Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 24
biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 267 © BistioGRarny 287 Bergamini, David. Japan's Imperial Conspiracy. New York: Pocket Books, 1972. Bisson, T. A. Japan in China, 1957-1937. New York: Macmillan, 1958. Boorman, Howard. “Wang Ching-wei: China’s Romantic Radical.” Political Sci- ence Quarterly 79, n0. 4 (1964): 504-23. , ed. Biographical Dictionary of Republican China. Vols. 1-4. New York: Columbia University Press, 196771. Brande, Conrad, Benjamin Schwartz, and John K. Fairbank, eds. A Documentary History of Chinese Communism. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1952. British Chamber of Commerce Journal (BCOC}} (Shanghai). Various issues. Bush, Richard C. The Politics of Cotton Textiles in Kuomintang China, 1927-1937. New York: Garland Publishing, 1982. Butow, Robert J. C. Tojo and the Coming of War. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1961. Chang Chiicchun, ed. K’ang Jib Chan-shib (History of the war of resistance). ‘Taipei: National Defense Research Institute, 1966. Chang Chien-p’u. Chine lin-shib-nien-lai-ti Chung-Jib kuan-bsi (Recent sixty years of Sino-Japanese relations). Shanghai: Sheng-huo Book Store, 1938. Chang Chih-chung, “Ti-wu-chun Tsan-chia Sung-Hu K’ang-Jih Chan-i-ti Chih- K’ou” (The Fifth Army in the Wusung-Shanghai battle). Were-shih Tzw-liao, no. 37. n.d, Cited in Kang-Jib Feng-ywn Lu (Shanghai: Shanghai People’s Publishing, x985)y 134+ Chang Hui and Pao Ts'un, eds. Shanghai chin-pai-nien ko-ming shib-bua (The history of the revolution during the past century in Shanghai). Shanghai: Shanghai People’s Press, 1963. Chang Kuo-Vao. The Rise of the Chinese Communist Party, 1921-27. 2 vols. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1971-72. Chang, Sidney, and Ramon Myers, eds. Ch’en Li-fu. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1994. Chang Yu-fa. Chung-kuo Hsien-tai shih (Contemporary history of China). ‘Taipei: Tung-hua History Publishing, 1977. Chen, Jerome, “The Left-wing Kuomintang—a Definition.” Bulletin of the S.0.A.S. (School of Oriental and African Studies) (London) 25, no. 3 (1962). Ch’en Kung-po. Chung-kuo Kuomintang Mi-shil (The secret history of China’s Kuomintang). Tokyo, r980. Chen, Percy. China Called Me. Boston: Little, Brown, 1979. Ch’en Pu-lei. Ch’en Pulei Hui-i-lu, Shanghai, 1939. Ch’en Teh-chang. Shanghai Tsu-chieh-shih (History of the Shanghai conces- sions). Reprint, Taipei, nd. Ch’eng Chi-hua. Chierg-kuo Tien-ying Fu-chan Shib (The history of the develop- ment of Chinese film). Peking: Chinese Film Publishing, 1981. Ch’i Hsi-sheng, Nationalist China at War 1937-1945. Ann Acbor: University of Michigan Press, 1982. Chiang Wen-hsien. Doihara Kenji and the Japanese Expansion into China 1931-1937. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 1969. Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 268 © 288 Bibliography Chien Tuan-sheng. Government and Politics of China 1912-1949. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1948, Chin, Rockwood Q. P. “Cotton Mills, Japan’s Economic Spearhead in China.” Far Eastern Survey 6, n0. 25 (November 17, 1937): 261-67. Chriu Kuo-chen. Shih-chiu Lu-chun Hsing-wang sbib (The rise and fall of the Nineteenth R.A.). Hong Kong: Yu-chou Publishing Co., 1969. Chook, Edward K. Chiang Kai-shek Close-up, a Personal View. Oakland: United California Press, 197. Chu Pang-hsing and Hu Lin-ko. Shanghai Ch'an-yeb yu Shanghai Chib-kung (Shanghai's industry and labor). Hong Kong: Yuan-tung Publishing Co., 1939. Chunghua Minkwo Ta-shib-chi (Record of major events of the Republic of China). Edited by Kao Yin-tzu. Taipei: Shih chieh Book Co., 1957. “Chung-Jih Wanpaoshan Shih-chien” (The Sino-Japanese Wanpaoshan inci- dent). Waichiao Kung-pao (Foreign affairs monthly) (Nanking), July x93, rig-ar. Chung-kuo Chin-tai Ta-shih Nien-piao (Chronology of modern C! Central Literary Supply Society, 1981. Chung-kuo hsien-tai-shib Ts'e-liao hui-pien (Current Chinese historical materi- als), Reprint. Hong Kong: Wen-hua Ts’e-liao Kung-ying Society, 1976. Chung-kuo Hsien-tai-shih Yan-chiu-she (China Current History Research Soci- ety). Chung-kueo K’ang-chan Hua-shib (Pictorial history of China’s war of resistance). Hong Kong: Chung-kuo Hsien-tai-shih yan-chiu-she, 1969. Chung-kuo Kung-ch’an-tang Chu-i Ch’ing-nien Hopeh-sheng Wei wei Chi-nien, “Ler-pa” San-chow-nien Hsuan-yan (Third anniversary commemoration of the 1-28 by the Hopeh Provincial Communist Party youth). Hopeh: CCP, 1935. Chung-kuo Kung-ch’an-tang Chung-yang. Mucch'ien cheng-chib hsing-wu Chung-kiwo yu Chung-kuo Kung-ch'an-tang-ti chung-hsin jen-wu (Politi ahead for China and conditions at the headquarters of the Chinese Commu- nist Party). Shanghai(?): CCP Central Headquarters, January 17, 1931. Chung-kuo Kung-ch’an-tang, Hopei Ch’ing-nien-t’uan, lerb-pa san-chow-nien hsuan-yan (Third anniversary of 1-28), Hopei: Communist Youth Corps, 1935, Chusa Kyoku, ed. Toa Keizai. Shina bosekigyo. Tokyo: Sanyodo, Keizai shiryo ‘Tsukan no. 179, April 1932. Coble, Parks M., Jr. Facing Japan: Chinese Politics and Japanese Imperialism 1931-1937. East Asian Monographs. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 399% ‘The Shanghai Capitalists and the Nationalist Government 1927-1937. East Asian Monographs. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1980. Conroy, Hilary, and Martin Bagish. “Japanese Aggression against China: The Question of Responsibility.” In China and Japan: Search for Balance since World War I, ed. Alvin D. Coox and Hilary Conroy. Santa Barbara: ABC- Clio, 1978. ina}. Taipei: Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 269 © BistioGRarny 289 Cook, Theodore. Japan at War. New York: New Press, 1992. Coox, Alvin D. Nomonhan: Japan against Russia, 1939. Vols. + and 2. Stanfords Stanford University Press, 1985 Coox, Alvin D., and Hilary Conroy, eds. China and Japan: Search for Balance since World War I. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 1578. Crowley, James. “Japanese Army Factionalism in the early 1930's.” Journal of Asian Studies 21, no. 3 (May 1962): 309-28. . “Japan's Military Foreign Policy.” In Japan's Foreign Policy 1868-1941, ced, James William Morley. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974. Japan's Quest for Autonomy: National Security and Foreign Policy, 1930-1938. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966. Doenecke, Justus D. When the Wicked Rise. Lewisburg, Pa.: Bucknell University Press, 1984. Dortill, William F, “CCP United Front Poliey after the Manchurian Incident: A Critique of the Maoist Interpretation.” In Collected Documents of the First Sino-American Conference on Mainland China.Taipei: Institute of Interna- tional Relations, 1971. Dreyer, Edward. China at War, 1901-1949. New York: Longman, 1995. Duus, Peter. The Rise of Modern Japan. New York: Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1976. Duus, Peter, Ramon H. Myers, and Mark R. Peattie, eds. The Japanese Informal Empire in China 1895-1937. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989. Eastman, Lloyd E. The Abortive Revolution: China under Nationalist Rule, 1927-1937. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1974. The Nationalist Era in China 1927-1949. New York: Cambridge Univer- sity Press, 1991, Elmquist, Paul O. “The Sino-Japanese Undeclared War of 1932 at Shanghai. Harvard Papers on China (May 1951): 39-74. Eto Shinkichi. “Japan’s Policies coward China.” In Japan's Foreign Policy 1868-1941, ed. James William Morley, 235-64. New York: Columbia Uni- versity Press, 1974. Evans, David C,. and Mark R. Peattie. Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941. Annapolis: Naval Institute, 1997. Fan Jib Ts'eng-k’an (Anti-Japan supplement). Nanking (?), Ch’ien-lu Society, October 1931. Kuomintang Archives, no. 473-24, Taiwan. Fan Yin-nan, ed. Tang-tai Chung-kuo Ming-jen Lu (Famous contemporary Chi- nese). Shanghai: Liang-you Publishing Co., 1931. Fan-Chiang Yun-tung Shib (The history of the anti~Chiang Kai-shek movement). Hong Kong: Chung-kuo Ch’ing-nien Chun-jen She Chu-pan, 1934. Fang Hsien-ting, Chung-kuo Chil Mien-fang Chib-yeh (Chinese cotton textiles). Tientsin: Nank’ai University, 1933. Fein, Larry. “Remembering Shanghai.” Washington Post, press clipping, nd., from the collection of Richard Buttrick, on the 19308 staff of the U.S. con- sulate at Shanghai. Feis, Herbert. The Road to Pear! Harbor. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1950. Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 269 © BistioGRarny 289 Cook, Theodore. Japan at War. New York: New Press, 1992. Coox, Alvin D. Nomonhan: Japan against Russia, 1939. Vols. + and 2. Stanfords Stanford University Press, 1985 Coox, Alvin D., and Hilary Conroy, eds. China and Japan: Search for Balance since World War I. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 1578. Crowley, James. “Japanese Army Factionalism in the early 1930's.” Journal of Asian Studies 21, no. 3 (May 1962): 309-28. . “Japan's Military Foreign Policy.” In Japan's Foreign Policy 1868-1941, ced, James William Morley. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974. Japan's Quest for Autonomy: National Security and Foreign Policy, 1930-1938. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966. Doenecke, Justus D. When the Wicked Rise. Lewisburg, Pa.: Bucknell University Press, 1984. Dortill, William F, “CCP United Front Poliey after the Manchurian Incident: A Critique of the Maoist Interpretation.” In Collected Documents of the First Sino-American Conference on Mainland China.Taipei: Institute of Interna- tional Relations, 1971. Dreyer, Edward. China at War, 1901-1949. New York: Longman, 1995. Duus, Peter. The Rise of Modern Japan. New York: Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1976. Duus, Peter, Ramon H. Myers, and Mark R. Peattie, eds. The Japanese Informal Empire in China 1895-1937. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989. Eastman, Lloyd E. The Abortive Revolution: China under Nationalist Rule, 1927-1937. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1974. The Nationalist Era in China 1927-1949. New York: Cambridge Univer- sity Press, 1991, Elmquist, Paul O. “The Sino-Japanese Undeclared War of 1932 at Shanghai. Harvard Papers on China (May 1951): 39-74. Eto Shinkichi. “Japan’s Policies coward China.” In Japan's Foreign Policy 1868-1941, ed. James William Morley, 235-64. New York: Columbia Uni- versity Press, 1974. Evans, David C,. and Mark R. Peattie. Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941. Annapolis: Naval Institute, 1997. Fan Jib Ts'eng-k’an (Anti-Japan supplement). Nanking (?), Ch’ien-lu Society, October 1931. Kuomintang Archives, no. 473-24, Taiwan. Fan Yin-nan, ed. Tang-tai Chung-kuo Ming-jen Lu (Famous contemporary Chi- nese). Shanghai: Liang-you Publishing Co., 1931. Fan-Chiang Yun-tung Shib (The history of the anti~Chiang Kai-shek movement). Hong Kong: Chung-kuo Ch’ing-nien Chun-jen She Chu-pan, 1934. Fang Hsien-ting, Chung-kuo Chil Mien-fang Chib-yeh (Chinese cotton textiles). Tientsin: Nank’ai University, 1933. Fein, Larry. “Remembering Shanghai.” Washington Post, press clipping, nd., from the collection of Richard Buttrick, on the 19308 staff of the U.S. con- sulate at Shanghai. Feis, Herbert. The Road to Pear! Harbor. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1950. Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 290 © 290 Bibliography Feuerwerker, Albert. The Chinese Economy, 1912-1949. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 1968, Fifth Army, rs6th Regiment. Sung Hut yu Jib Hsueh-chan Ta-bua Sbib (A pictor- ial history of the bloody defense at Wusung-Shanghai), Shanghai: Life Book Co, 1932. Finch, Perey. Shanghai and Beyond. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1953. Fitzgerald, John. “In the Scales of History: Politics and Culture in Twentieth- Century China.” Twentieth-Century China 24, no. (1999): 1-28 Fujimoto Haruki. Ningem Ishitvara Kanji (The world of Ishiwara Kanji).Tokyo: Taichi Sangyosha, 1959. Further Military Operations. Tokyo: Herald Press, March 1932. Furuya Keiji, ed. Chiang Tsung-t'ung Mi-le (The secret record of President Chiang). Taipei: Chung-yang Jih-pao, 1976. ., ed. Chiang Kai-shek, His Life and Times, Abridged English edition. Ed. Chang Chun-ming. New York: St. John’s University Press, 1981. Gaimu-sho, Joho-bu (Foreign Ministry, Publicity Division). Shina i okeru konichidanti to sono katsudo (China’s Anti-Japanese organizations and activities). Tokyo, September 1937. Glimpses into Japanese Schoolrooms: Including a Refutation of Certain Japanese Propaganda. Shanghai: Union of Educational Institutions of Shanghai, r932. Goette, John. Japan Fights for Asia. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1943. Hanaya Tadashi, “Manshu jihen wa koshite keikaku sareta” (How the Manchurian Incident was planned). In Himerareta Showa-shi, Bessatsu (The secret history of the Showa era), ed. Hayashi Masayoshi. Tokyo, 1965. Harada Kumao. Saionji ko to Seikyoku (Prince Saionji and the political situa- tion). Tokyo: Iwanamii shoten, 1950-52. Harrison, James Pinckney. The Long March to Power: A History of the Chinese Communist Party, 1921-1972. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1972. Hata Ikuhiko. Showa shi no gunjin tachi (Biogcaphies of Showa military men), Tokyo: Bungeishunju-sha, 1982 Hatano Ken’ichi. Shanhai Jiben Gaiko Shi (The diplomatic history of the Shang- hai “incident”). Tokyo, May 25, 1932. IMFTE, court exhibit 3163- National Archives. Hauser, Ernest O. Shanghai, City for Sale, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1940. Hayashi Masayoshi, ed. Himerareta Showa-shi, Bessatsu (The secret history of the Showa era). Tokyo, 1965. Henriot, Christian. Shanghai, 1927-1937. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993 Honig, Emily. “Invisible Inequities: The Status of Subei People in Contemporary Shanghai.” China Quarterly, no. 122 (June 1990}: 273-77. Sisters and Strangers: Women in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919-1949. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986. Houn, Franklin W. A Short History of Chinese Communism. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1967. Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 291 © BistioGRarny 291 Hsia Ching-lin, The Status of Shanghai: A Historical Review of the International Settlement, Its Future Development and Possibilities through Sino-Foreign Cooperation. Shanghai: Kelly and Walsh, Ltd., 1929. Hou C. Y, Immanuel. The Rise of Modern China. New York: Oxford University Press, 1970. Hsu Kai-yu. Chou En-lai, China's Gray Eminence. New York: Doubleday and Co., 1968. Hsu Lung-hsuen and Chang Ming-kai. History of the Sino-Japanese War 1937-1945. Taipei: Chung Wu Publishing Co., 1972. Hou Shu-hsi. Japan and Shanghai. Shanghai: Kelly and Walsh, 1932. Hu Han-min, San-shih nien tung-luan Churg-kuo (Thirty years of turmoil in China). Hong Kong: Asia Publishing Co., 95; Hua Chen-chung and Chu Po-kang, eds. Shib-cbin-lu-chun K'ang-Jib bsueh-chan shib-liao (Historical materials from the Nineteenth Route Army's bloody battle with Japan). 1932. Reprint, Shanghai: Shenchou Kuokuang Society, 1947. “Hu-an shih-muo chi” (The Shanghai case from beginning to end). Waichiao Yueb-pao (Peking), vol. 1, no. 1, July 1932. Huang Lili, ed. Ko-ming Jen-wu Chih VII (Celebrities of the revolution). Taipei: Kuomintang Party History Committee, Editorial Committee, 1971. Tenaga Saburo. The Pacific War, 1931~1945, trans. Frank Baldwin. New York: Pantheon Books, 1978. Ikeda Makoto. Chugoku Gendai seijishi (The political history of modern China). Kyoto: Legal Literature Society, 1962. Imperial Japanese Navy. The Shanghai Incident and the Imperial Japanese Navy. Tokyo: Navy Ministry, February 25, 1932. Iriye Akira. After Imperialism: The Search for a New Order in the Far East 1921-1931. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1965. ina and Japan in the Global Setting. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992. ‘The Origins of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific. New York: Longman, 1987. Pearl Harbor and the Coming of the Pacific War: A Brief History with Documents and Essays. Boston: St. Martin’s Press, 1999. Ishii Osamu, Cotton-Textile Diplomacy, Japan, Great Britain, and the US. 1930-1936. New York: Arno Press, 198 Japan Advertiser. American-owned newspaper published in Japan. Japanese National Committee of the International Chamber of Commerce. New York Office. Background of the Shanghai Trouble. New York, March 1932. “Jih-chun Ch’in-fan Shanghai yu Chin-kung Hua-pei” (The Japanese military encroachment at Shanghai and invasion of North China), Waiehiao Wen- (Taipei), November 30, 1965. Johnstone, William Crane. The Shanghai Problem. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1937. “Jucho K’ai-chan tsai Shih-chiu Lu-chun ping-shih ch’un-chung-chung-ti ko-ming Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 292 © 2g Bibliography kung-tso” (Developments in the revolutionary work with the soldiers and officers of the Nineteenth Route Army). Toucheng (Shanghai) 5 (February 1932): 3. Kahn, B. Winston, “Doihara Kenji and the North China Autonomy Movement 1935-36.” Occasional paper no. 4, Arizona State University, Center for Asian Studies, Tempe, November 1975, Kahn, E. China in r932: An Economic Review. Reprint, Shanghai: International Settlement, January 1933, Kang-Chang Yen-i (Expanded coverage of the war of resistance). Hong Kong: Chung-hua Book Store, 1976. Kang Jib Yubui (Resisting the Japanese insults). The History of the Chinese Rev- olutionary War, ed. Chiang Wei-kuo, pt. 3, bk. r. Taipei: Li-ming Literature Co., 1978. Kawakami, K. K. Japan Speaks on the Sino-Japanese Crisis. With an introduction by Prime Minister Inukai. New York: Macmillan Co., 1952. Kido Koichi. The Diary of Marquis Kido, 1931-1945. Frederick, Md. University Publications of America, 1984. Kido Koichi Nikki (Diary of Kido Koichi). Vols. x and 2. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1966. Kikuchi Takaharu. Chugoku minzoku undo no kihon kozo: Taigai boycott no kenkyu (The structure of Chinese nationalism: A study of anti-foreign boy- cotts). Tokyo: Daian, 1966. Kim Ku. Baekbur II Ji (Memoirs of the White Tiger). Seoul, 1992. Kirby, William C, Germany and Republican China, Stanford: Stanford Univer- sity Press, 1984. Kiyozawa Kiyoshi. Nibon gaikoshi (History of Japanese diplomacy). Tokyo, 19410 Kokuryurkai (Black Dragon Society). Kokuyu-kai yonju-nen jireki (The history of the past forty years of the Black Dragon Society). Tokyo, November 15, 1940. Koming Wenbsien (Revolutionary documents). Taipei: Kuomintang Party His- tory Editorial Committee. Kraus, Richard. “Cotton and Cotton Goods in China. 1918-1936: The Impact of Modernization on the Traditional Sector.” Ph.D.diss., Harvard University, 1968. Kung-ch'an Kuo-chi (Shanghai?) no. 3x (November x, 1932). Kung-fei buo-kuo-shib Liao-lui-pien HI (Materials gathered on the history of the national Communist calamity). Taipei, anniversary of the founding of the Republic Committee, 1964. Kuo Fang-nan, ed. [-erh-pa Kuo-Lien Tung-Shih (The painful history of the 1-28 national humiliation). Wuchang: Hupeh Provincial Institute of Education, Research Office, 1952. Kuo Hung (Guo Hong). P’ing-sha Huang-p’u Chiang. Ta-lien: Ta-lien Publishing, Co, 1993. Kuomintang Central Executive Committee. Propaganda Department. Kuomin Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 293 © BistioGRarny 293 Inuici bsuan-yan ehueb-ian-hsuan ch'uan-chi (Pronouncements and decisions from the National Congress). Nanking CEC Propaganda Department, July 1931. Kuomintang Archives, Kuomintang Party History Committee. Chung-hua Min-kuo-shib-bua (Chinese republican history pictorial). Taipei, 1978. LaFeber, Walter. The Clash: U.S.-Japanese Relations throughout History. New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1997. Lai Tse-han. “The Origins and Development of the Canton Separatist Movement of 193.” Manuscript, chap. 5. Lary, Diana. Region and Nation: The Kwangsi Clique in Chinese Politics 1925-1937. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1974. Lee, Edward Bing-shuey. Two Years of the Japan-China Undeclared War and the Attitude of the Powers. Shanghai, 1933. Lei Hsiao-ch’en, San-shib Nien Tung-luan Chung-kuo (China in thirty years of turmoil). Hong Kong: Asia Press, 1955. Lei, K. N., ed. Information and Opinion Concerning the Japanese Invasion of Manchuria and Shanghai from Sources other than Chinese. Shanghai: Shanghai Bar Association, 1932. Li Ching. Lerb-pa Sung Hu Chari Tan-hen (Battle scars of the 1-28 Wusung- Shanghai battle). Shanghai, 1932(2). Li Hsin (Xin). Chung-ktwo Hsin-min Chib Sheng yu Ko-ming Shib-ch'i Tung-shib (The comprehensive history of the birth and revolution of the new Chinese). Peking: People’s Publishing Society, 196. Li, Lincoln, Student Nationalism in China 1924-1949. Albany: SUNY Press, 1994. Li Tsung-jen. The Memoirs of Li Tsung-jen. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1; Liang Ching-ch’un, Chise-i-pa Shib-pien Shib-shu (History of the 9-18 incident). Hong Kong: Asia Book Store, 1954. Liang Hsiung. Tai Li Chuan (The biography of Tai Li). Taipei: Wenhsueh, 1980. Lin Chun-ch’ang, ed. Kuro-min Ko-ming-chun chib Fen-tou (The long struggle of the National Revolutionary Army}. Taipei: Executive Yuan News Bureau, 198. Lin Han-sheng, “A New Look at Chinese Nationalist Appeasers.” In China and Japant: Search for Balance since World War I., ed. Alvin D. Coox and Hilary ‘Conroy. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1978. Lin K’ang-pai. K’ang Jib Fei Yen (On resisting Japan and the CCP). Nanking: Chung-shan Cultural Education Institution, 1937, Lin Pai-sheng, Wang Hsien-sheng-chib Chung-yao chien-yi (Important proposals ‘of Wang Ching-wei). Hong Kong: Nan-hua Jih-pao, 1939. Liu Shao-tang, ed. Mir-kuo jen-wu hsiao-chuan (Short biographies of republi- can era personalities). Vols. 1-5. Taipeis Chuan-chi Wen-shueh Press, 1981-82, Lo Yin-nan. Tang-tai Chung-kuo Ming-jen Lu (Famous Chinese today). Shang- hai: Liang-you Publishing Co., 1931. wanchi Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 294 © 294 Bibliography Loh, Pichon P. Y. “The Politics of Chiang Kai-shek: A Reappraisal.” Journal of Asian Studies (May 1966). Lowe, Chuan-hua. “How Effective Is China’s Boycott against Japan?” China Weekly Review (CWR), February 20, 1932, 371. ed. Symposium on Japan’s Undeclared War in Shanghai. Shanghai: Chi- nese Chamber of Commerce, March 20, 1932. Lu Hsun, “Inscription for San-yi Pagoda” (Shanghai 1933). In Lu Hsun Complete Poems, trans. by David Chen. Tempe: Arizona State University, Center for Asian Studies, 1988. Ma Ying-liang. “Chien-chi Kang-Jih, Fan-tui Neichan” (Arguments for resisting Japan and opposing civil war). In Selections from Shanghai Literature and History, no. 47. Shanghai: Shanghai People’s Publisher, 1984. Ma Ying-liang. “The Record of Anti-Japanese Resistance.” In Report of the Chi- nese People’s Political Consultative Conference. Peking: CPPCC, 1984. Mao Tse-tung. Lun fan-tui Jib-pen Ti-kuo chu--ti ts’e-lye (Strategy for opposi- tion to Japanese imperialism). December 17, 1935. Reprint, Peking: People’s Publishing Society, 1976. ‘Mao Tse-tung Chi (Mao Tse-tung’s works). Peking: Mao Tse-tung Doc- umentary Materials Research Association, 1970. ‘Mao Tse-tung suan-chi (Selected works of Mao Tse-tung). Peking: 1960. Martin, Brian G. “The Green Gang and the Guomindang State: Du Yuesheng and the Politics of Shanghai, 1927-37," Journal of Asian Studies 54, no. x (Febru- ary 1995}: 64-71 Masaki Kashima, Shanhai Jihen Gaiko Shi (Diplomatic history of the Shanghai incident”). Tokyo: Kinkoh-do, 1932. Maxon, Yale Candee. Control of Japanese Foreign Policy: A Study of Civil-Mili- tary Rivalry, r930-1945. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1957. Meng Chih. China Speaks: On the Conflict between China and Japan. New York: Macmillan Co, April 1932 Meng Tich, Shib-chiu Lu-chun sha-tse chi (The record of the maiming of the Nineteenth Route Army). San Francisco: Sai Gai Yat Bo Publishing Co., April 1, 1932. Miao Ch’u-huang, Chung-kuo Kung-ch"an-tang chien-yao beshih (A short his- tory of the Chinese Communist Party). Peking: Hsueh-hsi tsa-chih she, 1956. Mitsubishi Economic Research Bureau. Japanese Trade and Industry: Present and Future, London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd., 1936. Morley, James William, ed. Japan's Foreign Policy 1868-1941. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974 Najita, Tetsuo, “Inukai Tsuyoshi: Some Dilemmas in Party Development in Pre- war Japan.” American Historical Review 74 (December r968): 492-510. New York Times. Various issues, 1931-32. Nihow Kokusai Seiji Gakkai. “Taibeiyo Senso Genin.” In Taileiyo Senso e no michi: Manshu Jiben. (The road to the Pacific War: The Manchurian Inci- dent), ed. Kenkyo Bu. Tokyo: Asahi Newspaper, 1962. Nihon Shoko Kaigisho. Shina Mondai Sanko Shiyo Dai Ni (Reference materials Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 295 © BistioGRarny 295 onthe China problem, no. 2). Shina ni Okeru Saikin no Nikka Haiseki Undo (China, no. 2, The recent anti-Japanese boycott movement). Tokyo, August 1931. Nish, lan Hill, Japan’s Struggle with Internationalism: Japan, China, and the League of Nations 19311933. London: K, Paul International, 1992. Nolan, William Francis. “America’s Participation in the Military Defense of Shanghai, 1931-41.” Ph.D. diss., St. Louis University, 1985. Ogata Sadako. Defiance in Manchuria: The Making of Japanese Foreign Policy 1931-32. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1964. ‘The Origin and History of the Anti-Japanese Movement in China. Tokyo: Herald Press, April 1932 Oudendyk, William J, (Dutch minister to China during 1920s—30s). Way's and By- Ways in Diplomacy. London: Peter Davies, Ltd., 1939. Peattie, Mark R. “Japanese Treaty Port Settlements in China 1895-1937." In The Japanese Informal Empire in China 1895-1937, ed. Peter Duus, Ramon H. ‘Myers, and Mark R. Peattie, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989. Press Union. The Shanghai Incident. Shanghai: Japanese Consulate General, 1932. The Shanghai Incident Misrepresented. Shanghai: Press Union, 1932. Rappaport, Armin, Henry L. Stimson and Japan, 1931~1933. Chicago: University ‘of Chicago Press, 1963. Rawski, Thomas. China’s Transition to Industrialism: Producer Goods and Eco- nomic Development in the Twentieth Century. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1980. Rea, George Bronson. “Drawing Lines on a Map.” Far Eastern Review, January 1931, 9-14. Reed, Christopher A. “Sooty Sons of Vulcan: Shanghai’s Printing Machine Man- ufacturers, 1895-1932.” Republican China 20, no. 2 (April 1995): 9-54. San-shib Nien lai-ti Shanghai kung-jen (Shanghai workers in the past thirty years). Shanghai: CCP, Shanghai Workers’ Publications, 1951. yueh Szu-jih-hou Hu An-chih Ching-kuo” (The Shanghai case after March 4}; signed Chang Wen. Waichiao Yueb-pao (Foreign affairs monthly}, vol. 1, no, 2, August 15, 1932. Scherer, James A. B. Japan's Advance. Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1934 Seki Hiroharu, “The Manchurian Incident, x95x,” trans. Marius Jansen, from Taiheiyo Senso e no michi: Kai sengaikoshi (Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun, 1962). In Japan Erupts, ed. James William Morley. New York: Columbia University Press, 1984. Selle, Earl Albert. Donald of China. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1948. Sergeant, Harriet. Shanghai: Collision Point of Cultures 1918-1939. New York: Crown Publishers, 1990. Shandan Hojin Yokohama Bocki Kyokai. Shina 10 Hainichi to Desaki Hosho (The origins and effects of China’s anti-Japanese movement), Yokohama: Manno Publishing Co., May 19 “Sa Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 296 © 296 Bibliography Shanhai Kyodo sokai kobukyoku, eds. Shanbai Jiben Chosho (Report on the Shanghai incident”). Shanghai: International Settlement Department, 1932. Shanhai Nihon Shoko Kaigisho (Japanese Chamber of Commerce, Shanghai Office). Manshu Jihen go no Tainichi Keizai Zekko Undo (The anti-Japa- nese boycott movement after the Manchurian Incident). Shanghai: Interna- tional Settlement Department, 1931. The Shanghai Affair. Tokyo: Herald Press, March 1932. Shanghai Jen-min Ko-ming Shib Shu-Ts'e (Historical documents of the Shanghai People’s Revolution), Shanghai: CCP, People’s Publishing Society, 1988. Shanghai K'ang-Jih Hsueb-chan Shib (The history of Shanghai's bloody resis- tance against Japan). Shanghai: Hsien-tai Shu-tien, April 1932. Shanghai Municipal Council. Report for the Year 1932 and Budget for the Year 1933. Shanghai, 1933, Shanghai Residents’ Association, eds. Shanhai Jiben Shi (The history of the Shanghai “incident”). Shanghai: Japanese Residents’ Association, 1932 Shenpao (newspaper) staff, eds. Sung Hu Ho Chan-chi-shib (Wusung and Shang- hai and the history of the battle). Shanghai: Shenpao Press, May 1932. Shimada Toshihiko. “The Extension of Hostilities, 1931-1932.” In Japan Erupts, ed. James William Morley, New York: Columbia University Press, 1984. —— Kantogun. Tokyo: Chuo Koronsha, 1965. Teibeiyo Senso E no Michi. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun, 1962. Smethurst, Richard J. A Social Basis for Prewar Japanese Militarism: The Army and the Rural Community. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1974. Snow, Edgar. Far Eastern Front. New York: H. Smith and R. Hass, 1933 Spence, Jonathan. The Search for Modern China. New York: W. W. Norton and Co. 1999. Stimson, Henry L. The Far Eastern Crisis. New York: Harpers Co., 1936 Stokesbury, James L. A Short History of Airpower. New York: William Morrow and Co., 1986. Stranahan, Patricia. Underground: The Shanghai Communist Party and the Pol- itics of Survival, 1927-1937. Lanham, Md. Rowman and Littlefield Publish- ers, 1998. Sun Fo. “The Problem before the Nation.” People’s Tribune, vol. 1, no. 5, Janu- ary 16, 1932, 124. Sun Youli. China and the Origins of the Pacific War, 1931-1941. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993. Sun Yuan-liang, Yi-wwan Kuang-nien-chung-ti Yishun Sun Yuan-liang bui-yi-lu (A glance at the middle of many glorious years, the memoirs of Sun Yuan- liang). Taipei, 1978. Suzuki, Kenichi, “Shanhai jihen no suii ni tsuite: Toku ni seifu to gumbu no doko” (Development of the Shanghai “incident”: The activities of the Japan government and the military). Rekishi hyoron 134 (October 1961): 65-77. Tai Li, Taf Yur-nung Hsien-sheng ch’uan-chi (The complete works of Tai L Vols. 1-2. Taipei: Ministry of National Defense, Burcau of Investigation, 1979. IGAN Digitized by Original UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 FM Page 297 © BistioGRarny 297 Tai Yu-neng Hsiew-sheng Nien-p'u (Tai Li chronology). Taipeit Ministry of National Defense, 1976. Takahashi Kunio. Tei Koku Kaigun to Shanbai Jiben (The imperial navy and the Shanghai “incident”). Tokyo, April 5, 1932. Tanaka Ryukichi, Hafin wo Tsuku: Gunbatsu Seno no Jisso (Fixing the blame for defeat: The truth about the warlords). Tokyo: Sansuisha, 1946 “Shanhai Jihen Wa Koshite Okosareta” (The real cause of the Shanghai incident”). Bessatsu Chisei 5 (December 1956): 181-86 ing Chi-chu, ed. Hsien-tai Chung-kuo Ming-jen Wai-sbib (The public lives of famous contemporary Chinese). Peking: Shih-pao newspaper, September 2, 19350 Tang Tai Chung-kuo Mingjen Chib (Famous contemporary Chinese). Shanghai: Shih-chieh P'ing-lun She, 1940. Tao-Shanghai Fan-Ti Pa-kung Wei-yuan-bui T'wng-tien (Citcular telegram to the Anti-Imperialist Strike Committee). Chianghsi: CCP, Special Branch of the ‘Mutual Aid Society, April 4, 1932. Teng Yuan-chung. “The Three People’s Principles: Li Hsing She and Japan.” Paper presented at the conference on Sun Yat-sen and modern China, November 198s, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Thorne, Christopher. The Limits of Foreign Policy: The West, the League, and the Far Eastern Crisis of 193133. London: Hamish Hamilton, Ltd., 1972. “The Shanghai Crisis of 1932: The Basis of British Policy.” American His- torical Review 75, no. 6 (October 1970): 1616-39. ‘Tien Hung-mao. Government and Politics in Kuomintang China 1927-1937. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1972. Titus, David Anson. Palace and Politics in Prewar Japan. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974. ‘Tong, Hollington. Chiang Kai-shek, Soldier and Statesman: An Authorized Biog- raphy. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1958. ‘Toynbee, Arnold J. Survey of International Affairs 1932. London: Oxford Uni- versity Press, 1933. Treat, Payson J. “Shanghai: January 28, 1932.” Pacific Historical Review 9 (1940]: 337-43. Ts'ai Ting-k’ai. Ts'ai Ting-R'ai Tzu Shib, Harbin: Heilungchiang Publication Society, 1982. Tsao Chuncli, “The Anti-Japanese Conflict and Youth Volunteer Corps.” Nankai Shib-bsueh, Tientsin: Nankai Publishing Co., r99o. ‘Tsha, Kingwell J. “A Chronological List of Events in Shanghai since January 8, 1932.” In Symposium on Japan’s Undeclared War in Shanghai, ed. Lowe Chuan-hua, app. A. Shanghai, 1932. ‘Tso Hsun-sheng. Chin-tai Chung Jil’ Kuan-hsi Shih Kang-yao (The summary of the history of Chinese-Japanese relations). Shanghai Chung-hua Book Store, 1935. . Sung Hu K’ang-chan yu Weng Chao-yuan wen Chib (The defense of ‘Wusung-Shanghai and Weng Chao-yuan’s record). Taipei: KMT Archives, 1969. Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 298 © 298 Bibliography ‘Tsou Lu. Chung-kuo Kuomintang Shib-kao (A draft history of China’s Kuo- mintang). Shanghai: Commercial Press, 1938. Tw Yuel-sheng Chuan. Vol. 3, ed. Chang Chun-kou, Taipei: Chuan-chi Wen- hsueh kan, 1968, Uehara, Cecil H., comp. Checklist of Archives in the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Tokyo, Japan, 1868-1945. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, Photoduplication Service, 1954. Usui Katsumi, Manshu Jilzen: Senso to Gaiko to (The Manchurian Incident: War and diplomacy). Tokyo: Chuo Koron, 1974 Waichiao Yueh-pao (Foreign affairs monthly) (Peking). First issues, 1932. Waichiaopu Kung-pao (Foreign affairs monthly) (Nanking). Various issues, 1931-32. ‘Wakeman, Frederic, Jr. “Licensing Leisure: The Chinese Nationalists’ Attempt to Regulate Shanghai, 1927-1949.” Journal of Asian Studies 54, no. 1 (February 1995): 19-42. ‘Waldron, Arthur. How the Peace Was Lost. Includes the J. MacMurray study on the Far Eastern crisis in x935. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1992. ‘Wang Ching-wei, “Autobiography.” Tung-fang Tea-chib 31, no. + (January 1g 34)t Ima. China's Problems and Their Solution, Shanghai: China United Press, 1934 “Peace Only with Honour.” In The Japanese Invasion and China's Defence, ed. Weng Chao-yuan (Wong Chi-yuen) and Tang Leang-li, Shang- hai: China United Press, 1932. ‘Wei Shao-cheng. Chi “I-erb-pa” Sung Hu K'ang-chan (Remembering the * 1-28” Defense of Wusung and Shanghai). Taichung: Kiangsu Wen-wu, 1978. yuan (Wong Chi-yuen) and Lo Yin-pu, eds. Sung He Hsweb-chan -u (Memoir of the bloody Wusung-Shanghai battle). Shanghai: Shen- pao Press, January 1, 1933. ‘Weng Chao-yuan (Wong Chi-yuen) and T’ang Leang-li, eds. The Japanese Inva- sion and China's Defence. Shanghai: China United Press, 1932. Whitson, William W., trans. and ed. History of the Sino-Japanese War. Taipei: Military Assistance and Advisory Group Military History Office, 1967. Wilbur, C. Martin, “Military Separatism and the Process of Reunification under the Nationalist Regime, 1922-1937.” In China in Crisis, ed. Ho Ping-ti and ‘Tang Tsou, vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968. Wilbur, C. Martin, and Julie Lien-ying How. Documents on Communism, Nationalism, and Soviet Advisers in China 1918-1927. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989. Wilson, Dick. When Tigers Fight: The Story of the Sino-Japanese War, 1937— 1945. New York: Penguin Books, 1983. Yanaga Chitoshi, Japan since Perry. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1966. Yen, W. W.(Hui-ch’ing). East-West Kaleidoscope 1877-1944: An Autobiography by W. W. Yen. Asia in the Modern World Series, no. r4. New York: St. Johns University Center for Asian Studies, 1974. Digitized by Original fror SITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY 0 IGAN biblio.qxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 299 © BIBLioGRarHy 299 Yin-hang Chou-pao (Bankers? weekly) (Shanghai). Various issues, 1932. Yonezawa Hideo. “Shanhai hojin hattenshi” (A history of Japanese development in Shanghai). Toa Keizai Kenkyu 22, no. 3 (July 1938): 50-64. Yoshihashi Takehiko. Conspiracy at Mukden. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1963. Yoshizawa Kenkichi. Gaiko rokuju-nen (Sixty years of diplomacy). Tokyo, 1958. Young, A. Morgan. Imperial Japan. London: George Allen and Unwin, Ltd., 1938. Young, Arthur N. China's Nation-Building Effort, 1927-37: The Financial and Economic Record. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1971. Young, John. Checklist of Microfilm Reproduction of Selected Archives of the Japanese Army, Navy, and Other Government Agencies, 1868-1945. Wash- ington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1959. Yu Chi-shih, ed. (Eighty-eighth Division Commander, Fifth Army, 1932). Lebr- pa Sung Lu K’ang-jib Chan-yu ching-wei bui-yi (Recollections of the strands of the “1-2-8” battle of resistance against Japan at Wusung and Shanghai ‘Taipei: Kuo-fang Pu (Ministry of National Defense Historical Bureau), 1981. Zumoto Motosada. Lytton Report and Japanese Reaction. Tokyo: Herald Press, October 23, 1932. _ Sino-Japanese Entanglement 1931-1932: A Military Record. Tokyo: Her~ ald Press, July x932. Digitized by Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN biblio.gxd 1/16/01 1:02 PM Page 300 © Digitized by Original from UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN press—— UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Index ABCD entente, 139, 238 Abend, Hallet, 31, 41, 425 65 Abortive Revolution: China Under Nationalist Rule, 1927-1937, ix Aikoku (aircraft), 191 All-Shanghai Trade Union, 79 Anhui Province, 86 Anti-Japanese National Salvation Association (AJNSA), 3, 10, 11, 12, 35,215 265 385 694 70, 79, 115, 215, 216; and boycott, xiv, 15 3545 70, 79 Araki Sadao (general; minister of Wat), 275 128, 138) 141, 148, 156, 1575 215, 216, 217, 218, 220, 221, 223, 228,239 Art of War, 173 Association of Fire Insurance Claimants, 198 Ataka (gunboat), 36 Aw Boon Haw (Hu Wen-hu), 118 Badham-Thornhill, Colonel, 189 Bankers’ Weekly, 193 Bank of China, 199, 200 Battle History of the Anti-Japanese Nineteenth R.A. 155 Battle Service Corps (AJNSA), 79 Baudet, M., 219 Bellevue Hotel, 115 Blue Shirts, x, 216 Blyukher, V. (general), 227 Boncour, Paul, 25 Borah, Senator, 160 Borodin, 214 Boxers, 17, 237 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PR ess—h— index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 302 © Braun, Otto, xv Buddhist monks. See Nichiren monks Bund, 1, 32 Bushido, 52 Cantonese KMT, 13, 56, 70, 156, 206, CCP (Chinese Communist Party), xiii, XIV, XV, 6, 23, 26, 79, 95, 102, 103, TES, T34p 1355 155s 174 181, 186, 189, 2135 2155 24 ty 242 CEC. See KMT Central Executive ‘Committee Central Daily, 211 Central Military Academy, 6, 57, 108, 373 Central Soviet Government, 95, 174 Central University, 119 Cercle Sporte Frangais, 16 Chang Chi, 208 Chang Chih-chung, xiii, 6, 57, 108, 130, 145, 15% 1585 1735 175, 178, 180, 233, fig. 6 Chang Ch'un, 5, 117 Chang Fa-kuei, 133 Chang Hsiang-ling (Samuel Chang), 229, 231 Chang Hsiao-lin, 207 Chang Hsueb-liang, 6, 10, 535 545 5% 206, 209, 210, 229 Changhuapin Railroad Station, 104, 1424 1595 162, 169, 181 Chang Kai-gnau, 195, 200 Chrang-shu, 183 Chang Tso-hsiang, 31, 227 jor Original fror UNIVERSITY 0 AICHIGAN UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRE: 302 index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 302 © Index Chang Tso-lin, 162, 176 Ch’ang Yu-ch’ing (lieutenant), 222 Chapei, x, xii, 16, 20, 26, 335 34 35> 365 381 40s Als 43> 451 451 47 48) 62, 635 71) 775 86 875 91, 925 945 TOO, 102, 106, 141, 43s 1525 1545 163, 164, 169, 170, 192, 198, 225 Chapei-Wusung front, 173-76 Chekiang Province, 86, 177, 209 Chen Chi-hua, 155 Ch’en Chi-tang, 117 Chen, Eugene (Yurjen), xv, 45 55 6, 53s S4y 56 715 975 242, 240 Ch’eng T'ien-fang, 206 Chenju, 100, 153, 163, 179 Chen Kung-po, 216 Chen Kuo-fu, 208 Chen Li-fu, 206, 216 Chen Ming-shu (general), 5, 35, $35 545 59 7X5 965 995 103, 108, TS, 120, 121, 128, 148, 150, 151, 206, 209 Chen-tan, 119 Chen Wang-tao, 96 Chen Yen-mao, 190 Ch’en Yi (general), 133, Chiang Kai-shek, ix, x5 xis xii 45 55 14 Bs 35> 505 $Uy 525 53s S4y 56s 575 585 59 60, 61, 62, 68, 70, 73,755 78, 87, 90, 96, 975 98, 103, 105, 108, 116, 120, 1294 130, 1315 1345 1375 1385 1455 148, 150, 152, 154, 156, 1575 161, 167, 168, 171, 1734 180, 205, 206, 207, 208, 2095 210, 212, 213, 214, 216, 224, 230, 240, 241, 242 Chiang Kuang-nai, 5, 52, 59, 625 975 105, £08, 109, 1175 128, 130, 148, 150, 1535 £56, 158, 1665 173, 1745 175, 180, Chiang Ting-wen, 166 Chiangwan, 89, 100, 104, 106, 107, 139) 1424 1434 1454 1475 148, 150, 1515 1525 1555 1585 161, 165, 168, 169, 171, 187, 192 Chiang-Wang Coalition, 6, 71, 94, 97, 103,232 shy Chiating, 131, 179, 183 Chi-chia-ch’iao, 127 Ch’ien Hsin-chih, 132 Chiient’ang River, 177 China and Japan in the Global Set- ting, xii China Machine Works, r99 China National Medical University, 15, 64 Chinan University, 154 China’s National Revolution, 66, 68 Chinese Bankers’ Association, 207 Chinese Communist Party. See CCP Chinese Eastern Railroad (CER), 31, 65 Chinese National Flood Relief C mittee, 49 Ch’ing-p'u, 87, 107 Ch'in Pang-hsien, 95 Chiuchiang Road, 117 Chii-ya-k’ou, 173, 174 Chou En-lai, xv Chu K’ung-yang, 57 Chung-hsin Bank, 118 Chungking, 53, 55 Chu Preisteh, 54, 595 61 Ciano, G., 219, 232 Coble, Parks, Jr., x, xi, 207 Comintern, 174, 214 Commercial Press (Shanghai), 48, 179 194, fig. 14 Commercial Treaty, 221 Coox, Alvin, 39, 152 Cunningham, Edward, 37, 41, 49, 235 m- Debuchi, Ambassador, 64 Dentsu news agency, 66 Dill, Senator, 29 Diplomatic Monthly, x4 Doihara, Colonel, 20, 8 Donald, William HL, 10 Dreyer, Edward, 236 Eastern Jewel. See Kamashita Yoshiko Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 303 © Inpex 303 Eastman, Lloyd, ix, x, x1 Eden, Anthony, 16 Facing Japan: Chinese Politics and Japanese Imperialism 1931-1937. x Fan Ch’i-wu, 135 Feng Yu-hsiang, 6, 54, 59, 185, 209, 2135233 Feng Yung University, 118 Fifteenth Destroyer Squadron, 19 Fifth Air Regiment, 149 Fifth Army, x, xis Xiv, 6, 575 625 72, 975 98, 995 100, 108, r10, 116, 118, 127, 128, 129, 131, 132, 1375 1445 152, 153, 154) 1555 158, 169, 171, 175, 178, 180, 186, 187, 188, 255, 241, figs. 18-20 Finance Ministry Revenue Guards, 98 Finch, Perey, xi, 153 First Destroyer Flotilla, 18 First Torpedo Squadron, 19 Fitzgerald, John, xiii Flood Relief Commission, 101 Forbes, W. Cameron, 29 Foreign Affairs Commission, 15 Four Powers, 181 French Concession, 8, 22, 43, 655 171 Fuchou, 13 Fukien Rebellion, x Fukushima, Kimiji, 10, 12, 18 Funatst Tasuichiro, 205 Fushimi Hiroyasu, Prince, 28, 68, r11, 218,240 Futan University, 142, 1435 1455 154 Gale Corporation, 149 General Labor Union, 69, 715 78 79 Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere, 240 Green Gang (Ch'ing-pang), 47, 70, 78, 82, 132, 207, 208, 222, 223, 242 Hanbury Institute, 49 Han Ching, r15 Hangchon, 38, 149, 170, 176 177, 196 Hank’ou, 55 UNIVER ITY OF MICHIGAN press—— Harada, Secretary, 157, 159 Harbin, 19, 315 325 645 65, 975 98, 227 Harrison, James, xv Hara Shoryu, 146 Heilungchiang Province, 11, 19, 31, 65 Hengk’ou, 7, 47. 81, 82, 112, 143, 202, 227,228 Hengk’ou Bund, 84 Hengk’ou Park, 39, 46, 475 495 86, 925 100, 102, 1645 168, 226 Hirohito, rr, 32, 65, 162, 182,217, 223, 29 H.MS. Kent, 94, 170 HMS. Sandwich, 89 Ho Hsiang-ning (widow of Liao Chung-kai), 71, 117, 118, 129, 209 Honjo Shigeru, 31, 32 Hoover, Herbert, xii, 64, 191, 237 Hornbeck, Stanley, 28, 30, 221 Houn, Franklin W., xv Ho Ying-ch’in (war minister), 55, 545 55s 565 58s 595 61, 83, 97, 103, 104, 108, 109, 110, 116, 120, 121, 129, 1335 150, 209 Hsia-kuan, 84 Hsinwenpao, 70, 132 Hsu, Immanuel C. Y..x Hsu Tao-min, 155 Huangp’u River, 25, 45, 47, 835 89) 935 123, 1425 156 181, 230 Huang Shao-hsiung (general), 198 Hu Han-min, 4,135, 175,212 Hu Li-fu (lieutenant), 222, 223 Hull, Secretary of State, 9 Hunan, 134, 210 Hureg Chi 1745 204 Hung-se chung-hud, 174 Hupeh, 210 Hu Shih, x Hu Yu-vze, 96 Hyakutake, Admiral, 68 Hymans, Paul, 224 Ienaga Saburo, xii Lerh-pa (January 28 incident), 236 Original fror UNIVERSITY O} CHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 304 © 304 Index LEMS. Kaga, rox Ikeda Junkyu (general), 204 Institute of Modern Chinese History (Peking), 35 International Settlement, xi, xii, 1 Inukai Tsuyoshi (prime minister), 8, 15, 175 875 138, 167, 189, 217, 221, 228, 232, 2395243 Iriye Akira, xii, 237 Itagaki Seishiro (colonel), 7, 39 Ivestia, 228 Japanese army in trenches, fig. 21 Japanese Chamber of Commerce, 81 ‘Japanese Cotton Mill Owners’ Associ- ation, 17, 81, 200, 203, 240 Japanese Front-Line Volunteers, 119 Japanese Invasion and China's Defense, 184 Japanese marines, figs. 7-9 ‘Japanese Naval Club, 22 ‘Japanese Reservists, fig. 9 Japanese Residents Association of Shanghai (J.R.A.), 75 175 315 325 38, 65, 80, 8 Japanese Spinners Association, 12, 67 Japan Mail Line, 25, 79, 106, 113, 126, 162 Japan’s Road to the Pacific War (series), xi Jikeidan, 39 Johnson, Nelson T., 121, 219, 232, 237 Kamashita Yoshiko (Eastern Jewel), 173 Kanazawa, 87 Kanchou, 208 Kanebo (Kanegafuchi) Textile Com- pany, 1, 126 K’ang Sheng, 95 Kan'in Kotohito, Prince, 18, 218 Kan Nai-kuang, 94 Kao Hsien-chia (captain), 83 Kato, Chargé, 30 Kawabata Teiji, 226, 227, 228 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PR ess—h— Kellogg Pact, 62, 75, 76, 85, 233 Kelly, Sit H. (admiral), 94, 102, 110, 164217 Kiangsi, xv, 5, 148, 166, 196, 208, 215 Kiangsu CCP Propaganda Depart- ment, 115 Kiangsu Province, 50, 58, 59, 835 86, 196, 222 Kido, Marquis, 177 Kirin Province, 65 Kitaoka Haruo (captain), 7, 37, 69, 81, 117, 118, 167, 181 Kitaura Toyoo (captain), 37, 45 KMT. See Kuomintang Koiso Kuniaki (general), 177 Kompo, 222, 223 Koo, Wellington (Ku Wei-chun), 121, 164,237, 238 Ku Chu-hsuan, 222 Ku Ch'u-’ung, 34, 57, 95 Kuga Noboru (major), 147 Kungch’an Kuochi, 186 Kung Dah mill, 126, 182 Kung, H. H. (K’ung Hsiang-hsis min- ister of industry), 5, 117, 206 Kunshan, 87, 100, 107, 151, 167, 180 Kuo family (Wing On department store owners), xi, 199, 204 Kuo Hung, 187 Kuominchun, 166 Kuomincang (KMT), x, xiv, X¥y 15 35 4564 By 145235 26, 435 70, 78, 795 86, 985 964 103s 132, 13.44 154, 2095 2135 215, 216; KMT Central Executive Committee (CEC), 15, 595 605 715 13%, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213 KMT Central Political Council, 53, 54 59, 60s KMT Military Council, 51, $9, 60. See also Cantonese KMT Kuo Tai-chi, 121, 216, 218, 219, 224, 225,230, 2325 238) 242 Kuowen Choupao, 89 Kwantung Army (K.A.), 8 10, 11 12, 355 175 18, 295 315 325 395 565 64, 655 Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 305 © Inpex 305 {635 705 735 975 107s 1405 1575 1625 163, 1705 176, 1775 1835 211, 224, 2275 228,233, 241 LaFeber, Walter, xii Lampson, Sir Miles, 119, 120, 135, 161, 219, 230, 232, 235, 237 League Commission of Inquiry, 76 League of Nations, xii, xv, 12, 29, 52, 54y 60s 735 764 855 102, 110) 139, 160, 163, 170) 181, 186, 192, 205, 210, 217, 224-25, 230, 235, 237 Liang Kuang-ying, 165 Liao Chung-k’ai, Mme, See Ho Hsiang-ning Liaoning Province, 1, 187 Liaotung Peninsula, 171 Li Chi-shen, 59, 209 Lienhua Film Company, 155 Li Hsin (Li Xin), 35, 174 Li Lich-chun (general), 209 Li, Lincoln, xiv Lindley, Sir Francis, 159, 230 Lin Shen, ro8 Lin Yishun, 118 Lion Hill, 84 Li Tsung-jen, 6, 54, 209 Little Tokyo, xiii, 4 6, 1 21, 40, 80, 123, 202 Litvinov, Soviet Foreign Minister, 228 Liu Ho, 116, 173, 175, 176, 178, 181, 185, 222, 236 Liu Hung-sheng, 12, 132 Liu River, 123, 171 Liu Shao-ch’i, 37, 79, 95, Liu Wei-wen, 132, Li Xin, See Li Hsin London Naval Treaty, 28, 68 Lo Wen-kan, 55, 54. 615 62, 765 122 Loyang, 60, 61, 94, 98, 103, 211, 216 Lu Hsun, 9, 96 Lunghua Railroad, 149 Lytton, Lord, 232 Lytton Commission of Inquiry, 76, 211, 214, 237 15s 175 19 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PR ess—h— Ma-an Islands, 102 MacDonald, Prime Minister, 64, Ma Chan-shan (general), 65 MacMurray, John V. A., 221 Macnaghten, Brigadier General, 76 Mainichi, 66, 67, 81 Manchukuo, xiii, xv, 157, 170, 199 Manchuria, 97, 180 Manchurian Incident, xii, 3, 4, 75 76 112, 162, 198, 210, 211, 227 Mao Tse-tung, 215 Mao Tun, 96 Margetts, Lieutenant Colonel, 136, 138 Matsuoka Yosuke, 110, 167, 170, 224, 237 Mayer, Captain, 155 May Fourth movement, xi Ma Yin-liang, 72 Mavzaki Jinsaburo (general), 218, 223 Mellroy, J. Gos 315 148 Miaohang, 142, F435 1445 1455 146, 1475 148, 1545 1595 1715 1755 178, 1875 188 Mikasa, Prince, 46 Minami Jiro (general; war minister), 32,65 Min-kuo Jib-pao, 10, 11, 14, 15 Minseito Party, 8 Mitsui Bank, 1, 10 Morishima Morito, 170 Mukden, 52, 535 655.735 179 Mukden incident, 30, 78, 221 Murai Kuramatsu, 7, 13, 145 155 215235 28, 355 374 40s 431 455 50) 53s 66 675 77s 80, 81, 82, 85, 86, 114, 135, 136, 169, 170, 180, 222, 226, 229 Nagaimen Mills, 1,21, 68, 134, 203 Nagata Tetsuzan (general), 39, 167 168, 17 Namhsiang, 103, 108, 110, 146, 177, 179, 180, 183 Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 306 © 306 Index Nanking government, 38, 60, 73, 755 94s 1495 154s 177s 1925 2075 2125 2375 241,242 Nanking No. 2 Archives, 152 Nanking University, 173 Nanshih, 26 Nantao, 22, 178 National Emergency Conference, 210 National Guard (Chinese), 6, 57, 595 61, 122, 154, 156 Native Bank Association of Shanghai, 196 Navy Council, 18, 20 New York Times, 28 Nichi-nichi, 66 Nichiren monks, 10, 11, 12, 14,21 Nikka Mills, 19, 69, 202, 205 Nine Power Pact, 62, 75, 160 Nine Powers, 60, 62 Nineteenth Route Army, ix, x; Xi, xii, iti, Xivy XV, 55 15, 15, 20, 26, 345 355 365 375 38, 40, 415 435 485 47s SO 515 54s 59s 625 7% 725 755 77s 825 86, 89, 95 92s 95» 96, 975 9B, 100, 1035 TO4y 1075 108, 109, 114, 116, 117, 122, 125, 1275 128, 129, 133, 139, 1425 U44y 1455 1465 147s 15, 152, 153, 15dp 1555 156, 161, 163, 164, 165, 166, 169, 171, 174, 1755 1775 1795 184, 186, 187, 188, 204, 2055 2095 2125 218, 220, 2255233, 235% 241, fig. 10, fig. ox Ningp’o, 168, 231 Nippon Dempo news service, 20 Nish, lan, 190 Nisshin Steamship Company, 36, 54 Nomura Kichisaburo (Admiral), 91, 925 102, 107, 109, TIT, 114, 120, 135, 147, 148, 156, 170, 176, 217, 226, fig. 2 North China Herald, 154 North China Sunday News, 63 Northern Expedition, 95, 103, 131, 214 North Railroad Station, 41, 425 45. 475 48, 86, 92, 100, 101, 113, 115, 168 Notoro (seaplane carrier), 19, 46 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PR ess—h— i (cruiser), 19 Oriental Library (Shanghai), xii, 48, 194 Origins of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific, xii Osaka, 201 Osaka Line, 127 Osumi Mineo (admiral; naval minis ter), 18, 38, 87, 91 Ou Shou-wu (colonel), 51 Pai chung-his, 20, 89 Paoshan, 143, 179 Patz, 190 Peace Preservation Corps, 233 Peattie, Mark, xiii Peck, W.R., 54 Peking, 215 People’s Republic of China, xiv Philippine Chinese United Associa tion, 72 Pienyitui, 69 Political Study Clique, 207 Pratt, J. T., 16 Pravda, 213 PRC. See People’s Republic of China Press Union, 36, 37 Prurk’ou, 83, 108, 166 Prurung, 45 Pu Yi, 19 Red Army, xv Red Cross, 71, 101, 118, 120, 192 Reed, Christopher, 198 Refugees, from Chapei, fig. 12 Reuters news service, 179 Revolutionary Diplomacy, 60, 211, 237 Ringwalt, Arthur, 82, 112 Ronin, 12, 15, 395 40, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84, 88, 112, 115, 120, 168, 192, 193, 198, 202,229 Route Pichon, 8 Saddle Island, 149 Saionji, Genro Prince, 27, 28, 68, 159, 218,229 Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 307 © Inpex 307 Samejima Tomoshige (captain), 21, 38, 425 454 102, Samurai, 80 San Yu towel factory, 11, 12, 13, 155 198 Sasebo, 25 Sato, 217 Schezh’uan North Road Settlement, 49, 86 Sea of Japan, 32, 65 Seinendan (Young Men’s Associa- tion), 12, 43, 81 Seiyukai Party, 10, 17, 28, 119 Sergeant, Harriet, xi Settlement Defense Committee, 30, 33, 34 Settlement Municipal Council, 13, 405 415 63, 81, 112 Shamejima Tomoshige (captain), 102 Shanghai, 1932 ruins of, fig. 14 Shanghai Bankers’ Association, 196 Shanghai Bureau of Social Affairs, 192, 195, 216 Shanghai Civie Association, 70 Shanghai Educators’ National Salva- tion Association, 71 Shanghai Evening Post-Mercury, 85 Shanghai Local Peace Preservation Association (SLPPA}, 70, 715 725 79 115, 116, 117, 152, 1545 197 Shanghai Municipal Police, 81 Shanghai-Nanking Railroad, 44, 50, 575 100, 180 Shanghai National Salvati tion, 215, 216 Shanghai Northern District Citizens’ Municipal Maintenance Associa tion, 222 Shanghai Volunteer Corps, 17, 20, 335 451 Shanghai Women’s Association for Support of Soldiers Protecting the Nation, 71 Shanghia-Wusung Railroad, 88, 92 n Associa UNIVER ITY OF MICHIGAN press—— Shang-kuan Yun-hsiang (general), 148, 165 Shantung, 210 Shenpao, 69, 71, 100, 109, 1175 184, 197 Shibayama, Captain, 81 Shidehara Kijuro, 5, 4.55 8, 68, 201, 2gt Shigemitsu Mamoru, 8, 9, 125 155 28, 33585, 92, 121, 218, 219, 226, 227, 239 Shih Liang-ts‘ai, 69, 70, 71, 725 109, 132, 197, 207, 213, Shib-shib Hsin-pao, 132, 232 Shih-tau, 143 Shih-taurlin fort, 175, 179 Shimada Toshihiko, xii, xii, 87, 113, 114, 156, 157,205 Shiozawa Kiochi (rear admiral), 8, 10, 4p 154 175 19y 21, 235 25, 26) 335 345 365 375 4ls 424 44y 455 464 50> 515 58 675 68, 774 83, 86, 875 915 924 935 102, 104, 176, 190, 2395 249 Shirakawa Yoshinori (general), 148, 162, 163, 171, 176, 1775 1795 183, 2175 225, 226, 227, 239, fig. 4 Short, Robert MeCawley, 149, 1935 237 Simon, Sir John, 16, 139, 217 Simpson, Sir John Hope, 192 Sino-French Medical Academy, 115 Sino-Japanese War, ix “Slippery Mary,” 92, 1435 163 SLPPA. See Shanghai Local Peace Preservation Association Soong Ailing, 117 Soong Ch’ing-ling (widow of Sun Yat- sem) 70, 71, 1525 1655 2095 242 Soong Mei-ling, 117 Soong, T. V. (Sung Tzu-wen), 5, 8, 9, 12, 405 $3» S4y 58, 95, 975 98, 99, 108, 117, 121, 122, 137, 151, 1975 206, 207, 208, 219, 238 South Manchurian Railroad, 3, 81, 126, 161 Special Naval Landing Party, 38 Original fror UNIVERSITY O} CHIGAN index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 308 © 308 Index Stimson, Henry, xiii, 28, 63, 64, 66, 85, 1124 1195 1394 1605 237 Storm Clouds Clear over China, 206 Stranahan, Patricia, xiii, xiv Student nationalism, in China, 1924-49, Xi Suchou Comparative Law School, 49 Suchou Creek, 49, 85, 115, Suchou Province, 83, 97, 103, 108, 149 Sun Chieh-yuan, 165 Sun Fo (K’0), 4s 55 54s 70 715 1175 Sung-chiang, 87, 107 Sun Tau, 173. 1795 236 Sun Yat-sen, 56 Sun Yuan-liang, 147 Supreme Military Council, 176 Tach’ang, 150, 161, 168, 170 Tai Chi, 26, 37, 525 98) 149, 231 Vai Hu, 179 ‘Taicts'ang, 178, 183 Takahashi Korekiyo (major; finance minister), 8, 51, 39, 191, 239 Ta Kung, 132 Tanabe Teruo, 202 Tanaka Giichi, 162 ‘Tanaka Ryukichi (major), xiii, 7 11, 12, 20, 22, 275 315 335 36, 395 66, 80, 86, 985 1735 180 Tran Chit-hsiu, 102 ‘Tange Kuji (captain), 83 Tangpu, 56, 1155 203 ‘Trang Sheng-chih, 59 Tani, Admiral, 68 Tan Kah Kee (Ch’en Tao Hsing-chih, 152 Tashiro, General, 121, 130 Taylor, Montgomery (U.S. admiral), gr “Tea party,” 218, 219, 220 ‘Temple of the Queen of Heaven, 14 ‘Teng Hsiao-p'ing, 240 ‘Thorburn, John, 14, 238 ‘Three Basic Principles, 220 ja-keng), 118 UNIVER ITY OF MICHIGAN press—— ‘Tientsin, 13, 53, 125, 126, 196, 201, 2045215 ‘Viien-tung-an Train Station, 43, 92 Ting Ling, 96 ‘Tokyo Stock Exchange, 190-91 Tou-cheng, 95 Toyota cotton mills, 49, 88 Trading guild, 81 Trento (cruiser), 94 Truce, of 1952, fig. 22 ‘Ts'ai Ting-k’ai (general), ixy xig 55 155 5, 525 625 98y 1095 130, 1355 Shy 145, 525 1535 1565 158, 164, 166, 173, 183, 184, 209, fig. ‘Tsai Yuan-p'ei, xi Ts'ao-chia-ch’iao, 127 Ts'eng Yang-fu, 206 Tsinan, 103 ‘Tsingtao, 15, 53, 20%, 204 ‘T’ung Chi University, 154 Tu Yuch-sheng, 70, 78, 132, 207 ‘Twenty-eight Bolsheviks, xv ‘Tze Chi University, 154 ‘Tru-tung Chiu-kuo-hui (Volunteer National Salvation Association), 216 Ueda Kenkichi (general), 87, 91, 1045 107, 125, 126, 1355 141, 1425 148, 150, 1515 176, fig. 3 Ujina, 87 Unequal Treaties, 66 USS. Marines Fourth Regiment, 38 USS. Senate Naval Affairs Committee, 161 USS. Houston, 895 94 USS. Missouri, 227 USS. Panay, 114 USS, State Department, 63 Usui Katsumi, 190 ‘Uyematsu Toma (admiral), 102 Volunteer National Salvation Associa- tion (Tzu-tung Chiu-kuo-hui), 216 Original fror UNIVERSITY O} CHIGAN Wakeman, Frederic, 223 Waldeck Russeau (cruiser), 94 Wang Cheng-ting, 242 ‘Wang Ching-wei, 4, 55 6 14 34) 525 53s Ss 55s 56s 59% 60, 70, 735 985 1335 134, 138, 206, 207, 208, 209 Wang Chun (general), 121 Wang, C. T., 136, 238 Wang Hsiao-lai, 70, 207 ‘Wang P'ing-nan, 151 Wang Shao-lai, 70, 131 Wang Yan-an, 96 Wanpaoshan, 56 Washington Treaty, 160 Weihaiwei, 171 ‘Weng Chao-yuan, 154,178, 180 Wentsaopeng Creek, 128 Western Capital Committee, 208 Western Powers, 73, 99 Werzell, Georg (general), 56, 58, 97 Whampoa, 6, 108 Wilden, W., 252 ‘Wing On company, xi, 1, 113, 114, 199, 204, 240, fig. 16 Woosung Creek. See Wusung Creek Writers’ Anti-Japanese Association, 96 Wu, C.C., 238 Wu Hsing-ya, 216 Wu K’ai-hsien, 216 Wusung, 110, 115, 1415 1435 1625 1695 170, 173, 178, 179, 181, 182, 184, 192, 1995 224 Wusung Creek, 141, 1425 147, 158 Wusung Port, 19, 25, 445 62, 68, 83, 935 104s 105, 106, 115, 123, 127, 128, 1355 136, 139, fig. 15 Wusung/Shanghai garrison, 52, 89 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRE: shy index.qxd 1/16/01 1:03 PM Page 309 © 309 Wu Trich-ch’eng (mayor), 6, 10, 12, 13420, 225 265 295 33s 36, 37+ 40s 41s 425 45s $05 $15 60, 62, 63, 70, 76, 775 86, 994 104, 110, 14, 117, 169. 170, 177s 194, 2035 212, fig. 1 Yakuza, 11, 39, 435 80,223 Yamamoto, Captain, 127 Yang-lin-k’ou, 173, 174 Yang Shang-Kun, 37, 955 1155 240, ar Yangtze Patrol, 8, 25 Yangtzep’u, 49, 77, 198 Yangtze River, 4, 52, 53561, 78, 83, 84, 995 YO4, TOR, 111, 125, 14%5 1655 167, 173, 174 17%, 181y 183, 205 Yano Makoto (consul), 228 Yeh Ch'u-ts'ang, 59 Yen Hsi-shan, 6, 54, 59, 209 Yen Hui-ch’ing, 73, 198 Yen, W. W., 119,224 Yi-yung chun (volunteer units), 77, 795 954 1195 131, 1545 187, 242 Yokohama Specie Bank, 81, 191, 225 Yonesato Monkichi, 222 Yoshizawa Kenkichi, 8, 14, 19,28, 2%, 66,775 85, 1275 128, 136, 157, 161, 170, 230, 231 Yubari (cruiser), 19525 Yu Chi-chung, 173 Yu Chi-shih, 57, 62, 105, 116, 130, 152, 187 Yu Hung-chun, 35, 36 Zaibatsu, 15 10, 81, 112, 126, 203, 206, 240 Zumoto Motosada, 173 Original fror UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi