ABSTRACT

The Chinese Hsinhai Revolution explores and explains for the first time the important role of G. E. Morrison in great power diplomacy in China from the end of the Russo-Japanese War to the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty. The work is based on a wide range of multinational scholarly sources and in order to develop the context in which Morrison carried out his personal diplomacy and to delineate the many-sided story into which Morrison has to be placed, Woodhouse has in addition to mining the very rich Morrison collection, drawn upon British, Japanese and American personal and official materials.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter |37 pages

The Outbreak of the Revolution

chapter |25 pages

Morrison and Yuan Shih-Kai

chapter |18 pages

Sino-Anglo-Japanese Diplomacy

chapter |35 pages

Morrison's Personal Diplomacy, 1911–12

chapter |21 pages

The Effect Of Morrison's Work

chapter |21 pages

China After The Hsinhai Revolution

China, sex and prostitution reconsidered

chapter |5 pages

Summary/Conclusion

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue