The HoofWhat are China?s objectives in world affairs and what course will she pursue to achieve her goals? These are the questions of vital concern to the Western democracies, questions that can be approached intelligently only from a knowledge of how China?s for. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 100 筆
第 4 頁
The regular tribute payments to Peking, the key to the whole Chinese system of control, symbolized Chinese suzerainty and usually exhausted the duties of the inferior state. Dependencies such as Mongolia and Tibet were under the ...
The regular tribute payments to Peking, the key to the whole Chinese system of control, symbolized Chinese suzerainty and usually exhausted the duties of the inferior state. Dependencies such as Mongolia and Tibet were under the ...
第 7 頁
Above all, they could reduce foreign pressure upon Peking in the process of its transmission. The whole treatment weakened the personal status of the foreigner and permitted the central govemment to remain complacent, superior, ...
Above all, they could reduce foreign pressure upon Peking in the process of its transmission. The whole treatment weakened the personal status of the foreigner and permitted the central govemment to remain complacent, superior, ...
第 9 頁
The Peking officials had great difficulty in moving out of their traditional patterns and meeting the new challenge with new policies.“ When the foreigners began to sense the fundamentally negative and antagonistic attitude of the ...
The Peking officials had great difficulty in moving out of their traditional patterns and meeting the new challenge with new policies.“ When the foreigners began to sense the fundamentally negative and antagonistic attitude of the ...
第 12 頁
... treaties were less owing to the demands of the foreign powers for commercial privileges or extraterritoriality than to their requests for such things as permission to reside in Peking— requests that ran counter to Chinese mores.
... treaties were less owing to the demands of the foreign powers for commercial privileges or extraterritoriality than to their requests for such things as permission to reside in Peking— requests that ran counter to Chinese mores.
第 19 頁
foreign policy, often in competition with, sometimes in opposition to the Tsungli Yamen, though almost always maintaining a semblance of obedience to Peking. Such paradoxical situations resulted as that a foreign government quarreled ...
foreign policy, often in competition with, sometimes in opposition to the Tsungli Yamen, though almost always maintaining a semblance of obedience to Peking. Such paradoxical situations resulted as that a foreign government quarreled ...
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內容
3 | |
23 | |
3 FOREIGN IMPACT AND REFORM | 35 |
4 TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OR THE OPEN DOOR? | 52 |
5 REBELLION AGAINST THE WEST | 59 |
6 THREATENED LOSS OF MANCHURIA | 71 |
7 NURTURING NATIONALISM | 86 |
8 ALIGNMENT WITH GERMANY AND AMERICA | 99 |
15 INCIDENT WITH JAPAN AND RECONSTRUCTION | 193 |
16 RENEWED AGGRESSION AND INTERNAL DISCORD | 211 |
17 THE ALLIANCE IN WORLD WAR II | 231 |
18 THE AFTERMATH OF YALTA | 240 |
19 THE LOSS OF MANCHURIA AND SINKIANG | 248 |
20 THE COLLAPSE OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT | 261 |
21 THE THEORY OF COMMUNIST FOREIGN POLICY | 273 |
22 THE HATEAMERICA CAMPAIGN | 284 |
9 STRENGTHENING THE EMPIRE | 108 |
10 REVOLUTION AND FOREIGN MONEY | 120 |
11 THEORETICAL ALLY IN WORLD WAR I | 137 |
12 THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE 1921 | 159 |
13 TURNING FROM THE WEST TO RUSSIA | 168 |
14 DIPLOMATIC SUCCESSES | 179 |
23 THE ALLIANCE WITH THE SOVIET UNION | 308 |
24 THE BID FOR ASIAN LEADERSHIP | 325 |
25 REALIZING AMBITIONS IN ASIA | 332 |
NOTES | 357 |
INDEX | 390 |
常見字詞
action affairs aggression agreement alliance Allies anuary apan apan’s army Asia Asian assistance August became benefit Boxer Boxer Rebellion Britain British Canton Chiang K’ai-shek China New York Chinese Communists Chinese government Communist China concessions conference confirmed Confucian cooperation December defeat demands developed diplomatic DSDD East Eastern economic empress dowager favor February fight fighting finally financial first force foreign policy foreign powers Formosa govemment government’s groups Iapan imperialism imperialist influence interests japan japanese Korea Kuomintang leaders Li Hung-chang loan London Manchuria ment military minister Mongolia Nanking National Government Nationalists negotiations North China Herald November October officials oflicials Open Door Pacific peace Peking People’s Republic political propaganda Rebellion reforms regime revolution Russian September Shanghai Sinkiang situation Soviet Union specific Sun Yat-sen T. V. Soong T’ang territory Tibet Tibetan tion treaty troops U.S. Foreign Relations United Nations viceroys Viet Minh Washington Western Yalta Agreement Yuan
熱門章節
第 161 頁 - China to develop and maintain for herself an effective and stable government ; (3) To use their influence for the purpose of effectually establishing and maintaining the principle of equal opportunity for the commerce and industry of all nations throughout the territory of China ; (4) To refrain from taking advantage of conditions in China in order to seek special rights or privileges which would abridge the rights of subjects or citizens of friendly States, and from countenancing action inimical...
第 368 頁 - Henry F. Pringle, The Life and Times of William Howard Taft (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1939), II, 678-679.
第 291 頁 - Nations furnish such assistance to the Republic of Korea as might be necessary to repel the armed attack and to restore international peace and security in the area.
第 280 頁 - The Central People's Government shall have centralised handling of all external affairs of the area of Tibet; and there will be peaceful co-existence with neighbouring countries and establishment and development of fair commercial and trading relations with them on the basis of equality, mutual benefit and mutual respect for territory and sovereignty.
第 39 頁 - A more hopeless spectacle of fatuous imbecility, made up in equal parts of arrogance and helplessness, than the central Government of the Chinese Empire presented, after the actual pressure of war had been removed, it is almost impossible to conceive.
第 385 頁 - Benjamin Schwartz, Chinese Communism and the Rise of Mao (Cambridge, Mass., 1951); Robert C. North, Kuomintang and Chinese Communist Elites (Stanford University, 1952). Some thoughts on the possibility of Maoist "Titoism...
第 272 頁 - September 29, 1949, they embodied the clause that "the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China shall examine all treaties and agreements concluded between the Kuomintang and foreign Governments, and recognize, abrogate, revise or renew them according to their respective contents.
第 280 頁 - Government of the People's Republic of China shall do its utmost to protect the proper rights and interests of Chinese .residing abroad. ARTICLE 59. The People's Government of the People's Republic of China protects law-abiding foreign nationals in China. , ARTICLE 60. The People's Republic of China shall accord the right of asylum to foreign nationals who seek refuge in China because they have been oppressed by their own governments for supporting the people's interests and taking part in the struggle...