Imperial Rivals: China, Russia, and Their Disputed FrontierM.E. Sharpe, 1996 - 417 頁 Based on archival research, this is a history of the Russo-Chinese border which examines Russia's expansion into the Asian heartland during the decades of Chinese decline and the 20th-century paradox of Russia's inability to sustain political and economic sway over its domains. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 63 筆
第 272 頁
... Influence Agreements with Britain and Japan Three factors made Russian expansion into Mongolia feasible . First , Russia came to terms with its two major rivals in the Far East , Great Britain and Japan . In the early 1890s , a conflict ...
... Influence Agreements with Britain and Japan Three factors made Russian expansion into Mongolia feasible . First , Russia came to terms with its two major rivals in the Far East , Great Britain and Japan . In the early 1890s , a conflict ...
第 281 頁
... influence in Outer Mongolia and ultimately culminated in its separation from China . “ 64 65 Given the realities of Mongolia's geographic location , no true independence was possible without the cooperation of both Russia and China ...
... influence in Outer Mongolia and ultimately culminated in its separation from China . “ 64 65 Given the realities of Mongolia's geographic location , no true independence was possible without the cooperation of both Russia and China ...
第 315 頁
... influence agreements with Japan , securing Russia's Far Eastern border . " 6 With the redeployment of tsarist military forces from the Far East to the European war zone , Russia could not continue to project power in Asia . On February ...
... influence agreements with Japan , securing Russia's Far Eastern border . " 6 With the redeployment of tsarist military forces from the Far East to the European war zone , Russia could not continue to project power in Asia . On February ...
內容
Political Legitimacy and Economic Backwardness | 12 |
The Demise | 25 |
The Treaty of Aigun | 49 |
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administration agreement Amur Archives ARFP Asian barbarians Bolsheviks border boundary Boxer Uprising Britain British CABM Central Asia century Ch'ing Dynasty Ch'ung-hou Chinese Eastern Railway Chinese government chüan commercial concessions countries crisis demands diplomacy diplomatic East economic European forces Foreign Affairs Foreign Minister frontier HMIRCP Hsü I-shan Ibid Ignat'ev Imperial Inner Mongolia Japan Japanese Kiakhta Kiakhta Conference Korea Korostovets Kuropatkin Li Hung-chang Livadia Lü-shun MacMurray Manchu Manchuria military Ministry Mongols Murav'ev Muslim negotiations Nevel'skoi Nicholas Nikolaevich northern otchet MID Outer Mongolia Petersburg political Popov population Rebellion region River Romanov Russia and China Russian empire Russian expansion Russian Foreign Policy Russian government Russo-Chinese relations Russo-Japanese Russo-Japanese War Sazonov Siberia Sinkiang Sino-Russian Sino-Soviet Soviet Union Tannu Uriankhai Tientsin trade Treaty of Aigun Treaty of Livadia Treaty of Peking troops ts'e tsar tsarist government Tseng Chi-tse Urga Ussuri Western Witte Zhomini to Girs России