Tributary status
French Protectorate 1874
French troops stationed 1880
French Gunboat Diplomacy, August 1884
Destruction of Qing southern fleet, Aug. 23, 1884
Qing Dynasty
Korea was tributary state of China
Japanese Meiji Reform Government, 1868
Japan’s gunboat diplomacy, 1875
Japanese-Korean treaty of 1876
Japan and Korea equal states
Exchange of Envoys
Opening of three ports to Japanese trade
Extraterritorial rights for Japanese citizens
Sino-Korean Treaty 1882
Qing subjects granted extraterritoriality
Loans and gifts of modern weapons
Qing troops in Korea
Is this traditional East Asian diplomacy?
Factional conflict at Korean court
Pro-Japanese insurrection, 1884
Qing successfully intervene
Sino-Japanese treaty, 1884
Korea a co-protectorate
Qing and Japanese withdraw troops
March on Seoul
Qing intervention
Japanese response
War not diplomacy
Pyongyang, Korea
Liaodong
Yalu River mouth, Sept. 17, 1894
Weihaiwei, Aug. 10, 1895
David vs. Goliath?
Population, ca. 1895
China, 450 million
Japan, 40 million
Superior “software”
Drill of conscripts
Strategic and tactical training of officers
Superior “hardware”
Smaller, faster ships and guns
Better ammunition
Recognized Korean independence
Chinese indemnity: 200,000 million oz. silver
150% of Japan’s war expenses
Japan’s equality with West at treaty ports
Japanese factories in China
Taiwan and *Liaodong to Japan
Why did this treaty encourage Chinese nationalism?
Germany takes Qingdao, 1897
Russia takes Liaodong, 1898
Britain, 1898
Leased Weihaiwei
Extended lease on Kowloon for 99 years
France
Leased Guangzhou Bay for 99 years
Sphere of influence in SW
Zeng Guofan (1811-1872)
Zhang Daye (1854-?)
World of a Tiny Insect, completed in 1894 (on eve of Sino-Japanese War)
Kang Youwei (1858-1927)
Yang Changji (1871-1920)
Liang Qichao (1873-1929)
Mao Zedong (1893-1976)
Pa Chin (Ba Jin, 1904-2005)
Family, published in 1931