Modern Chinese Warfare, 1795-1989Routledge, 2005年7月28日 - 384 頁 Why did the Chinese empire collapse and why did it take so long for a new government to reunite China? Modern Chinese Warfare, 1795-1989 seeks to answer these questions by exploring the most important domestic and international conflicts over the past two hundred years, from the last half of the Qing empire through to modern day China. It reveals how most of China's wars during this period were fought to preserve unity in China, and examines their distinctly cyclical pattern of imperial decline, domestic chaos and finally the creation of a new unifying dynasty. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 67 筆
... March. Lin also ordered the Chinese workers to stay away, and barricaded all entrances to the foreign area. On 27 March 1839, Charles Elliot, the British chief superintendent, ordered that all foreign-owned opium chests be handed over ...
... Conflict was renewed on 26 February 1841, when the British took the Chinese forts along the Middle Bogue and then occupied the foreign factories in Guangzhou on 18 March. On 21 May, Chinese fireboats. 22 IMPERIAL DECLINE.
Bruce A. Elleman. in Guangzhou on 18 March. On 21 May, Chinese fireboats tried to sink the British fleet anchored just off the city. This plan failed miserably, and during the next few days the British sank seventy-one junks, destroyed ...
... March 1841, and in so doing proved that the Chinese forts and large chains guarding the entrance to the Bogue could be outflanked. During this expedition, the river became so shallow that at one point the Nemesis "practically slithered ...
您已達到此書的檢閱上限.
內容
13 | |
The Taiping Rebellion and the Arrow War | 35 |
The Nian Muslim and Tungan Rebellions | 57 |
The Hi Crisis and Chinas defense of Xinjiang | 71 |
The SinoFrench War in Annam | 82 |
The SinoJapanese War and the partitioning | 94 |
The Boxer antiforeign Uprising | 116 |
The Chinese Revolution and the fall | 138 |
Expedition to unite China | 149 |