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Post World War I

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Post World War I. Post World War I. Emperor Puyi Two parts http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBrMcaGkDYQ. Post World War I. Csuchico.edu. Emperor Puyi - Puyi was three years old when he became emperor. His father ruled as his regent. -By 1911, there was a rebellion in - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Post World War I

Post World War I

Page 2: Post World War I

Post World War IEmperor Puyi

Two parts

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBrMcaGkDYQ

Page 3: Post World War I

Post World War IEmperor Puyi

-Puyi was three years old when he became emperor. His father ruled as his regent.-By 1911, there was a rebellion in China and Puyi abdicated on February 12, 1912.-He continued to live in the Forbidden City and was treated with enormous respect.-The city which was built between 1406-1420 did not allow commoners to enter.

Csuchico.edu

Page 4: Post World War I

Post World War I Emperor Puyi

-In 1917 when he was 9, a warlord, Chang Hsun decided to restore him to the throne. Puyi proclaimed that he was emperor once again. Six days later a plane dropped three bombs on the Forbidden City. PuYi’s supporters abandoned him and he lost his throne.. He remained in the Forbidden City.

Chinapage.com

Page 5: Post World War I

Post World War IEmperor Puyi

-In 1931 the Japanese army invaded Manchuria. The Japanese set up a new country in Manchuria called Manchukuo. They made Pu Yi the Chief Executive.-During World War II, Japanese developed Manchukuo as a military industrial base.-At the end of the war, Soviet forces invaded Manchuria were flown to the USSR and kept under house arrest

March 9, 1932 Csuchico.edu

Page 6: Post World War I

Post World War I Emperor Puyi

-At last, in 1950, Pu Yi was forced to leave his comfortable Russian Village and return to China, where he was sent at once to a prison camp.

-He remained there for 9 years. In December of 1959, he was finally released. He was in his fifties.

-In 1962, Pu Yi got married to Communist Party member, Li Shu- Hsien

Csuchico.edu

Page 7: Post World War I

Post World War IYuan Shikai

-1882 active military duty in Korea-Between 1876 and 1895, Japan and China struggle for influence in Korea-1885, Japan and Korea split influence in Korea equally-1894, Japan defeats China for control of Korea-Assigned to work on a modern Chinese military after China’s defeat. -Boxer Rebellion, he ignored the Court’s policy of support of the Boxers. He protected foreigners under his jurisdiction.

Bhoffert.faculty.noctrl.edu

Page 8: Post World War I

Post World War I

Indiana.edu

-July 1901 he was commander of the best trained military in the north of China.-By 1908 , after the death of Empress Dowager CiXi his career declined.-Double Ten Revolution (October 10) began in 1911. He was summoned back to duty to suppress the rebellion. -March 1912, the Manchus abdicated and Yuan was named the first president of the Chinese Republic.-By June 1916, exhausted and tired, he died.

Page 9: Post World War I

Post World War I

By 1919, Sun Yat-sen (Yixian) was back in power until the time of his death in 1925. Back in power? When was he IN power?

The other side of the storyAfter the death of Yuan Shikai, China slipped into twelve years of

civil war and revolution.

Sun Yat-sen was in power also from January 1912 until March 1912.

He gave up his position as president of China to Yuan Shikai if he could get the Manchu’s to abdicate.

Puyi abdicates on February 11, 1912 and Yuan Shikai remained as president until 1916.

Page 10: Post World War I

Post World War IMay 4th Movement—1919

Precursor

-Dynastic period ends 1912-Imperialism—Opium War, Taiping

Rebellion, Boxer Rebellion

Page 11: Post World War I

Post World War IMay 4th Movement—1919

Purpose to strengthen China--Starts out with 3,000 student protestors who want cultural and intellectual changes--Closed many schools and colleges in 200 cities--Many reject Confucian traditions--Movement toward Western ideas of democracy and nationalism--Women looked to end arranged marriages, foot binding and seclusion.

Result--Effective, Beginning of Chinese Nationalism--Ideology but no army

Page 12: Post World War I

Post World War IMay 4th Movement

Bhoffert.faculty.edu

Page 13: Post World War I

Post World War IBy 1921, Sun Yat-sen had

established a Nationalist party, Guomindang (gwoh meen Dawng). (meaning favorable to democracy)

Page 14: Post World War I

Post World War ISun Yat-sen

--Born in 1866--Joined older brother in Hawaii at 13, became very Westernized--By brothers support studied in Hong Kong completed medical degree in 1892--Couldn’t practice medicine in Macao b/c he didn’t have a medical license from there.--Returned to Hawaii, then U.S. and London seeking support among Chinese overseas--Kidnapped by Ch’ing dynasty while in London who planned to send him to China for execution

Sacu.org Song Quingling, wife, Japan, 1915

Page 15: Post World War I

Post World War I Sun Yat-sen

--Based in Tokyo and developed three principles

People’s NationalismPeople’s DemocracyPeople’s Livelihood

--The Ch’ing pressure obliged Japan to expel Sun in 1906--Went to Vietnam but forced out by the French--He dies in 1925 and Chaing Kai-shek takes over in China

Sacu.org Wuchang Hubei

Page 16: Post World War I

Post World War INanking Decade 1927—1937

Northern China--During the 1920s, many floods, drought and famine killed

millions.

--As a result many peasants were landless.

--Many western missionaries helped to rebuild roads, famine relief and rural credit cooperatives.

--The Nationalist leader of China at that time during the agrarian crisis Chaing Kai-Shek mistrusted peasant organizations.

Page 17: Post World War I

Post World War INanking Decade 1927—1937

Chiang Kai-shek--Major investor in Shanghai--Old Style Confucian--Set up secret Fascist organizations called Blue shirts similar to Hitler’s and Mussolini’s Brown and Black Shirts to ferret out Communists.--Employed German military advisors to stop communism and Japanese expansionism--Liked by West, spoke English, western clothing, Harvard

Page 18: Post World War I

Post World War I

Murphey, Rhodes East Asia: A New History, 1997

Page 19: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Long March

--Started in 1935

--The leader of the Communists at this time was Mao Zedong.

--Chaing Kai-Shek drove 80,000 communists over 6,600 miles from

southern to northern China. --10,000 finished

--Chaing Kai-Shek flew above them to plan points along the route.

--He was captured by a Manchirian warlord and demanded that he stop

the civil war and join the United Front against Japan.

Mbc.edu

Page 20: Post World War I

Post World War I

Page 21: Post World War I

Post World War I

CallChina.pbworks.com

Page 22: Post World War I

Post World War I

Murphey, Rhodes East Asia: A New History, 1997

Page 23: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Long March

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvaHrKDwkyM

Page 24: Post World War I

Post World War IFascism in Italy

History—a bundle of sticks with an axWrapped around it. It was a symbol of ancient Rome.

Bible-history.com

Page 25: Post World War I

Post World War IFasces in History—Mercury Dime

Democraticunderground.com

Page 26: Post World War I

Post World War IFasces in History—United States Capitol

Kids.clerk.house.gov

Page 27: Post World War I

Post World War IHow does it work?

It is any authoritarian government that

is not communist.

As an economic system, fascism is SOCIALISM with a capitalist veneer. Library of Economics and Liberty –Econlib.org

Page 28: Post World War I

Post World War IWhat are the characteristics of Fascism?

F A S C I S M

Discipline and loyalty

Rooted in extreme

nationalism

Individual to serve the state

The state is absolute

Page 29: Post World War I

Post World War I

Why did it surface?It was started by Benito Mussolini (IlDuce—The Leader) and unemployed

former soldiers

Page 30: Post World War I

Post World War I

Who followed Fascist ideas/thinking?Business leaders, wealthy landownersand lower middle class.

Why was Fascism so popular?It revived national pride and offered astable government. It appealed topeople since it offered a stablegovernment

Page 31: Post World War I

Post World War IMussolini became Italy’s leader in 1922.

Mussolini distinguished fascism from liberal capitalism in his 1928 autobiography:

The citizen in the Fascist State is no longer a selfish individual who has the anti-social right of rebelling against any law of the Collectivity. The Fascist State with its corporative conception puts men and their possibilities into productive work and interprets for them the duties they have to fulfill. (p. 280)

http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Fascism.html

Page 32: Post World War I

Post World War IMussolini In Color

http://www.smithsonianchannel.com/site/sn/show.do?series=817

Page 33: Post World War I

Post World War IMussolini’s Bunker: Il Duce’s Futile Search For

Safety

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18828612

Page 34: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Rise of Nazism in Germany

Treaty of Versailles

Page 35: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Rise of Nazism in Germany

Economy

Page 36: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Rise of Nazism in Germany

Philosophy

Page 37: Post World War I

Post World War IThe Rise of Nazism in Germany

Propaganda

Page 38: Post World War I

Post World War I

Page 39: Post World War I

Post World War I