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Sino-Japanese War

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Sino-Japanese War

Either of two conflicts between China and Japan in the 19th and 20th centuries. The first (1894–95), over Korea, marked the emergence of Japan as a world power and demonstrated the weakness of China. Though Korea had long been China's most important client state, Japan became interested in it for its natural resources and its strategic location. After Japan opened Korea to foreign trade in 1875, tensions between radical, pro-Japanese Koreans, who favoured modernization, and conservative Korean government officials, who were supported by China, brought China and Japan into conflict. Foreign observers predicted an easy victory for the more massive Chinese forces, but Japan scored overwhelming victories on both land and sea. In the Treaty of Shimonoseki, China recognized the independence of Korea and ceded Taiwan, the Pescadores, and the Liaodong Peninsula (the last of which Japan was later forced to return) to Japan. The second conflict (1937–45) denotes the period of China's resistance to Japan's aggression in Chinese territory after Japan had established itself in Manchuria; it ended with Japan's defeat in World War II. See also Manchukuo; Marco Polo Bridge Incident; Nanjing Massacre; Tonghak Uprising.



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Chinese director Guan Hu on Thursday offered the Venice film festival the most improbable of stories from the Sino-Japanese war, that of a peasant and a Dutch cow left to fend for themselves.
Aggressor nation' "The current Chinese government obstinately insists that there was a 'Japanese invasion', but Japan obtained its interests in the Chinese mainland legally under international law through the Sino-Japanese War, the Russo-Japanese War, and so on, and it placed its troops there based on treaties in order to protect those interests," Tamogami wrote.
95 Paperback DS777 During the Sino-Japanese war of 1937-45, the Chinese Communist Party experienced an astonishingly rapid increase in resources and momentum that provided the wherewithal for the triumph of the 1949 revolution.
 
 
 
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