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Japan's Response to the Chinese Revolution of 1911

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

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The revolution that erupted in China in 1911 came as a shock to Japan. The Japanese had taken advantage of the opportunity created by their victory over Russia in 1905 to annex Korea and extend their influence into China. Their chief aim was to use the Korean peninsula as a base for an advance into Manchuria. Encouraged by various interests acquired through the Treaty of Portsmouth, Japan already had begun to exercise some control in Manchuria.

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Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1966

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References

1 Ijūin to Hayashi, October 13, 1911. Japan Foreign Ministry, Nihon Gaikō Bunsho (The Diplomatic Documents of Japan), special Vols. XLIV–XLV, Jiken, Shinkoku (The Chinese Revolution of 1911) (hereafter NGB XLIV-XLV) (Tokyo, 1961), No. 261Google Scholar.

2 Uchida Yasuya Den (Biography of Uchida Yasuya), in Japanese Foreign Ministry, unpublished.

3 Japan Foreign Ministry, Nihon Gaikō Nempyō narabini Shuyō Bunsho (Chronological Table and Main Documents of Japanese Diplomacy) (hereafter NGSB), Vol. I (Tokyo, 1955), 353Google Scholar.

4 Katsumi, Usui, “Nihon to Shingai Kakumei Sono Ichi Sokumen” (A Side-Light on Japan and the Revolution of 1911), Rekishi-gaku Kenkyū (Tokyo), No. 207, 1957.Google Scholar

5 Keiichiro, Hara, Hara Kei Nikki (The Diary of Hara Kei), Vol. IV (Tokyo, 1950), 373Google Scholar.

6 Ibid., p. 373.

7 Ibid., p. 374.

8 NGSB, Vol. I, 356.

9 Hara Keiichiro, Hara Nikki. Vol. IV, 376.

10 Yoshihiro, Hatano, “Shingai Kakumei to Nihon” (The Revolution of 1911 and Japan), Rekishi Kyōiku, Vol. II, No. 2 (1958)Google Scholar.

11 Ibid. See Janscn, Marius B., The Japanese and Sun Yat-sen (Cambridge, 1954), pp. 130137Google Scholar.

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13 Yasunobu, Somura, “Shingai Kokumei to Nihon no Yoron,” Hōgaku Shimpō, Vol. LXIII, No. 9 (1956), pp. 5166.Google Scholar

14 For example, Jiji Shimpō, October 18, 1911; Tokyo Asahi Shimbun, October 15 and 28, 1911; Gaikō Jihō, Vol. XIV, No. 11.

15 Kurihara Ken, “Dai-ichiji Dai-niji Manmō Dokuritsu Undō” (The First and Second Independence Movements for Manchuria and Mongolia), Nihon Gaikō-shi Kenkyü, Taishō-jidai (Studies in Japanese Diplomatic History: The Taishō Era). Tsutomu, Aida, Kawashima Naniwa Ō (The Biography of Kawashima Naniwa) (Tokyo, 1936) p. 114Google Scholar.

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19 Ijūin to Uchida, November 5, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 429.

20 Grey to Jordan, November 9, 1911, (Public Record Office Documents, London).

21 Zhukov, E. M., Mezhdunarodnye Otnosheniya na Dal'nen Vostoke (International Relations in the Far East) (Moscow, 1957), p. 242Google Scholar.

22 Ijūin took such a position toward the emergence of Yuan.

23 Most of the Japanese press expressed such views.

24 Kawashima Naniwa represented this position. See Tsutomu, Aida, Kawashima Naniwa Ō (Tokyo, 1936), p. 114Google Scholar.

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26 Ijūin to Uchida, November 1, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 388, No. 401.

27 NGSB, Vol. I, p. 186.

28 Uchida to Ijūin, November 17, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 299.

29 Ijūin to Uchida, November 18, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 540.

32 Ijūin to Uchida, November 19, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 548.

33 Ijūin to Uchida, November 27, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 586.

34 Usui Katsumi, “Shingai Kakumei: Nihon no Taiō” (Japan's Response to the Revolution of 1911), in Nihon Gaikō-shi Kenkyū, Taishō-jidai (Studies in Japan's Diplomatic History: The Taishō Era) (Tokyo, 1958), pp. 13–25.

35 Iichiro, Tokutomi, Kōshaku Yamagata Aritomo Den (The Biography of Prince Yamagata Aritomo) (Tokyo, 1933), Vol. III, p. 778Google Scholar; Pooley, A. M., Japan's Foreign Policies (London, 1920), p. 65Google Scholar.

36 NGSB, Vol. I, pp. 357–359.

37 Matsumura (at Hankow) to Uchida, November 28, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 84.

38 Uchida to Yamaza, November 30, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 33.

39 Ijūin to Uchida, November 30, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 611.

40 Ijūin to Uchida, December 3, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 624.

42 Uchida to Ijūin, December 4, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 347.

43 Yamaga to Uchida, December 6, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 242.

44 Uchida to Ijūin, December 8, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 361.

45 Ijūin to Uchida, December 11, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 663.

46 Kokuryu-kai, , Nisshi Kōshō Gaishi (An Unofficial History of Sino-Japancse Relations) (Tokyo, 1939). Vol. II, p. 15Google Scholar.

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48 Uchida to Yamaza, December 10, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 214. Motono to Uchida, December 13, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 175.

49 The Japanese Chargé d'Affaires at Washington to the Secretary of State, Washington (undated), in Foreign Relations of the United States, 1912 (Washington, 1919), pp. 5657.Google Scholar

50 The Secretary of State to the Japanese Chargé d'Affaires, Washington, December 21, 1911, ibid., pp. 57–58.

51 Reid, John Gilbert, The Manchu Abdication and the Powers, 1908–1912 (Berkeley, 1935), p. 267Google Scholar; and Kuo-kan, Chang, Hsin-hai ko-ming shih-liao (Documents on the Revolution of 1911) (Peking, 1960), p. 291Google Scholar.

52 Ariyoshi (at Shanghai) to Uchida, December 20, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 429.

53 Ijūin to Uchida, December 22, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 718.

54 Uchida to Yamaza, December 22, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 228.

55 Ijūin to Uchida, December 22, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 720.

56 Ariyoshi to Uchida, December 22, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 436.

57 Hara, op. cit., Vol. IV, pp. 420–421.

58 Uchida to Ijūin, December 23, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 403.

59 Hara Keiichiro, Hara Nikki, Vol. V, p. 10; and Uchida to Ijūin, December 23, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 403.

60 Ijūin to Uchida, December 25 and December 27, 1911, in NGB, Vol. XLIV–XLV, No. 727 and No. 738.

61 Takenouchi Masashi, a member of the House of Representatives, on January 23, 1912. Tokyo Asahi Shimbun, January 24, 1922.

62 Kōsaku, Tamura, Saikjn Shina Gaikō Shi (Diplomatic History of Modern China) (Tokyo, 1938), Vol. I, pp. 105106Google Scholar.

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64 Jiji Shimpō, January 27, 1912.

65 Kokumin Shimbun, February 5, 1912.

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67 Yamagata Bunsho (Yamagata Aritomo Papers) (unpublished), in the National Diet Library, No. 10.

68 NGSB, Vol. I, pp. 359–361.

69 Die Grosse Politic der Europäishcn Kabinette, 32 band, ss. 257–258; Foreign Relations of the United States, 1912, pp. 63–64.

70 Usui Katsumi, “Shingai Kukumei: Nihon no Taiō,” in Ninon Gaikō-shi Kenhyū, Taishō-jidai, pp. 13–25.

71 Uchida to Motono, March 4, 1912, Japan Foreign Ministry, Nihon Gaikō Bunsho (The Diplomatic Documents of Japan), Vol. XLV, (hereafter NGB XLV) (Tokyo, 1962), No. 39.

72 Katsumi, Usui, “Taishō Shoki no Nicchū Kankei” (Sino-Japanese Relations of early Taishō period), Rekishi Kyoiku, Vol. VII, No. 2 (1959)Google Scholar.

73 Minutes of Adjourned Meeting of the six Groups held at the Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Paris, on June 18, 1912, in NGB, Vol. XLV, pp. 415–416.

74 Japanese Minister Motono at Petersburg first approached Sazonoff on January 16 under instruction from Uchida (NGB XLV, No. 6.) Young, C. Walter, Japan's Special Position in Manchuria (Baltimore, 1931), P. 79Google Scholar, states that Russia took the initiative. However, Japanese diplomatic records reveal that Japan made the first approach.

75 NGB, Vol. XLV, No. 1145.

76 NGSB, Vol. I, p. 192, p. 199.

77 NGSB, Vol. I, p. 196.