MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · October 10 · 1945

ON THIS DAY · 10 OCTOBER 1945

The Chungking talks

Map: The Chungking talks
10 OCTOBER 1945 · CHINA IN REVOLUTION, 1911–1949

28 Aug–10 Oct 1945 — Mao flies to Chiang’s capital under American escort; the two men toast each other and sign a unity communiqué neither believes. General Marshall’s year of mediation follows, and fails the same way: both parties would rather risk everything than share an army.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

Japan’s surrender opens the largest land-grab in Chinese history, and the map draws it as a race. The two tan arrows from the north are August Storm (the ● at Harbin): the Soviet Union enters the war on 9 August 1945 and overruns Manchukuo in eleven days — then strips its factories (a reparations commission later priced the removals near nine hundred million dollars) and, with studied ambiguity, lets Japanese arsenals leak to the Communist columns arriving on foot and by junk from Shandong (the red arrow across the gulf). The blue arrow up the coast is the other racer: America sealifts and airlifts half a million Nationalist troops north to take the surrenders of a million Japanese — the greatest troop movement Washington ever performed for an ally, and the clearest statement of whose China it preferred. In between, the map’s hatching says what both parties knew: Manchuria — Japan’s industrial estate, the one region where a Chinese war could be won with factories — is contested from the hour it is created. The countryside between its cities is turning red before the cities have finished changing flags.

From Chapter 10 — The Failed Peace and Manchuria of China in Revolution, 1911–1949 (1946).

OPEN THE INTERACTIVE MAP →

New here? Chapters 1–2 of every atlas are free to sample, and the WW2 atlas is free in full. One membership opens all thirteen — the Cartographer’s Circle.

TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES

Then ask the room: The “lost chance” debate: could the 1945–46 mediation have produced a coalition China — or was the civil war already decided? The argued answer is on the chapter page →

THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT

China in Revolution, 1911–1949
12 CHAPTERS · AN INTERACTIVE SITUATION MAP

THE DISPATCH

One short letter when a new atlas opens — and the printable study guide for China in Revolution is yours now, free.

NO TRACKING · YOUR ADDRESS IS USED FOR THE DISPATCH AND NOTHING ELSE · UNSUBSCRIBE ANYTIME