie elements were taking over the party

Call for youths to engage in post-revolutionary class warfare

Red Guards (consisting of young people) marched throughout China

Older alleged reactionaries removed from positions of power

China after Chairman Mao

Mao died in September, 1976

“Gang of Four”

Failed at a coup d’état in October, 1976

China continued to industrialize

One-Child Policy adopted – 1979

Tiananmen Square Massacre – 1989

Today – issues include:

Balancing limited capitalism with communist ideals

Environmental pollution

Unequal male-to-female ratios resulting from One-Child Policy

Control of Tibet

Review Questions

Which group led the Republican Revolution of 1912?

What common enemy united the Nationalists and Communists?

Who led the Communist Revolution?

Describe the Great Leap Forward.

Describe the Cultural Revolution.

What issues face China today?