The Northern Expedition
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Transcript The Northern Expedition
Chapter 14
Twentieth-Century Political and Cultural Ferment
Independence Movements
The Arab World
British interest is military, political, and strategic
Sherif Husayn agreed to revolt against the Ottomans
Balfour Declaration, 1917, supports Zionists
Mandates under the League of Nations
France mandated Lebanon and Syria
Britain mandated Iraq, Jordan, Palestine
British sphere of influence over Arabian Peninsula
Cairo Conference, 1921
Britain to use Arab leaders to rule
Egyptian revolt when refused independence, 1919
Limited independence under constitutional monarchy,
1922
Conflicting demands of Zionists and Palestinians in Palestine
Modernism versus tradition
Turkey
Mustafa Kemal, Atatürk, wished to westernizeas
rapidly as possible
Secular, constitutional state
Social changes
Iran
Reza Khan seized power, 1923
Modernization
Saudi Arabia
Influence of the Wahhabi
Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud commitment to an Islamic
state
Favors modernization
African Revolts
Failure of early west and south African revolts
North Africa
Abd al-Karim
Omar Mukhtar
African Political Organizations and Pan Africanism
Negriturde
W.E.B. DuBois, African American
Racial, economic, political reforms
African independence
Blaise Daigne
Africans to achieve parity with Europeans in the
imperial network
Marcus Garvy, Jamaican
Back to Africa
National Congress of British West Africa
African National Congress
Afrikaners in South Africa
Mexico
Porfirio Diaz
Modernization at the expense of the masses
Exclusion of the middle class and urban workers
Large foreign infestment
Francisco Madero
Plan of San Luis Potosí
Emiliano Zapata
Plan of Ayala
Constitution of 1917
Institutional Revolutionary Party
Lázaro Cárdenas
Revolution slows down in the 1940s
East Asian Colonial Territories, 1840-1940
1. Although European contacts with the East date from the sixteenth century, there ware restrictions. China limited western trade to Canton-Maccao
and the Japanese after 1639 restricted western commerce to only the Dutch who were permitted one ship a year to an island off the commercial port
of Nagasaki.
2. Expanding at the expense of the Ottomans, Russia occupied the area of the Caspian Sea by 1881 and in 1885 was in Turkistan. The appearance
of the Russians on the northern borders of Persia and Afghanistan worried the British in India. In 1907 Britain and Russia agreed to make
Afghanistan a buffer and divide Persia into two spheres of influence. Likewise, French annexation of Indochina was cause for Britain to take over
Burma and expand from Singapore to the Malay Peninsula. Because Siam served as a buffer to the French and the British, it remained
independent.
3. Blocked by the British in western Asia, Russia turned to eastern Asia. By 1860 it had occupied Manchuria but conflicting aspirations over Korea
brought war with Japan in 1904. Defeated in 1905, Russia recognized Korea as a Japanese protectorate.
4. The opening of China in the nineteenth century was the result of the inability to withstand the pressures of the West. Because the Europeans had
few products desired by China, there was a significant imbalance of trade. This was altered when Britain initiated commerce in illegal opium from
India. When the Chinese tried to stop the trade in 1839, Britain went to war. The peace in 1842 opened new ports and forced China to cede Hong
Kong to Britain. Other western states demanded similar concessions. More ports were opened after military operations by the French and British in
1858-1860. In 1860 China lost Manchuria to Russia and had to allow France to establish a protectorate over Indochina. Following the SinoJapanese War (1894-1895), Russia, Britain, France, Germany, and Japan partitioned China into "spheres of interest." Finally, in 1912 after an
indigenous uprising, the Manchu government fell and China became a republic.
5. The presence of the United States in Asia stemmed from opening Japan in 1853. American interest was peaked even further in 1898 as a result of
the Spanish-American War. The defeat of Spain brought control over the Philippine Islands and Guam. The Filipinos hoped for independence but
the United States had no such intentions. An insurrection followed which took three years and 60,000 troops to quell. Independence would not
come until July 4, 1946.
6. The westernization of Japan under the Meiji led to adventures in imperialism. In the Sine-Japanese War (1894-1895) victorious Japan won
Chinese recognition of Korean independence, the cession of Formosa, the Pescadores Islands, and the southern projection of Manchuria (though
eventually forced to give it up). Later, Japan gained concessions in Fukien opposite Formosa. After the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) Japan
annexed southern Sakhalin Island and gained economic concessions in Manchuria.
Questions:
1. Why was China unable to halt Western and Japanese advance?
2. Why did Russia and Britain struggle over Asia?
East Asian Colonial Territories, 1840-1940
Struggle for Independence in South and East Asia
India
British policy to suppress local practices cruel and
unjust
Promoted tolerance for all religions
Indian National Congress, 1885
All India Muslim League, 1905
Government of India Act, 1919
Mohandas K. Gandhi, Mahatma
Violence is wrong
Social reform
Civil disobedience
India Act, 1935
Mohammed Ali Jinnah
Separate identity for Muslims
Changing Indian Society
Population growth, low standard of living
Expanded economy
Advancing status of women
Southeast Asia
Burma (Myanmar) separated and granted limited
autonomy from India due to anti-British riots
Achmed Sukarno led nationalistic opposition in the Dutch
East Indies (Indonesia)
Communist nationalist opposition in Vietnam
The Qing Empire in the Early Twentieth Century
1. The Qing dynasty from 1644 to 1912 generally continued the political and social order of the previous Ming (1368-1644). The ruling Manchus
originated in Manchuria from which the unifier of the Manchu state, Nurhachi, seized part of the Liaotung Peninsula and in 1625 made Mukden his
capital. Beijing, and thus the Chinese throne, fell to the Manchus in 1644.
2. In the 1670s the khan of the Dzungars, Galdan, in western Mongolia extended his control over Chinese Turkestan (Xinjiang) . When Galdan
attacked the eastern Mongols, China replied and in 1696 destroyed Galdan's army. By the 1750s after years of unsettled affairs, the Qing gained
control Dzungaria and Chinese Turkestan.
3. In subduing the Western Mongols, the Qing were led to move on Tibet since the Lamist church exercised influence on both Tibetan life and the
Mongols. In 1750 a Qing protectorate with a garrison of 1500 men was established.
4. Since the Manchus constituted only two percent of the empire's entire population, military forces were strategically placed throughout the empire:
25 posts around Beijing; strategic locations in the northwestern frontier to prevent attacks from Central Asia; major population centers; and at
important southern locations. Further protecting themselves, the Manchus separated their homeland from China and prohibited Chinese immigration
in 1668. The Willow Palisade (a ditch with willows planted along it) was extended from near where the Great Wall begins in the east several hundred
miles to north of Mukden and then down the Yalu River.
5. In the late eighteenth century military campaigns brought tributary status to Nepal, Burma, and Vietnam. Siam, Cambodia, Laos, and Tonkin also
paid tribute at various times.
6. Between 1858 and 1860 Russia succeeded in gaining by treaty the north bank of the Amur River and jointly possessed with China the territory
between the Ussuri River and the sea. The east coast of Manchuria remained unresolved between Russia and China. Finally in 1860 a treaty gave
Russia the Maritime Provinces between the Ussuri and the Pacific where Vladivostok was founded in 1860.
7. By 1637 Korea had been made a vassal state. In 1876 Japan forced China to open three ports and declare Korea an independent state. War
broke out in 1895 over China's claim on Korea. China's loss resulted in the recognition of the independence of Korea and handing over Liaotung
Peninsula and Taiwan (Formosa) to Japan.
Question:
1. How had the Qing begun to contract by the end of the nineteenth century?
The Qing Empire in the Early Twentieth Century
Chinese Nationalism
Sun Yat sen
Three People’s Principles
Kuomintang
Chinese Republic established, 1911
Active warlords
Accepts support of the Soviet Union
Chiang Kai-shek
Chinese Communism
Mao Tse-tung
Peasants key to political power
Long March
The Northern Expedition
1. Revolutionary Marxism had its greatest impact on the industrial center of Shanghai where the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was founded in
1919. At the urging of Comintern agents, the CCP formed an alliance with the ruling Kuomintang Party (Nationalist) in 1923 to oppose the warlords
and drive out foreign powers in China. Meanwhile, in Canton, the CCP was creating a communist led government within a government. Communist
influence was spreading in the Kuomintang. In March 1926 Chiang Kai-Shek, who had succeeded to the head of the Kuomintang after Sun Yat-sen
died in 1925, staged a coup d'etat at Canton ousting part of the CCP leadership. Chiang reaffirmed the Canton-Moscow alliance.
2. The Northern Expedition had been long in planning by Sun to smash the warlords and unify China. It was launched in July 1926. Preceded by
trained propagandist, the army advanced rapidly and by the time it reached the Yangtze River had absorbed the armies of thirty-four warlords. In
1927 the Northern Expedition continued to press its successful take over of central China. This included movement down the Yangtze to seize the
center of rice production and the industrial base around Shanghai. On April 12 Chiang's forces attacked the Communists and their supporters in
Shanghai and killed thousands. Chaing then set up his own government in Nanjing. Another Nationalist Northern Expedition in 1928 occupied
Peiking, renaming it Peiping (Beijing, "Northern Peace"). By the end of 1928 the nationalist government had received international recognition.
3. In response to these events, Mao Zedong led an insurrection in Hunan but it, like the revolt in Canton, failed. The CCP leadership that was not
executed went underground or was forced into the countryside.
4. In late 1926 the Nationalist government moved from Canton to Wuhan.
5. After 1927 the CCP-Kuomintang alliance no longer existed and Chiang was determined to root the communists out of their base in Shanghai and
their rural redoubt in Jianxi province. By 1931 they were drawn out of Shanghai. Three years later the communists were surrounded in Jianxi.
Abandoning their base in October 1934, Mao Zedong's Young People's Liberation Army embarked on the Long March. Moving swiftly on foot at
night over a period of one year and at distance of 6000 miles, the journey ended at Yunan. Only 10,000 arrived at the final destination.
Questions:
1. What was the purpose of the Northern Expedition and what did it accomplish?
2. What was the Long March and why was it necessary?
The Northern Expedition
Japanese Imperialism in China
Manchuria, 1931
Chiang Kai-shek calls for unity to resist Japan
Invasion of China, 1937
Changing Chinese Society
Confucian philosophy collapsed with the imperial
system
Impact of Christian schools on education
Soviet Union, 1917-1939
Tsarist Government
Nicholas II, 1894-1917
Peasant population growth
Emergence of small urban working class
Revolt of 1905
October Manifesto, 1905
Heavy loses in World War I
Tsarist government falls, 1917
Provisional government under Alexander Kerensky, a
moderate socialist
Lenin and Bolsheviks seize power
V.I. Lenin; Bolsheviks
Provisional government overthrown, November 6, 1917
Bolshevik regime, 1918-1924
Social Revolutionaries
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Civil War, 1918-1920
Red Terror
Economic collapse; NEP
Struggle for Succession to Lenin
Political struggle between Trotsky and Stalin
Stalin purges the party
Five Year Plans
Attacks on the kulaks and nepmen
State and communal farms
Forced labor
Political purges, 1934-1939
Life and Culture
Destroy the Russian Orthodox church
Aims to create a classless society
Medical care and compulsory free education
Government control of the arts
Soviet Foreign Policy
Third Internationale, Comintern
Commercial treaties, recognition
League of Nations, 1934
Scientific Advances of the Twentieth Century
Marie Curie, radium
Albert Einstein, four-dimensional space-time continuum
Astronomy
Biology, Anthropology, and Psychology
Green Revolution
Modifications on Darwin’s theories
DNA
Margaret Mead
Cultural relativism
Technology
Increased productivity
Plastics and synthetics
Automobile
Recreational and entertainment advances
Medicine
Computers
Dangers of technology
Economics
Managerial revolution
Service occupations
Multinational firms
Government involvement in economics
Social Changes and Women’s Rights
Population explosion and rapid urbanization
Welfare state
Education
Women
More in the workforce
Suffrage
Simone de Beauvoir
Secularism, Pragmatism, Existentialism
Cultural and moral relativism
John Dewey, Pragmatism
Jean-Paul Sartre
Secularism versus Religion
Reconciling Hinduism and Confucianism with Western
institutions
Al-Afghani and Muhammad Abdu
Muslim Brotherhood
Social Thought
Conservatism
Liberalism
Modernism and the Arts
Stress emotions and underside of modern life
Influence of non-Western traditions and styles
Popular Culture
Electronic media
Americanization of popular culture