Guangxu and Cixi die in 1908
Last Emperor ascends the dragon throne
Puyi at age 3
Wuchang, Hubei Province
Accidental explosion, Oct. 9, 1911
Proclamation of a Republic, Oct. 11, 1911
Qing Constitutional Monarchy, Nov. 3, 1911
National Assembly
Yuan Shikai, Premier
Delegates from southern provincial assemblies
Shanghai, Dec. 25, 1911
Sun Yat-sen, Provisional President
*Yuan Shikai, Premier
Role in suppressing 1898 reform movement
Puyi "abdicates," Feb. 12, 1912
Sun Yat-sen resigns as Provisional President
Feb. 13, 1912
*Yuan Shikai, Provisional President
March 10, 1912
Electorate 10% of the population
National People's Party (Guomindang or GMD or KMT)
Plurality
45% of House of Representatives
U. S. recognizes Republic of China, May 1913
*Yuan Shikai “President”
Sun Yat-sen flees to Japan
Emperor of the Chinese Empire, Jan. 1, 1916
SW military leaders declare independence
Reinstitutes Republic of China, March 1916
Dies, June 6, 1916
Death of Yuan, 1916
Weak government in Beijing
Lack of military loyalties to central government
Zhang Xun’s “Qing restoration,” June-July 1917
"Legitimate" government of China
Responsible for foreign loans to Qing
Received foreign-collected customs duties
Decline of central tax system
Lack of unifying ideology
Confucian dynastic rule discredited
Nationalism limited
Constitutional democratic republic unworkable
Why was a democracy difficult to implement in China in the 1910s?
“Power grows from the barrel of a gun.”—Mao Zedong