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 ChinaWar Losses Cause China to Sign Away SovereigntyChina remained largely isolated from the rest of
the world's civilizations, closely restricting foreign activities. By the
end of the 18th century only Canton (location of modern-day Hong Kong) and
the Portuguese port of Macao were open to European merchants. But with the
first Anglo-Chinese War in 1839–1842, a long period of instability
and concessions to Western colonial powers began. Following the war,
several ports were opened up for trading, and Hong Kong was ceded to
Britain. Treaties signed after further hostilities (1856–1860)
weakened Chinese sovereignty and gave foreigners immunity from Chinese
jurisdiction. European powers took advantage of the disastrous
Sino-Japanese War of 1894–1895 to gain further trading concessions
from China. Peking's response, the Boxer Rebellion (1900), was suppressed
by an international force.
The death of Empress Dowager Tzu Hsi in 1908 and
the accession of the infant emperor Hsüan T'ung (Pu-Yi) were followed
by a nationwide rebellion led by Dr. Sun Yat-sen, who overthrew the
Manchus and became the first president of the Provisional Chinese Republic
in 1911. Dr. Sun resigned in favor of Yuan Shih-k'ai, who suppressed the
Republicans in a bid to consolidate his power. Yuan's death in June 1916
was followed by years of civil war between rival militarists and Dr. Sun's
Republicans. Nationalist forces, led by General Chiang Kai-shek and with
the advice of Communist experts, soon occupied most of China, setting up
the Kuomintang regime in 1928. Internal strife continued, however, and
Chiang eventually broke with the Communists.
On Sept. 18, 1931, Japan launched an invasion of
Manchuria, capturing the province. Tokyo set up a puppet state dubbed
Manchukuo and installed the last Manchu emperor, Henry Pu-Yi (Hsüan
T'ung), as its nominal leader. Japanese troops moved to seize China's
northern provinces in July 1937 but were resisted by Chiang, who had been
able to use the Japanese invasion to unite most of China behind him.
Within two years, however, Japan had seized most of the nation's eastern
ports and railways. The Kuomintang government retreated first to Hankow
and then to Chungking, while the Japanese set up a puppet government at
Nanking, headed by Wang Jingwei.
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