ABSTRACT

First published in 1938, this book aims to be a ‘true and objective’ account of China’s recent history and its present circumstances at the time, drawing on the author’s thirty years of experience as a member of the British consular service in China. The recurrent themes of the period are examined: the efforts of the Chinese leadership to build a new China out of the ruins of the old, their efforts to claim a place of equality among the nations of the world, and the development of the conflict between a resurgent China and the ambitions of Japan. Some of the issues studied were in the process of change and others definitely closed by war — nearly all were affected to some degree.

chapter |15 pages

Historical Prelude

chapter |25 pages

Japan in China

chapter |13 pages

Russia and France in China

chapter |6 pages

The Boxer Indemnity

chapter |11 pages

The Treaty Ports

chapter |26 pages

Shanghai

chapter |20 pages

Frontiers and Dependencies

chapter |9 pages

Army, Navy and Aviation

chapter |17 pages

The Foreigner in China

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion