 |
HSIA |
B.C. 2205-1766 |
SHANG |
B.C. 1766-1122 |
CHOW |
B.C. 1122-770 |
SPRING
& AUTUMN ANNALS |
B.C. 770-476 |
WARRING
STATES |
B.C. 476-221 |
CHIN |
B.C. 221-206 |
HAN |
B.C. 206-A.D.220 |
THREE
KINDOMS |
A.D. 220-265 |
TSIN |
A.D. 265-420 |
SOUTHERN
& NORTHERN |
A.D. 420-589 |
SUI |
A.D. 589-618 |
TANG |
A.D. 618-907 |
FIVE
DYNASTIES |
A.D. 907-960 |
SUNG |
A.D. 960-1280 |
YUEN |
A.D. 1280-1368 |
MING |
A.D. 1368-1644 |
Hung Wu |
A.D. 1368-1399 |
Chien Wen |
A.D. 1399-1403 |
Yung
Lo |
A.D. 1403-1425 |
Hung
His |
A.D. 1425-1426 |
Hsuan
Toh |
A.D. 1426-1436 |
Cheng
Tung |
A.D. 1436-1450 |
Ching
Tai |
A.D. 1450-1457 |
Tien
Shun |
A.D. 1457-1465 |
Cheng
Hwa |
A.D. 1465-1488 |
Hung Chih |
A.D. 1488-1506 |
Cheng Toh |
A.D. 1506-1522 |
Chia Ching |
A.D. 1522-1567 |
Lung ching |
A.D. 1567-1573 |
Wang Lee |
A.D. 1573-1620 |
Tai Chang |
A.D. 1620-1621 |
Tien Chi |
A.D. 1621-1628 |
Chung Cheng |
A.D. 1628-1644 |
CHING |
A.D. 1644-1911 |
Shun
chih |
A.D. 1644-1662 |
Kang His |
A.D. 1662-1723 |
Yung Ching |
A.D. 1723-1736 |
Chien Lung |
A.D. 1736-1796 |
Chia Ching |
A.D. 1796-1821 |
Tao Kuang |
A.D. 1821-1851 |
Hsien Fong |
A.D. 1851-1862 |
Tung Chih |
A.D. 1862-1875 |
Kuang Hsu |
A.D. 1875-1908 |
Hsuan Tung |
A.D. 1908-1911 |
MING
GUO(republic of China) |
A.D. 1911-1949 |
P.R.CHINA(people's
republic of China) |
A.D. 1949- |

The Ancient Dynasties
Chinese civilization, as described in mythology,
begins with Pangu, the creator of the universe, and a succession
of legendary sage-emperors and culture heroes (among them
are Huang Di, Yao, and Shun) who taught the ancient Chinese
to communicate and to find sustenance, clothing, and shelter.

Hsia Dyanster
The first prehistoric dynasty is said to
be Hsia ( ), from about the twenty-first to the sixteenth century B.C. Until
scientific excavations were made at early bronze-age sites
at Anyang, Henan Province, in 1928, it was difficult to separate
myth from reality in regard to the Hsia. But since then, and
especially in the 1960s and 1970s, archaeologists have uncovered
urban sites, bronze implements, and tombs that point to the
existence of Hsia civilization in the same locations cited
in ancient Chinese historical texts. At minimum, the Hsia
period marked an evolutionary stage between the late neolithic
cultures and the typical Chinese urban civilization of the
Shang Dynasty.

The Dawn of History

Thousands of archaeological finds in the
Huang He ( Yellow River), Henan Valley -the apparent cradle
of Chinese civilization--provide evidence about the Shang
( ) dynasty, which endured roughly from 1700 to 1027 B.C. The Shang
dynasty (also called the Yin dynasty in its later stages)
is believed to have been founded by a rebel leader who overthrew
the last Hsia ruler. Its civilization was based on agriculture,
augmented by hunting and animal husbandry. Two important events
of the period were the development of a writing system, as
revealed in archaic Chinese inscriptions found on tortoise
shells and flat cattle bones (commonly called oracle bones),
and the use of bronze metallurgy. A number of ceremonial bronze
vessels with inscriptions date from the Shang period; the
workmanship on the bronzes attests to a high level of civilization.
A line of hereditary Shang kings ruled over
much of northern China, and Shang troops fought frequent wars
with neighboring settlements and nomadic herdsmen from the
inner Asian steppes. The capitals, one of which was at the
site of the modern city of Anyang, were centers of glittering
court life. Court rituals to propitiate spirits and to honor
sacred ancestors were highly developed. In addition to his
secular position, the king was the head of the ancestor- and
spirit-worship cult. Evidence from the royal tombs indicates
that royal personages were buried with articles of value,
presumably for use in the afterlife. Perhaps for the same
reason, hundreds of commoners, who may have been slaves, were
buried alive with the royal corpse.

The Zhou Period 
The last Shang ruler, a despot according
to standard Chinese accounts, was overthrown by a chieftain
of a frontier tribe called Zhou ( ), which had settled in the Wei Valley in modern
Shaanxi Province. The Zhou dynasty had its capital at Hao,
near the city of Xi'An , or Chang'an, as it was known in its
heyday in the imperial period. Sharing the language and culture
of the Shang, the early Zhou rulers, through conquest and
colonization, gradually sinicized, that is, extended Shang
culture through much of China Proper north of the Chang Jiang
(Yangtze River). The Zhou dynasty lasted longer than any other,
from 1027 to 221 B.C. It was philosophers of this period who
first enunciated the doctrine of the "mandate of heaven"
(tianming), the notion that the ruler (the "son of heaven"
) governed by divine right but that his dethronement would
prove that he had lost the mandate. The doctrine explained
and justified the demise of the two earlier dynasties and
at the same time supported the legitimacy of present and future
rulers.
The term feudal has often been applied to
the Zhou period because the Zhou's early decentralized rule
invites comparison with medieval rule in Europe. At most,
however, the early Zhou system was proto-feudal , being a
more sophisticated version of earlier tribal organization,
in which effective control depended more on familial ties
than on feudal legal bonds. Whatever feudal elements there
may have been decreased as time went on. The Zhou amalgam
of city-states became progressively centralized and established
increasingly impersonal political and economic institutions.
These developments, which probably occurred in the latter
Zhou period, were manifested in greater central control over
local governments and a more routinized agricultural taxation.
In 771 B.C. the Zhou court was sacked, and
its king was killed by invading barbarians who were allied
with rebel lords. The capital was moved eastward to Luoyang
in present-day Henan Province. Because of this shift, historians
divide the Zhou era into Western Zhou (1027-771 B.C.) and
Eastern Zhou (770-221 B.C.). With the royal line broken, the
power of the Zhou court gradually diminished; the fragmentation
of the kingdom accelerated. Eastern Zhou divides into two
subperiods. The first, from 770 to 476 B.C., is called the
Spring and Autumn Period ( ), after a famous historical chronicle of the time; the second
is known as the Warring States Period (475-221 B.C. ).

The First Imperial Period 
Much of what came to constitute China Proper
was unified for the first time in 221 B.C. In that year the
western frontier state of Qin, the most aggressive of the
Warring States, subjugated the last of its rival states. (Qin
in Wade-Giles romanization is Ch'in, from which the English
China probably derived.) Once the king of Qin consolidated
his power, he took the title Shi Huangdi (First Emperor),
a formulation previously reserved for deities and the mythological
sage-emperors, and imposed Qin's centralized, nonhereditary
bureaucratic system on his new empire. In subjugating the
six other major states of Eastern Zhou, the Qin kings had
relied heavily on Legalist scholar-advisers. Centralization,
achieved by ruthless methods, was focused on standardizing
legal codes and bureaucratic procedures, the forms of writing
and coinage, and the pattern of thought and scholarship. To
silence criticism of imperial rule, the kings banished or
put to death many dissenting Confucian scholars and confiscated
and burned their books . Qin aggrandizement was aided by frequent
military expeditions pushing forward the frontiers in the
north and south. To fend off barbarian intrusion, the fortification
walls built by the various warring states were connected to
make a 5,000-kilometer-long great wall. What is commonly referred
to as the Great Wall is actually four great walls rebuilt
or extended during the Western Han, Sui, Jin, and Ming periods,
rather than a single, continuous wall. At its extremities,
the Great Wall reaches from northeastern Heilongjiang Province
to northwestern Gansu. A number of public works projects were
also undertaken to consolidate and strengthen imperial rule.
These activities required enormous levies of manpower and
resources, not to mention repressive measures. Revolts broke
out as soon as the first Qin emperor died in 210 B.C. His
dynasty was extinguished less than twenty years after its
triumph. The imperial system initiated during the Qin dynasty,
however, set a pattern that was developed over the next two
millennia.

The Han Dynasty

After a short civil war, a new dynasty,
called Han (206 B.C.-A.D. 220), emerged with its capital at
Chang'an . The new empire retained much of the Qin administrative
structure but retreated a bit from centralized rule by establishing
vassal principalities in some areas for the sake of political
convenience. The Han rulers modified some of the harsher aspects
of the previous dynasty; Confucian ideals of government, out
of favor during the Qin period, were adopted as the creed
of the Han empire, and Confucian scholars gained prominent
status as the core of the civil service. A civil service examination
system also was initiated. Intellectual, literary, and artistic
endeavors revived and flourished. The Han period produced
China's most famous historian, Sima Qian (145-87 B.C.?), whose
Shiji (Historical Records) provides a detailed chronicle from
the time of a legendary Xia emperor to that of the Han emperor
Wu Di (141-87 B.C.). Technological advances also marked this
period. Two of the great Chinese inventions, paper and porcelain,
date from Han times.
The Han dynasty, after which the members
of the ethnic majority in China, the "people of Han,"
are named, was notable also for its military prowess. The
empire expanded westward as far as the rim of the Tarim Basin
(in modern Xinjiang-Uyghur Autonomous Region), making possible
relatively secure caravan traffic across Central Asia to Antioch,
Baghdad, and Alexandria. The paths of caravan traffic are
often called the "silk route" because the route
was used to export Chinese silk to the Roman Empire. Chinese
armies also invaded and annexed parts of northern Vietnam
and northern Korea toward the end of the second century B.C.
Han control of peripheral regions was generally insecure,
however. To ensure peace with non-Chinese local powers, the
Han court developed a mutually beneficial "tributary
system" . Non-Chinese states were allowed to remain autonomous
in exchange for symbolic acceptance of Han overlordship. Tributary
ties were confirmed and strengthened through intermarriages
at the ruling level and periodic exchanges of gifts and goods.
After 200 years, Han rule was interrupted
briefly (in A.D. 9-24 by Wang Mang, a reformer), and then
restored for another 200 years. The Han rulers, however, were
unable to adjust to what centralization had wrought: a growing
population, increasing wealth and resultant financial difficulties
and rivalries, and ever-more complex political institutions.
Riddled with the corruption characteristic of the dynastic
cycle, by A.D. 220 the Han empire collapsed.

Era of Disunity
The collapse of the Han dynasty was followed
by nearly four centuries of rule by warlords. The age of civil
wars and disunity began with the era of the Three Kingdoms
(Wei, Shu, and Wu, which had overlapping reigns during the
period A.D. 220-80). In later times, fiction and drama greatly
romanticized the reputed chivalry of this period. Unity was
restored briefly in the early years of the Jin dynasty (A.D.
265-420), but the Jin could not long contain the invasions
of the nomadic peoples. In A.D. 317 the Jin court was forced
to flee from Luoyang and reestablished itself at Nanjing to
the south. The transfer of the capital coincided with China's
political fragmentation into a succession of dynasties that
was to last from A.D. 304 to 589. During this period the process
of sinicization accelerated among the non-Chinese arrivals
in the north and among the aboriginal tribesmen in the south.
This process was also accompanied by the increasing popularity
of Buddhism (introduced into China in the first century A.D.)
in both north and south China. Despite the political disunity
of the times, there were notable technological advances. The
invention of gunpowder (at that time for use only in fireworks)
and the wheelbarrow is believed to date from the sixth or
seventh century. Advances in medicine, astronomy, and cartography
are also noted by historians.

Sui Dynasty 
China was reunified in A.D. 589 by the short-lived
Sui dynasty (A.D. 581-617), which has often been compared
to the earlier Qin dynasty in tenure and the ruthlessness
of its accomplishments. The Sui dynasty's early demise was
attributed to the government's tyrannical demands on the people,
who bore the crushing burden of taxes and compulsory labor.
These resources were overstrained in the completion of the
Grand Canal(大运河) --a monumental engineering feat--and in the
undertaking of other construction projects, including the
reconstruction of the Great Wall. Weakened by costly and disastrous
military campaigns against Korea (朝鲜)in the early seventh
century, the dynasty disintegrated through a combination of
popular revolts, disloyalty, and assassination.

Tang Dyansty 
The Tang dynasty (A.D. 618-907), with its
capital at Chang'an, is regarded by historians as a high point
in Chinese civilization--equal, or even superior, to the Han
period. Its territory, acquired through the military exploits
of its early rulers, was greater than that of the Han. Stimulated
by contact with India and the Middle East, the empire saw
a flowering of creativity in many fields. Buddhism , originating
in India around the time of Confucius, flourished during the
Tang period, becoming thoroughly sinicized and a permanent
part of Chinese traditional culture. Block printing was invented,
making the written word available to vastly greater audiences.
The Tang period was the golden age of literature and art.
A government system supported by a large class of Confucian
literati selected through civil service examinations was perfected
under Tang rule. This competitive procedure was designed to
draw the best talents into government. But perhaps an even
greater consideration for the Tang rulers, aware that imperial
dependence on powerful aristocratic families and warlords
would have destabilizing consequences, was to create a body
of career officials having no autonomous territorial or functional
power base. As it turned out, these scholar-officials acquired
status in their local communities, family ties, and shared
values that connected them to the imperial court. From Tang
times until the closing days of the Qing empire in 1911, scholar-officials
functioned often as intermediaries between the grass-roots
level and the government.
By the middle of the eighth century A.D.,
Tang power had ebbed. Domestic economic instability and military
defeat in 751 by Arabs at Talas, in Central Asia, marked the
beginning of five centuries of steady military decline for
the Chinese empire. Misrule, court intrigues, economic exploitation,
and popular rebellions weakened the empire, making it possible
for northern invaders to terminate the dynasty in 907. The
next half-century saw the fragmentation of China into five
northern dynasties and ten southern kingdoms.

Song Dynasty 
But in 960 a new power, Song (960-1279),
reunified most of China Proper. The Song period divides into
two phases: Northern Song (960-1127) and Southern Song (1127-1279).
The division was caused by the forced abandonment of north
China in 1127 by the Song court, which could not push back
the nomadic invaders.
The founders of the Song dynasty built an
effective centralized bureaucracy staffed with civilian scholar-officials.
Regional military governors and their supporters were replaced
by centrally appointed officials. This system of civilian
rule led to a greater concentration of power in the emperor
and his palace bureaucracy than had been achieved in the previous
dynasties.
The Song dynasty is notable for the development
of cities not only for administrative purposes but also as
centers of trade, industry, and maritime commerce. The landed
scholar-officials, sometimes collectively referred to as the
gentry, lived in the provincial centers alongside the shopkeepers,
artisans, and merchants. A new group of wealthy commoners--the
mercantile class--arose as printing and education spread,
private trade grew, and a market economy began to link the
coastal provinces and the interior. Landholding and government
employment were no longer the only means of gaining wealth
and prestige.
Culturally, the Song refined many of the
developments of the previous centuries. Included in these
refinements were not only the Tang ideal of the universal
man, who combined the qualities of scholar, poet, painter,
and statesman, but also historical writings, painting, calligraphy,
and hard-glazed porcelain. Song intellectuals sought answers
to all philosophical and political questions in the Confucian
Classics. This renewed interest in the Confucian ideals and
society of ancient times coincided with the decline of Buddhism,
which the Chinese regarded as foreign and offering few practical
guidelines for the solution of political and other mundane
problems.
The Song Neo-Confucian philosophers, finding
a certain purity in the originality of the ancient classical
texts, wrote commentaries on them. The most influential of
these philosophers was Zhu Xi (1130-1200), whose synthesis
of Confucian thought and Buddhist, Taoist, and other ideas
became the official imperial ideology from late Song times
to the late nineteenth century. As incorporated into the examination
system, Zhu Xi's philosophy evolved into a rigid official
creed, which stressed the one-sided obligations of obedience
and compliance of subject to ruler, child to father, wife
to husband, and younger brother to elder brother. The effect
was to inhibit the societal development of premodern China,
resulting both in many generations of political, social, and
spiritual stability and in a slowness of cultural and institutional
change up to the nineteenth century. Neo-Confucian doctrines
also came to play the dominant role in the intellectual life
of Korea, Vietnam, and Japan.

Mongolian Interlude 
By the mid-thirteenth century, the Mongols
had subjugated north China, Korea, and the Muslim kingdoms
of Central Asia and had twice penetrated Europe. With the
resources of his vast empire, Kublai Khan (忽必烈1215-94), a
grandson of Genghis Khan (成藩朔罕1167?-1227) and the supreme
leader of all Mongol tribes, began his drive against the Southern
Song. Even before the extinction of the Song dynasty, Kublai
Khan had established the first alien dynasty to rule all China--the
Yuan (1279-1368).
Although the Mongols sought to govern China
through traditional institutions, using Chinese (Han) bureaucrats,
they were not up to the task. The Han were discriminated against
socially and politically. All important central and regional
posts were monopolized by Mongols, who also preferred employing
non-Chinese from other parts of the Mongol domain--Central
Asia, the Middle East, and even Europe--in those positions
for which no Mongol could be found. Chinese were more often
employed in non-Chinese regions of the empire.
As in other periods of alien dynastic rule
of China, a rich cultural diversity developed during the Yuan
dynasty. The major cultural achievements were the development
of drama and the novel and the increased use of the written
vernacular. The Mongols' extensive West Asian and European
contacts produced a fair amount of cultural exchange. Western
musical instruments were introduced to enrich the Chinese
performing arts. From this period dates the conversion to
Islam, by Muslims of Central Asia, of growing numbers of Chinese
in the northwest and southwest. Nestorianism and Roman Catholicism
also enjoyed a period of toleration. Lamaism (Tibetan Buddhism)
flourished, although native Taoism endured Mongol persecutions.
Confucian governmental practices and examinations based on
the Classics, which had fallen into disuse in north China
during the period of disunity, were reinstated by the Mongols
in the hope of maintaining order over Han society. Advances
were realized in the fields of travel literature, cartography
and geography, and scientific education. Certain key Chinese
innovations, such as printing techniques, porcelain production,
playing cards, and medical literature, were introduced in
Europe, while the production of thin glass and cloisonne became
popular in China. The first records of travel by Westerners
date from this time. The most famous traveler of the period
was the Venetian Marco Polo, whose account of his trip to
"Cambaluc," the Great Khan's capital (now Beijing),
and of life there astounded the people of Europe. The Mongols
undertook extensive public works. Road and water communications
were reorganized and improved. To provide against possible
famines, granaries were ordered built throughout the empire.
The city of Beijing was rebuilt with new palace grounds that
included artificial lakes, hills and mountains, and parks.
During the Yuan period, Beijing became the terminus of the
Grand Canal, which was completely renovated. These commercially
oriented improvements encouraged overland as well as maritime
commerce throughout Asia and facilitated the first direct
Chinese contacts with Europe. Chinese and Mongol travelers
to the West were able to provide assistance in such areas
as hydraulic engineering, while bringing back to the Middle
Kingdom new scientific discoveries and architectural innovations.
Contacts with the West also brought the introduction to China
of a major new food crop--sorghum--along with other foreign
food products and methods of preparation.

The Chinese Regain Power 
Rivalry among the Mongol imperial heirs,
natural disasters, and numerous peasant uprisings led to the
collapse of the Yuan dynasty. The Ming dynasty (1368-1644)
was founded by a Han Chinese peasant and former Buddhist monk
turned rebel army leader (朱元璋). Having its capital first at
Nanjing (南旦which means Southern Capital) and later at Beijing
(北旦or Northern Capital), the Ming reached the zenith of power
during the first quarter of the fifteenth century. The Chinese
armies reconquered Annam (安南), as northern Vietnam was then
known, in Southeast Asia and kept back the Mongols, while
the Chinese fleet sailed the China seas and the Indian Ocean,
cruising as far as the east coast of Africa. The maritime
Asian nations sent envoys with tribute for the Chinese emperor.
Internally, the Grand Canal was expanded to its farthest limits
and proved to be a stimulus to domestic trade.
The Ming maritime expeditions stopped rather
suddenly after 1433, the date of the last voyage. Historians
have given as one of the reasons the great expense of large-scale
expeditions at a time of preoccupation with northern defenses
against the Mongols. Opposition at court also may have been
a contributing factor, as conservative officials found the
concept of expansion and commercial ventures alien to Chinese
ideas of government. Pressure from the powerful Neo-Confucian
bureaucracy led to a revival of strict agrarian-centered society.
The stability of the Ming dynasty, which was without major
disruptions of the population (then around 100 million), economy,
arts, society, or politics, promoted a belief among the Chinese
that they had achieved the most satisfactory civilization
on earth and that nothing foreign was needed or welcome.
Long wars with the Mongols, incursions by
the Japanese into Korea, and harassment of Chinese coastal
cities by the Japanese in the sixteenth century weakened Ming
rule, which became, as earlier Chinese dynasties had, ripe
for an alien takeover. In 1644 the Manchus took Beijing from
the north and became masters of north China, establishing
the last imperial dynasty, the Qing (1644-1911).

The Rise of the Manchus 
Although the Manchus were not Han Chinese
and were strongly resisted, especially in the south, they
had assimilated a great deal of Chinese culture before conquering
China Proper. Realizing that to dominate the empire they would
have to do things the Chinese way, the Manchus retained many
institutions of Ming and earlier Chinese derivation. They
continued the Confucian court practices and temple rituals,
over which the emperors had traditionally presided.
The Manchus continued the Confucian civil
service system. Although Chinese were barred from the highest
offices, Chinese officials predominated over Manchu officeholders
outside the capital, except in military positions. The Neo-Confucian
philosophy, emphasizing the obedience of subject to ruler,
was enforced as the state creed. The Manchu emperors also
supported Chinese literary and historical projects of enormous
scope; the survival of much of China's ancient literature
is attributed to these projects.
Ever suspicious of Han Chinese, the Qing rulers put into effect
measures aimed at preventing the absorption of the Manchus
into the dominant Han Chinese population. Han Chinese were
prohibited from migrating into the Manchu homeland, and Manchus
were forbidden to engage in trade or manual labor. Intermarriage
between the two groups was forbidden. In many government positions
a system of dual appointments was used--the Chinese appointee
was required to do the substantive work and the Manchu to
ensure Han loyalty to Qing rule.
The Qing regime was determined to protect
itself not only from internal rebellion but also from foreign
invasion. After China Proper had been subdued, the Manchus
conquered Outer Mongolia (now the Mongolian People's Republic)
in the late seventeenth century. In the eighteenth century
they gained control of Central Asia as far as the Pamir Mountains
and established a protectorate over the area the Chinese call
XiZang (Tibet) but commonly known in the West as Tibet. The
Qing thus became the first dynasty to eliminate successfully
all danger to China Proper from across its land borders. Under
Manchu rule the empire grew to include a larger area than
before or since; Taiwan, the last outpost of anti-Manchu resistance,
was also incorporated into China for the first time. In addition,
Qing emperors received tribute from the various border states.
The chief threat to China's integrity did
not come overland, as it had so often in the past, but by
sea, reaching the southern coastal area first. Western traders,
missionaries, and soldiers of fortune began to arrive in large
numbers even before the Qing, in the sixteenth century. The
empire's inability to evaluate correctly the nature of the
new challenge or to respond flexibly to it resulted in the
demise of the Qing and the collapse of the entire millennia-old
framework of dynastic rule.

Republic of China 
The republic that Sun Yat-sen and his associates
envisioned evolved slowly. The revolutionists lacked an army,
and the power of Yuan Shikai began to outstrip that of parliament.
Yuan revised the constitution at will and became dictatorial.
In August 1912 a new political party was founded by Song Jiaoren
(1882-1913), one of Sun's associates. The party, the Guomindang
Kuomintang or KMT--the National People's Party, frequently
referred to as the Nationalist Party), was an amalgamation
of small political groups, including Sun's Tongmeng Hui .
In the national elections held in February 1913 for the new
bicameral parliament, Song campaigned against the Yuan administration,
and his party won a majority of seats. Yuan had Song assassinated
in March; he had already arranged the assassination of several
pro-revolutionist generals. Animosity toward Yuan grew. In
the summer of 1913 seven southern provinces rebelled against
Yuan. When the rebellion was suppressed, Sun and other instigators
fled to Japan. In October 1913 an intimidated parliament formally
elected Yuan president of the Republic of China, and the major
powers extended recognition to his government. To achieve
international recognition, Yuan Shikai had to agree to autonomy
for Outer Mongolia and Xizang (西藏). China was still to be
suzerain, but it would have to allow Russia a free hand in
Outer Mongolia and Britain continuance of its influence in
Xizang.
In November Yuan Shikai, legally president,
ordered the Guomindang dissolved and its members removed from
parliament. Within a few months, he suspended parliament and
the provincial assemblies and forced the promulgation of a
new constitution, which, in effect, made him president for
life. Yuan's ambitions still were not satisfied, and, by the
end of 1915, it was announced that he would reestablish the
monarchy. Widespread rebellions ensued, and numerous provinces
declared independence. With opposition at every quarter and
the nation breaking up into warlord factions, Yuan Shikai
died of natural causes in June 1916, deserted by his lieutenants.

Nationalism and Communism
After Yuan Shikai's death, shifting alliances
of regional warlords fought for control of the Beijing government.
The nation also was threatened from without by the Japanese.
When World War I broke out in 1914, Japan fought on the Allied
side and seized German holdings in Shandong Province. In 1915
the Japanese set before the warlord government in Beijing
the so-called Twenty-One Demands, which would have made China
a Japanese protectorate. The Beijing government rejected some
of these demands but yielded to the Japanese insistence on
keeping the Shandong territory already in its possession.
Beijing also recognized Tokyo's authority over southern Manchuria
and eastern Inner Mongolia. In 1917, in secret communiques,
Britain, France, and Italy assented to the Japanese claim
in exchange for the Japan's naval action against Germany.
In 1917 China declared war on Germany in
the hope of recovering its lost province, then under Japanese
control. But in 1918 the Beijing government signed a secret
deal with Japan accepting the latter's claim to Shandong.
When the Paris peace conference of 1919 confirmed the Japanese
claim to Shandong and Beijing's sellout became public, internal
reaction was shattering. On May 4, 1919, there were massive
student demonstrations against the Beijing government and
Japan. The political fervor, student activism, and iconoclastic
and reformist intellectual currents set in motion by the patriotic
student protest developed into a national awakening known
as the May Fourth Movement . The intellectual milieu in which
the May Fourth Movement developed was known as the New Culture
Movement and occupied the period from 1917 to 1923. The student
demonstrations of May 4, 1919 were the high point of the New
Culture Movement, and the terms are often used synonymously.
Students returned from abroad advocating social and political
theories ranging from complete Westernization of China to
the socialism that one day would be adopted by China's communist
rulers.

Opposing the Warlords
The May Fourth Movement helped to rekindle
the then-fading cause of republican revolution. In 1917 Sun
Yat-sen had become commander-in-chief of a rival military
government in Guangzhou in collaboration with southern warlords.
In October 1919 Sun reestablished the Guomindang to counter
the government in Beijing. The latter, under a succession
of warlords, still maintained its facade of legitimacy and
its relations with the West. By 1921 Sun had become president
of the southern government. He spent his remaining years trying
to consolidate his regime and achieve unity with the north.
His efforts to obtain aid from the Western democracies were
ignored, however, and in 1921 he turned to the Soviet Union,
which had recently achieved its own revolution. The Soviets
sought to befriend the Chinese revolutionists by offering
scathing attacks on "Western imperialism." But for
political expediency, the Soviet leadership initiated a dual
policy of support for both Sun and the newly established Chinese
Communist Party The Soviets hoped for consolidation but were
prepared for either side to emerge victorious. In this way
the struggle for power in China began between the Nationalists
and the Communists. In 1922 the Guomindang-warlord alliance
in Guangzhou was ruptured, and Sun fled to Shanghai. By then
Sun saw the need to seek Soviet support for his cause. In
1923 a joint statement by Sun and a Soviet representative
in Shanghai pledged Soviet assistance for China's national
unification. Soviet advisers--the most prominent of whom was
an agent of the Comintern, Mikhail Borodin--began to arrive
in China in 1923 to aid in the reorganization and consolidation
of the Guomindang along the lines of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union. The CCP was under Comintern instructions
to cooperate with the Guomindang, and its members were encouraged
to join while maintaining their party identities. The CCP
was still small at the time, having a membership of 300 in
1922 and only 1,500 by 1925. The Guomindang in 1922 already
had 150,000 members. Soviet advisers also helped the Nationalists
set up a political institute to train propagandists in mass
mobilization techniques and in 1923 sent Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang
Jieshi in pinyin), one of Sun's lieutenants from Tongmeng
Hui days, for several months' military and political study
in Moscow. After Chiang's return in late 1923, he participated
in the establishment of the Whampoa (Huangpu in pinyin) Military
Academy outside Guangzhou, which was the seat of government
under the Guomindang-CCP alliance. In 1924 Chiang became head
of the academy and began the rise to prominence that would
make him Sun's successor as head of the Guomindang and the
unifier of all China under the right-wing nationalist government.
Sun Yat-sen died of cancer in Beijing in
March 1925, but the Nationalist movement he had helped to
initiate was gaining momentum. During the summer of 1925,
Chiang, as commander-in-chief of the National Revolutionary
Army, set out on the long-delayed Northern Expedition against
the northern warlords. Within nine months, half of China had
been conquered. By 1926, however, the Guomindang had divided
into left- and right-wing factions, and the Communist bloc
within it was also growing. In March 1926, after thwarting
a kidnapping attempt against him, Chiang abruptly dismissed
his Soviet advisers, imposed restrictions on CCP members'
participation in the top leadership, and emerged as the preeminent
Guomindang leader. The Soviet Union, still hoping to prevent
a split between Chiang and the CCP, ordered Communist underground
activities to facilitate the Northern Expedition, which was
finally launched by Chiang from Guangzhou in July 1926.
In early 1927 the Guomindang-CCP rivalry
led to a split in the revolutionary ranks. The CCP and the
left wing of the Guomindang had decided to move the seat of
the Nationalist government from Guangzhou to Wuhan. But Chiang,
whose Northern Expedition was proving successful, set his
forces to destroying the Shanghai CCP apparatus and established
an anti-Communist government at Nanjing in April 1927. There
now were three capitals in China: the internationally recognized
warlord regime in Beijing; the Communist and left-wing Guomindang
regime at Wuhan; and the right-wing civilian-military regime
at Nanjing, which would remain the Nationalist capital for
the next decade.
The Comintern cause appeared bankrupt. A
new policy was instituted calling on the CCP to foment armed
insurrections in both urban and rural areas in preparation
for an expected rising tide of revolution. Unsuccessful attempts
were made by Communists to take cities such as Nanchang ,
Changsha, Shantou , and Guangzhou, and an armed rural insurrection,
known as the Autumn Harvest Uprising, was staged by peasants
in Hunan Province. The insurrection was led by Mao Zedong
(1893-1976), who would later become chairman of the CCP and
head of state of the People's Republic of China. Mao was of
peasant origins and was one of the founders of the CCP.
But in mid-1927 the CCP was at a low ebb.
The Communists had been expelled from Wuhan by their left-wing
Guomindang allies, who in turn were toppled by a military
regime. By 1928 all of China was at least nominally under
Chiang's control, and the Nanjing government received prompt
international recognition as the sole legitimate government
of China. The Nationalist government announced that in conformity
with Sun Yat-sen's formula for the three stages of revolution--military
unification, political tutelage, and constitutional democracy--China
had reached the end of the first phase and would embark on
the second, which would be under Guomindang direction.
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