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Battle of Beiping–Tianjin

The Battle of Beiping–Tianjin (simplified Chinese: 平津作战; traditional Chinese: 平津作戰; pinyin: Píng Jīn Zùozhàn), also known as the Battle of Beiping, Battle of Peiping, Battle of Beijing, Battle of Peiking, the Peiking–Tientsin Operation, and by the Japanese as the North China Incident (北支事変, Hokushi jihen) (25–31 July 1937) was a series of battles of the Second Sino-Japanese War fought in the proximity of Beiping (now Beijing) and Tianjin. It resulted in a Japanese victory.

Battle of Beiping-Tianjin
Part of the Second Sino-Japanese War

Japanese troops march into the Zhengyangmen gate in Beijing after capturing the city.
Date (1937-07-07) (1937-08-08)July 7 – August 8, 1937
(1 month and 1 day)
Location
Vicinity of BeijingTianjin
Result Japanese victory
Belligerents

Japan

China
Commanders and leaders
Kanichiro Tashiro
Kiyoshi Katsuki
Song Zheyuan
Zhao Dengyu 
Tong Linge 
Strength
180,000+[1] ~75,000+

Background edit

During the Marco Polo Bridge Incident on 8 July 1937, the Japanese China Garrison Army attacked the walled city of Wanping (宛平鎮) after an ultimatum to allow its forces to search for an allegedly missing soldier had elapsed. Wanping, in the neighborhood of Lugou Bridge, was on the main railway line west of Beijing and was of considerable strategic importance. Prior to July 1937, Japanese forces had repeatedly demanded the withdrawal of the Chinese forces stationed at this place.

Chinese General Song Zheyuan ordered his forces to hold their positions and attempted to avert war through diplomacy.

On 9 July, the Japanese offered a ceasefire and truce, one of the conditions of which was that the Chinese 37th Division, which had proven "hostile" to Japan, be replaced with another division from the Chinese 29th Army. This condition was agreed to by the Chinese the same day. However, from midnight of 9 July, Japanese violations of the ceasefire began to increase and Japanese reinforcements continued to arrive. Lieutenant General Kanichiro Tashiro, commander of the Japanese China Garrison Army, fell ill and died on 12 July and was replaced by Lieutenant General Kiyoshi Katsuki.

Muslim General Ma Bufang of the Ma clique notified the Chinese government that he was prepared to lead his army into battle against the Japanese when they started the attack on Beijing.[2] Immediately after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident, Ma Bufang arranged for a cavalry division under the Muslim General Ma Biao to be sent east to battle the Japanese.[3] Ethnic Turkic Salar Muslims made up the majority of the first cavalry division which was sent by Ma Bufang.[4]

Order of battle edit

Diplomatic maneuverings edit

Meanwhile, the Japanese civilian government of Prime Minister Konoe in Tokyo held an extraordinary cabinet meeting on 8 July, and resolved to attempt to defuse hostilities and settle the issue diplomatically. However, the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff authorized the deployment of an infantry division from the Chosen Army, two independent combined brigades from the Kwantung Army and an air regiment as reinforcements. This deployment was rescinded on 11 July on news that negotiations were being held by the commander of the Japanese Northern China Area Army and the Chinese 29th Army on location, and with Japanese diplomats at the Chinese capital of Nanjing. However, even after General Song Zheyuan, Commander of the 29th Army and head of the Hebei-Chahar Political Council, was reported to have come to terms on 18 July, the Japanese Army pushed forward the deployment of reinforcements citing lack of sincerity on part of the Chinese central government. This mobilization was strongly opposed by General Kanji Ishihara on the grounds that an unnecessary escalation in the conflict with China was endangering Japan's position in Manchukuo vis-à-vis the Soviet Union. At Ishihara's urging, the deployment was delayed while Konoe used his personal contacts with Japanese acquaintances of Sun Yat-sen in an effort to establish a direct diplomatic settlement with the Kuomintang central government in Nanjing. This secret diplomacy failed when elements within the Japanese military detained Konoe's emissary on 23 July, and the mobilization of reinforcements was restarted on 29 July.

One week later, the Commander of the Japanese Northern China Area Army reported that, having exhausted every means of peaceful settlement, he had decided to use force to "chastise" the Chinese 29th Route Army and requested approval from Tokyo. In the meantime, mobilization orders were issued for four more infantry divisions.

Langfang Incident edit

Despite the nominal truce, numerous violations of the ceasefire continued, including another shelling of Wanping by Japanese artillery on 14 July.

By 25 July, Japanese reinforcements in the form of the IJA 20th Division arrived and fighting reerupted first at Langfang, a city on the railroad between Beijing and Tianjin, between companies of Japanese and Chinese troops. A second clash occurred on 26 July, when a Japanese brigade attempted to force its way through Guanghuamen Gate in Beijing to "protect Japanese nationals". The same day Japanese planes bombed Langfang.

The Japanese then issued an ultimatum to General Song demanding the withdrawal of all Chinese forces from the outskirts of Beijing to the west of the Yongding River within 24 hours. Song refused, ordered his units to prepare for action, and requested large reinforcements from the central government, which were not provided.

On 27 July, as the Japanese laid siege to Chinese forces in Tongzhou, one Chinese battalion broke out and fell back to Nanyuan [zh]. Japanese planes also bombed Chinese forces outside Beiping and reconnoitered Kaifeng, Zhengzhou and Luoyang. On the same day Emperor Hirohito sanctioned an imperial order to bring stability to the strategic areas in the region.[5]

On 28 July, the IJA 20th Division and three independent combined brigades launched an offensive against Beijing, backed by close air support. The main attack was against Nanyuan and a secondary attack against Beiyuan. Bitter fighting ensued with both General Tong Linge Deputy Commander of Chinese 29th Army and General Zhao Dengyu commanding Chinese 132nd Division being killed, and their units suffering heavy casualties. However, a brigade of Chinese 38th Division under General Liu Chen-san pushed back the Japanese in the Langfang area while a brigade of the Chinese 53rd Corps and a portion of the Chinese 37th Division recovered the railway station at Fengtai.[6]

However, this was only a temporary respite, and by nightfall General Song admitted that further combat was futile and withdrew the main force of Chinese 29th Army south of the Yungging River. Tianjin Major General Zhang Zizhong was left in Beiping to take charge of political affairs in Hebei and Chahar provinces with virtually no troops. General Liu Ruzhen's New Separate 29th Brigade was left in Beijing to maintain public order.

Tongzhou mutiny edit

On 29 July, the Japanese collaborationist East Hebei Army troops mutinied against the Japanese in Tongzhou, killing most of their Japanese advisors and other civilians, including women and children.[7]

Fall of Tianjin edit

Meanwhile, on the coast at dawn of 29 July, the IJA 5th Division and Japanese naval forces separately attacked Tianjin and the port at Tanggu, which were defended by units of Chinese 38th Division and volunteers under acting commander Liu Wen-tien. General Huang Wei-kang's brigade defended the Taku Forts gallantly and also attacked a nearby Japanese airfield, destroying many aircraft. However, with increasing Japanese reinforcements his position was untenable, and that night (30 July) General Zhang Zizhong was ordered to withdraw toward Machang and Yangliuching south of Tianjin, abandoning the city and Taku Forts to the Japanese.

Fall of Beijing edit

On 28 July, Chiang Kai-shek ordered Song Zheyuan to retreat to Baoding in southern Hebei province. Over the next two days, intense fighting took place in Tianjin, where the Chinese forces put up a stiff resistance, but subsequently the Chinese retreated south along the lines of the Tianjin-Pukou Railway and the Beiping-Hankou Railway.

On 4 August, General Liu Ruzhen's remaining forces withdrew into Chahar. Isolated, Beiping was captured by the Japanese without further resistance on 8 August 1937. General Masakazu Kawabe entered the city on 18 August in a military parade, and posted proclamations at important points announcing that he was the new military governor of the city. Zhang was allowed to retain his position as mayor, but left the city secretly a week later.

Aftermath edit

With the fall of Beijing and Tianjin, the North China Plain was helpless against the Japanese divisions which occupied it by the end of the year. The Chinese National Revolutionary Army was in constant retreat until the hard fought Battle of Taierzhuang.

Zhang was vilified relentlessly by the Chinese press, and reviled as a traitor. Upon arrival at Nanjing he apologized publicly. Since he later died fighting against the Japanese, the Kuomintang posthumously pardoned Zhang for the events in Beijing.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Documentary about the Battle of Beiping-Tianjin https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dj7lWDz-sY8
  2. ^ Central Press (30 Jul 1937). "He Offers Aid to Fight Japan". Herald-Journal. Retrieved December 12, 2010.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-07-02. Retrieved 2015-04-04.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-08-27. Retrieved 2015-06-25.
  5. ^ Harmsen, Peter (2018). War in the Far East. Volume 1: Storm clouds over the Pacific, 1931-1941. Philadelphia Oxford: Casemate. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-61200-480-8.
  6. ^ Harmsen, Peter (2018). War in the Far East. Volume 1: Storm clouds over the Pacific, 1931-1941. Philadelphia Oxford: Casemate. pp. 103–105. ISBN 978-1-61200-480-8.
  7. ^ 中村粲 『大東亜戦争への道』展々社,1990年

Sources edit

  • Hsu Long-hsuen and Chang Ming-kai, History of The Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) 2nd Ed., 1971. Translated by Wen Ha-hsiung, Chung Wu Publishing; 33, 140th Lane, Tung-hwa Street, Taipei, Taiwan Republic of China. Pg.177-180 Map 2
  • Dorn, Frank (1974). The Sino-Japanese War, 1937-41: From Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor. MacMillan. ISBN 0-02-532200-1.
  • Dryburgh, Marjorie (2000). North China and Japanese Expansion 1933-1937: Regional Power and the National Interest. RoutledgeCurzon. ISBN 0-7007-1274-7.
  • Lu, David J (1961). From The Marco Polo Bridge To Pearl Harbor: A Study Of Japan's Entry Into World War II. Public Affairs Press. ASIN B000UV6MFQ.
  • Furuya, Keiji (1981). The riddle of the Marco Polo bridge: To verify the first shot. Symposium on the History of the Republic of China. ASIN: B0007BJI7I.

External links edit

  • Discussion and Map of Peiking Tientsin Operation
  • International Military Tribunal Proceedings

battle, beiping, tianjin, battle, tianjin, redirects, here, other, battle, with, different, romanization, battle, tientsin, this, article, about, 1937, battle, list, other, battles, also, called, battle, beijing, battle, beijing, this, article, needs, addition. Battle of Tianjin redirects here For the other battle with a different romanization see Battle of Tientsin This article is about 1937 battle For list of other battles also called Battle of Beijing see Battle of Beijing This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Battle of Beiping Tianjin news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Battle of Beiping Tianjin simplified Chinese 平津作战 traditional Chinese 平津作戰 pinyin Ping Jin Zuozhan also known as the Battle of Beiping Battle of Peiping Battle of Beijing Battle of Peiking the Peiking Tientsin Operation and by the Japanese as the North China Incident 北支事変 Hokushi jihen 25 31 July 1937 was a series of battles of the Second Sino Japanese War fought in the proximity of Beiping now Beijing and Tianjin It resulted in a Japanese victory Battle of Beiping TianjinPart of the Second Sino Japanese WarJapanese troops march into the Zhengyangmen gate in Beijing after capturing the city Date 1937 07 07 1937 08 08 July 7 August 8 1937 1 month and 1 day LocationVicinity of Beijing TianjinResultJapanese victoryBelligerentsJapan East HebeiChinaCommanders and leadersKanichiro Tashiro Kiyoshi KatsukiSong Zheyuan Zhao Dengyu Tong Linge Strength180 000 1 75 000 Contents 1 Background 2 Order of battle 3 Diplomatic maneuverings 4 Langfang Incident 5 Tongzhou mutiny 6 Fall of Tianjin 7 Fall of Beijing 8 Aftermath 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksBackground editDuring the Marco Polo Bridge Incident on 8 July 1937 the Japanese China Garrison Army attacked the walled city of Wanping 宛平鎮 after an ultimatum to allow its forces to search for an allegedly missing soldier had elapsed Wanping in the neighborhood of Lugou Bridge was on the main railway line west of Beijing and was of considerable strategic importance Prior to July 1937 Japanese forces had repeatedly demanded the withdrawal of the Chinese forces stationed at this place Chinese General Song Zheyuan ordered his forces to hold their positions and attempted to avert war through diplomacy On 9 July the Japanese offered a ceasefire and truce one of the conditions of which was that the Chinese 37th Division which had proven hostile to Japan be replaced with another division from the Chinese 29th Army This condition was agreed to by the Chinese the same day However from midnight of 9 July Japanese violations of the ceasefire began to increase and Japanese reinforcements continued to arrive Lieutenant General Kanichiro Tashiro commander of the Japanese China Garrison Army fell ill and died on 12 July and was replaced by Lieutenant General Kiyoshi Katsuki Muslim General Ma Bufang of the Ma clique notified the Chinese government that he was prepared to lead his army into battle against the Japanese when they started the attack on Beijing 2 Immediately after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident Ma Bufang arranged for a cavalry division under the Muslim General Ma Biao to be sent east to battle the Japanese 3 Ethnic Turkic Salar Muslims made up the majority of the first cavalry division which was sent by Ma Bufang 4 Order of battle editMain article Order of battle at Beiping TianjinDiplomatic maneuverings editMeanwhile the Japanese civilian government of Prime Minister Konoe in Tokyo held an extraordinary cabinet meeting on 8 July and resolved to attempt to defuse hostilities and settle the issue diplomatically However the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff authorized the deployment of an infantry division from the Chosen Army two independent combined brigades from the Kwantung Army and an air regiment as reinforcements This deployment was rescinded on 11 July on news that negotiations were being held by the commander of the Japanese Northern China Area Army and the Chinese 29th Army on location and with Japanese diplomats at the Chinese capital of Nanjing However even after General Song Zheyuan Commander of the 29th Army and head of the Hebei Chahar Political Council was reported to have come to terms on 18 July the Japanese Army pushed forward the deployment of reinforcements citing lack of sincerity on part of the Chinese central government This mobilization was strongly opposed by General Kanji Ishihara on the grounds that an unnecessary escalation in the conflict with China was endangering Japan s position in Manchukuo vis a vis the Soviet Union At Ishihara s urging the deployment was delayed while Konoe used his personal contacts with Japanese acquaintances of Sun Yat sen in an effort to establish a direct diplomatic settlement with the Kuomintang central government in Nanjing This secret diplomacy failed when elements within the Japanese military detained Konoe s emissary on 23 July and the mobilization of reinforcements was restarted on 29 July One week later the Commander of the Japanese Northern China Area Army reported that having exhausted every means of peaceful settlement he had decided to use force to chastise the Chinese 29th Route Army and requested approval from Tokyo In the meantime mobilization orders were issued for four more infantry divisions Langfang Incident editMain articles Langfang Incident and Guanganmen Incident Despite the nominal truce numerous violations of the ceasefire continued including another shelling of Wanping by Japanese artillery on 14 July By 25 July Japanese reinforcements in the form of the IJA 20th Division arrived and fighting reerupted first at Langfang a city on the railroad between Beijing and Tianjin between companies of Japanese and Chinese troops A second clash occurred on 26 July when a Japanese brigade attempted to force its way through Guanghuamen Gate in Beijing to protect Japanese nationals The same day Japanese planes bombed Langfang The Japanese then issued an ultimatum to General Song demanding the withdrawal of all Chinese forces from the outskirts of Beijing to the west of the Yongding River within 24 hours Song refused ordered his units to prepare for action and requested large reinforcements from the central government which were not provided On 27 July as the Japanese laid siege to Chinese forces in Tongzhou one Chinese battalion broke out and fell back to Nanyuan zh Japanese planes also bombed Chinese forces outside Beiping and reconnoitered Kaifeng Zhengzhou and Luoyang On the same day Emperor Hirohito sanctioned an imperial order to bring stability to the strategic areas in the region 5 On 28 July the IJA 20th Division and three independent combined brigades launched an offensive against Beijing backed by close air support The main attack was against Nanyuan and a secondary attack against Beiyuan Bitter fighting ensued with both General Tong Linge Deputy Commander of Chinese 29th Army and General Zhao Dengyu commanding Chinese 132nd Division being killed and their units suffering heavy casualties However a brigade of Chinese 38th Division under General Liu Chen san pushed back the Japanese in the Langfang area while a brigade of the Chinese 53rd Corps and a portion of the Chinese 37th Division recovered the railway station at Fengtai 6 However this was only a temporary respite and by nightfall General Song admitted that further combat was futile and withdrew the main force of Chinese 29th Army south of the Yungging River Tianjin Major General Zhang Zizhong was left in Beiping to take charge of political affairs in Hebei and Chahar provinces with virtually no troops General Liu Ruzhen s New Separate 29th Brigade was left in Beijing to maintain public order Tongzhou mutiny editMain article Tongzhou mutiny On 29 July the Japanese collaborationist East Hebei Army troops mutinied against the Japanese in Tongzhou killing most of their Japanese advisors and other civilians including women and children 7 Fall of Tianjin editMeanwhile on the coast at dawn of 29 July the IJA 5th Division and Japanese naval forces separately attacked Tianjin and the port at Tanggu which were defended by units of Chinese 38th Division and volunteers under acting commander Liu Wen tien General Huang Wei kang s brigade defended the Taku Forts gallantly and also attacked a nearby Japanese airfield destroying many aircraft However with increasing Japanese reinforcements his position was untenable and that night 30 July General Zhang Zizhong was ordered to withdraw toward Machang and Yangliuching south of Tianjin abandoning the city and Taku Forts to the Japanese Fall of Beijing editOn 28 July Chiang Kai shek ordered Song Zheyuan to retreat to Baoding in southern Hebei province Over the next two days intense fighting took place in Tianjin where the Chinese forces put up a stiff resistance but subsequently the Chinese retreated south along the lines of the Tianjin Pukou Railway and the Beiping Hankou Railway On 4 August General Liu Ruzhen s remaining forces withdrew into Chahar Isolated Beiping was captured by the Japanese without further resistance on 8 August 1937 General Masakazu Kawabe entered the city on 18 August in a military parade and posted proclamations at important points announcing that he was the new military governor of the city Zhang was allowed to retain his position as mayor but left the city secretly a week later Aftermath editWith the fall of Beijing and Tianjin the North China Plain was helpless against the Japanese divisions which occupied it by the end of the year The Chinese National Revolutionary Army was in constant retreat until the hard fought Battle of Taierzhuang Zhang was vilified relentlessly by the Chinese press and reviled as a traitor Upon arrival at Nanjing he apologized publicly Since he later died fighting against the Japanese the Kuomintang posthumously pardoned Zhang for the events in Beijing See also editHistory of BeijingReferences edit Documentary about the Battle of Beiping Tianjin https www youtube com watch v dj7lWDz sY8 Central Press 30 Jul 1937 He Offers Aid to Fight Japan Herald Journal Retrieved December 12 2010 让日军闻风丧胆地回族抗日名将 Archived from the original on 2017 07 02 Retrieved 2015 04 04 还原真实的西北群马之马步芳骑八师中原抗日 Archived from the original on 2016 08 27 Retrieved 2015 06 25 Harmsen Peter 2018 War in the Far East Volume 1 Storm clouds over the Pacific 1931 1941 Philadelphia Oxford Casemate p 103 ISBN 978 1 61200 480 8 Harmsen Peter 2018 War in the Far East Volume 1 Storm clouds over the Pacific 1931 1941 Philadelphia Oxford Casemate pp 103 105 ISBN 978 1 61200 480 8 中村粲 大東亜戦争への道 展々社 1990年Sources editHsu Long hsuen and Chang Ming kai History of The Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 2nd Ed 1971 Translated by Wen Ha hsiung Chung Wu Publishing 33 140th Lane Tung hwa Street Taipei Taiwan Republic of China Pg 177 180 Map 2 Dorn Frank 1974 The Sino Japanese War 1937 41 From Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor MacMillan ISBN 0 02 532200 1 Dryburgh Marjorie 2000 North China and Japanese Expansion 1933 1937 Regional Power and the National Interest RoutledgeCurzon ISBN 0 7007 1274 7 Lu David J 1961 From The Marco Polo Bridge To Pearl Harbor A Study Of Japan s Entry Into World War II Public Affairs Press ASIN B000UV6MFQ Furuya Keiji 1981 The riddle of the Marco Polo bridge To verify the first shot Symposium on the History of the Republic of China ASIN B0007BJI7I External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Beiping Tianjin Discussion and Map of Peiking Tientsin Operation International Military Tribunal Proceedings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Beiping Tianjin amp oldid 1218779368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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