MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · November 7 · 1914

ON THIS DAY · 7 NOVEMBER 1914

Tsingtao taken

Map: Tsingtao taken
7 NOVEMBER 1914 · CHINA IN REVOLUTION, 1911–1949

7 Nov 1914 — Japan, entering the World War on the Allied side, seizes Germany’s Shandong colony — and means to keep it. When Versailles confirms the transfer in 1919, it is this port, not any battlefield, that brings Chinese students into the streets.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

The map stays one blue piece through these years, and the chapter is about why that blue was already a fiction. Yuan Shikai (the ● at Peking) is the most powerful man in China because the Beiyang Army is personally his — its officers owe their careers to him, not to the republic. Watch him use it: when Sun’s new Nationalist Party wins the republic’s first real election in 1913, its parliamentary leader Song Jiaoren is shot at Shanghai station (the trail of telegrams ran embarrassingly close to Yuan’s premier); the party’s armed “Second Revolution” that summer is crushed in weeks; parliament is dissolved, the constitution rewritten, and by 1914 the republic is a presidency-for-life with a legislature of appointees. It is government by one man’s army — which means it can survive exactly as long as one man.

From Chapter 2 — Yuan Shikai’s Republic of China in Revolution, 1911–1949 (1915).

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THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT

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

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