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Unequal treaty

Unequal treaties refer to a series of treaties signed during the 19th and early 20th centuries, between China (mostly the Qing dynasty) and various foreign powers (specifically the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the United States, Russia, and Japan).[1] The agreements, often reached after a military defeat or a threat of military invasion, contained one-sided terms, requiring China to cede land, pay reparations, open treaty ports, give up tariff autonomy, legalise opium import, and grant extraterritorial privileges to foreign citizens.[2]

Unequal treaty
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese不平等條約
Simplified Chinese不平等条约
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinbù-píngděng tiáoyuē
Wade–Gilespu1 p'ing2 teng3 t'iao2 yüeh1
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingbat1 ping4 dang2 tiu4 joek3
Korean name
Hangul불평등 조약
Hanja不平等條約
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationbulpyeongdeung joyak
McCune–Reischauerpulp'yŏngdŭng choyak
Japanese name
Kanji不平等条約
Kanaふびょうどうじょうやく
Transcriptions
Romanizationfu byōdō jōyaku

With the rise of Chinese nationalism and anti-imperialism in the 1920s, both the Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party used the concept to characterize the Chinese experience of losing sovereignty between roughly 1840 to 1950. The term "unequal treaty" became associated with the concept of China's "century of humiliation", especially the concessions to foreign powers and the loss of tariff autonomy through treaty ports.

Japanese and Koreans also use the term to refer to several treaties that resulted in the loss of their sovereignty, to varying degrees. Japan and Qing China also signed treaties with Korea like the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1876 and China–Korea Treaty of 1882, which granted some extent of privileges to Japan and China, respectively.

China edit

 
A French political cartoon in 1898, China – the cake of Kings and Emperors, showing Queen Victoria of Britain, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, Marianne of France and Japanese Emperor Meiji dividing China ruled by Emperor Guangxu. "Kiao-Tchéou" and "Port-Arthur," written on slices of the cake, represent those locations in China; a stereotyped mandarin reacts with horror in the background.
 
The Eight-Nation Alliance inside the Chinese imperial palace, the Forbidden City, during a celebration ceremony after the signing of the Boxer Protocol, 1901.

In China, the term "unequal treaty" first came into use in the early 1920s to describe the historical treaties, still imposed on the then-Republic of China, that were signed through the period of time which the American sinologist John K. Fairbank characterized as the "treaty century" which began in the 1840s.[3] The term was popularized by Sun Yat-sen.[4]: 53 

In assessing the term's usage in rhetorical discourse since the early 20th century, American historian Dong Wang notes that "while the phrase has long been widely used, it nevertheless lacks a clear and unambiguous meaning" and that there is "no agreement about the actual number of treaties signed between China and foreign countries that should be counted as unequal."[3] However, within the scope of Chinese historiographical scholarship, the phrase has typically been defined to refer to the many cases in which China was effectively forced to pay large amounts of financial reparations, open up ports for trade, cede or lease territories (such as Outer Manchuria and Outer Northwest China (including Zhetysu) to the Russian Empire, Hong Kong and Weihaiwei to the United Kingdom, Guangzhouwan to France, Kwantung Leased Territory and Taiwan to the Empire of Japan, the Jiaozhou Bay concession to the German Empire and concession territory in Tientsin, Shamian, Hankou, Shanghai etc.), and make various other concessions of sovereignty to foreign spheres of influence, following military threats.[5]

The Chinese-American sinologist Immanuel Hsu states that the Chinese viewed the treaties they signed with Western powers and Russia as unequal "because they were not negotiated by nations treating each other as equals but were imposed on China after a war, and because they encroached upon China's sovereign rights ... which reduced her to semicolonial status".[6]

The earliest treaty later referred to as "unequal" was the 1841 Convention of Chuenpi negotiations during the First Opium War. The first treaty between China and the United Kingdom termed "unequal" was the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842.[5]

Following Qing China's defeat, treaties with Britain opened up five ports to foreign trade, while also allowing foreign missionaries, at least in theory, to reside within China. Foreign residents in the port cities were afforded trials by their own consular authorities rather than the Chinese legal system, a concept termed extraterritoriality.[5] Under the treaties, the UK and the US established the British Supreme Court for China and Japan and United States Court for China in Shanghai.

Chinese post-World War I resentment edit

After World War I, patriotic consciousness in China focused on the treaties, which now became widely known as "unequal treaties." The Nationalist Party and the Communist Party competed to convince the public that their approach would be more effective.[5] Germany was forced to terminate its rights, the Soviet Union surrendered them, and the United States organized the Washington Conference to negotiate them.[7]

After Chiang Kai-shek declared a new national government in 1927, the Western powers quickly offered diplomatic recognition, arousing anxiety in Japan.[7] The new government declared to the Great Powers that China had been exploited for decades under unequal treaties, and that the time for such treaties was over, demanding they renegotiate all of them on equal terms.[8]

Towards the end of the unequal treaties edit

After the Boxer Rebellion and the signing of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902, Germany began to reassess its policy approach towards China. In 1907 Germany suggested a trilateral German-Chinese-American agreement that never materialised. Thus China entered the new era of ending unequal treaties on March 14, 1917, when it broke off diplomatic relations with Germany, thereby terminating the concessions it had given that country, with China declaring war on Germany on August 17, 1917.[9]

As World War I commenced, these acts voided the unequal treaty of 1861, resulting in the reinstatement of Chinese control on the concessions of Tianjin and Hankou to China. In 1919, the post-war peace negotiations failed to return the territories in Shandong, previously under German colonial control, back to the Republic of China. After it was determined that the Japanese forces occupying those territories since 1914 would be allowed to retain them under the Treaty of Versailles, the Chinese delegate Wellington Koo refused to sign the peace agreement, with China being the only conference member to boycott the signing ceremony. Widely perceived in China as a betrayal of the country's wartime contributions by the other conference members, the domestic backlash following the failure to restore Shandong would cause the collapse of the cabinet of the Duan Qirui government and lead to the May 4th movement.[10][11]

On May 20, 1921, China secured with the German-Chinese peace treaty (Deutsch-chinesischer Vertrag zur Wiederherstellung des Friedenszustandes) a diplomatic accord which was considered the first equal treaty between China and a European nation.[9]

Many of the other treaties China considers unequal were repealed during the Second Sino-Japanese War, which started in 1937 and merged into the larger context of World War II. Entering the war with the Attack on Pearl Harbor, China became a major ally in the war effort and the United States Congress was pressed to end American extraterritoriality in December 1943. Significant examples outlasted World War II: treaties regarding Hong Kong remained in place until Hong Kong's 1997 handover, though in 1969, to improve Sino-Soviet relations in the wake of military skirmishes along their border, the People's Republic of China was forced to reconfirm the 1858 Treaty of Aigun and 1860 Treaty of Peking.[citation needed]

Japan edit

When the US expeditionary fleet led by Matthew Perry reached Japan in 1854 to force open the island nation for American trade, the country was compelled to sign the Convention of Kanagawa under the threat of violence by the American warships.[12] This event abruptly terminated Japan's 220 years of seclusion under the Sakoku policy of 1633 under unilateral foreign pressure and consequentially, the convention has been seen in a similar light as an unequal treaty.[13]

Another significant incident was the Tokugawa Shogunate's capitulation to the Harris Treaty of 1858, negotiated by the eponymous U.S. envoy Townsend Harris, which, among other concessions, established a system of extraterritoriality for foreign residents. This agreement would then serve as a model for similar treaties to be further signed by Japan with other foreign Western powers in the weeks to follow.[14]

The enforcement of these unequal treaties were a tremendous national shock for Japan's leadership as they both curtailed Japanese sovereignty for the first time in its history and also revealed the nation's growing weakness relative to the West through the latter's successful imposition of such agreements upon the island nation. An objective towards the recovery of national status and strength would become an overarching priority for Japan, with the treaty's domestic consequences being the end of the Bakufu, the 700 years of shogunate rule over Japan, and the establishment of a new imperial government.[15]

The unequal treaties ended at various times for the countries involved and Japan's victories in the 1894–95 First Sino-Japanese War convinced many in the West that unequal treaties could no longer be enforced on Japan.

Korea edit

Korea's first unequal treaty was not with the West, but instead with Japan. The Ganghwa Island incident in 1875 saw Japan send the warship Un'yō led by Captain Inoue Yoshika with the implied threat of military action to coerce the Korean kingdom of Joseon through the show of force. After an armed clash ensued around Ganghwa Island where the Japanese force was sent, which resulted in its victory, the incident subsequently forced Korea to open its doors to Japan by signing the Treaty of Ganghwa Island, also known as the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1876.[16]

During this period Korea also signed treaties with Qing China and the West powers (such as the United Kingdom and the United States). In the case of Qing China, it signed the China–Korea Treaty of 1882 with Korea stipulating that Korea was a dependency of China and granted the Chinese extraterritoriality and other privileges,[17] and in subsequent treaties China also obtained concessions in Korea, notably the Chinese concession of Incheon.[18][19] However, Qing China lost its influence over Korea following the First Sino-Japanese War in 1895.

As Japanese dominance over the Korean peninsula grew in the following decades, with respect to the unequal treaties imposed upon the kingdom by the West powers, Korea's diplomatic concessions with those states became largely null and void in 1910, when it was annexed by Japan.[20]

Selected list of unequal treaties edit

Imposed on China edit

Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on
  English name    Chinese name 
Treaty of Nanking 南京條約 1842   United Kingdom   Qing dynasty
Treaty of the Bogue 虎門條約 1843   United Kingdom
Treaty of Wanghia 中美望廈條約 1844   United States
Treaty of Whampoa 黃埔條約 1844   France
Treaty of Canton 中瑞廣州條約 1847   Sweden-Norway
Treaty of Kulja 中俄伊犁塔爾巴哈臺通商章程 1851   Russia
Treaty of Aigun 璦琿條約 1858   Russia
Treaty of Tientsin (1858) 天津條約 1858   France
  United Kingdom
  Russia
  United States
Convention of Peking 北京條約 1860   United Kingdom
  France
  Russia
Treaty of Tientsin (1861) 中德通商条约 1861   Prussia, also for Deutscher Zollverein
Chefoo Convention 煙臺條約 1876   United Kingdom
Treaty of Livadia 里瓦幾亞條約 1879   Russia
Treaty of Saint Petersburg 伊犁條約 1881   Russia
Treaty of Tientsin (1885) 中法新約 1885   France
Sino-Portuguese Treaty of Peking 中葡北京條約 1887   Portugal
Treaty of Shimonoseki (Treaty of Maguan) 馬關條約 1895   Japan
Li–Lobanov Treaty 中俄密約 1896   Russia
Convention for the Lease of the Liaotung Peninsula 旅大租地条约 1898   Russia
Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory 展拓香港界址專條 1898   United Kingdom
Treaty of Kwangchow Wan [fr] 廣州灣租界條約 1899   France
Boxer Protocol 辛丑條約 1901   United Kingdom
  United States
  Japan
  Russia
  France
  Germany
  Italy
  Austria-Hungary
  Belgium
  Spain
  Netherlands
Simla Convention 西姆拉條約 1914   United Kingdom   Republic of China
Twenty-One Demands 二十一條 1915   Japan
Sino-Japanese Joint Defence Agreement 中日共同防敵軍事協定 1918   Japan
Tanggu Truce 塘沽協定 1933   Japan

Imposed on Japan edit

Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on
English name Japanese name
Convention of Kanagawa 日米和親条約 1854[21]   United States   Tokugawa shogunate
Anglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty 日英和親条約 1854[22]   United Kingdom
Treaty of Shimoda 下田条約 1855   Russia
Ansei Treaties
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the United States and Japan (Harris Treaty) 安政条約 1858[23]   United States
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Japan   Netherlands
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the Russian Empire and Japan   Russia
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between British Empire and Japan   United Kingdom
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between France and Japan   France
Prussian-Japanese Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation 日普修好通商条約 1861[24]   Prussia
Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation between Austria and Japan 日墺修好通商航海条約 1868[25]   Austria-Hungary   Japan
Spanish-Japanese Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation 日西修好通商航海条約 1868[26]   Spain
Retrocession following the Triple Intervention
Convention of retrocession of the Liaodong Peninsula [ja]
遼東還付条約 1895[27]   France
  Russia
  Germany

Imposed on Korea edit

Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on
English name Korean name
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1876
(Treaty of Ganghwa)
강화도 조약 (江華島條約) 1876[28]   Japan   Joseon dynasty
United States–Korea Treaty of 1882 조미수호통상조약 (朝美修好通商條約) 1882[29]   United States
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1882
(Treaty of Chemulpo)
제물포 조약 (濟物浦條約) 1882   Japan
China–Korea Treaty of 1882
(Joseon-Qing Communication and Commerce Rules)
조청상민수륙무역장정 (朝淸商民水陸貿易章程) 1882[30]   Qing dynasty
Germany–Korea Treaty of 1883 조독수호통상조약 (朝獨修好通商條約) 1883[31]   Germany
United Kingdom–Korea Treaty of 1883     조영수호통상조약 (朝英修好通商條約) 1883[32]   United Kingdom
Russia–Korea Treaty of 1884 조로수호통상조약 (朝露修好通商條約) 1884[33]   Russia
Italy–Korea Treaty of 1884 조이수호통상조약 (朝伊修好通商條約) 1884[34]   Italy
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1885
(Treaty of Hanseong)
한성조약 (漢城條約) 1885[35]   Japan
France–Korea Treaty of 1886 조불수호통상조약 (朝佛修好通商條約) 1886[36]   France
Austria–Korea Treaty of 1892 조오수호통상조약 (朝奧修好通商條約) 1892[37]   Austria-Hungary
Belgium–Korea Treaty of 1901 조벨수호통상조약 (朝白修好通商條約) 1901[38]   Belgium   Korean Empire
Denmark–Korea Treaty of 1902 조덴수호통상조약 (朝丁修好通商條約) 1902[39]   Denmark
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1904 한일의정서 (韓日議定書) 1904[40]   Japan[41]
Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904 제1차 한일협약 (第一次韓日協約) 1904[42]   Japan[43]
Japan–Korea Agreement of April 1905 1905[44]   Japan[45]
Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1905 1905[46]   Japan[47]
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1905
제2차 한일협약 (第二次韓日協約)
(을사조약 (乙巳條約))
1905[48]   Japan[49]
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1907 제3차 한일협약 (第三次韓日協約)
(정미조약 (丁未條約))
1907[50]   Japan
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1910 한일병합조약 (韓日倂合條約) 1910[51]   Japan

Modern rhetorical usage edit

In 2018, Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad criticized the terms of the bilateral infrastructure projects under the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative in Malaysia and urged the Chinese negotiators to reassess them through invoking the historical memory of China's unequal treaties.[52][53] Stating that "they know that when they lend big sums of money to a poor country, in the end they may have to take the project for themselves". He appealed by stating that "China knows very well that it had to deal with unequal treaties in the past imposed upon China by Western powers. So China should be sympathetic toward us. They know we cannot afford this."[54]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Unequal Treaties with China". Encyclopédie d’histoire numérique de l’Europe. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  2. ^ Fravel, M. Taylor (October 1, 2005). "Regime Insecurity and International Cooperation: Explaining China's Compromises in Territorial Disputes". International Security. 30 (2): 46–83. doi:10.1162/016228805775124534. ISSN 0162-2889. S2CID 56347789.
  3. ^ a b Wang, Dong. (2005). China's Unequal Treaties: Narrating National History. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780739112083.
  4. ^ Crean, Jeffrey (2024). The Fear of Chinese Power: an International History. New Approaches to International History series. London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-350-23394-2.
  5. ^ a b c d Dong Wang, China's Unequal Treaties: Narrating National History (Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books, 2005).
  6. ^ Hsu, Immanuel C. Y. (1970). The Rise of Modern China. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 239. ISBN 0195012402.
  7. ^ a b Akira Iriye, After Imperialism: The Search for a New Order in the Far East, 1921–1931 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1965; Reprinted: Chicago: Imprint Publications, 1990), passim.
  8. ^ . TIME. June 25, 1928. Archived from the original on November 21, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Andreas Steen: Deutsch-chinesische Beziehungen 1911-1927: Vom Kolonialismus zur „Gleichberechtigung“. Eine Quellensammlung. Berlin, Akademie-Verlag 2006, S. 221.
  10. ^ Dreyer, June Teufel (2015). China's Political System. Routledge. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-317-34964-8
  11. ^ "May Fourth Movement". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  12. ^ Hall, John Whitney; Hall, John Whitney (1991). Japan: from prehistory to modern times. Michigan classics in Japanese studies. Ann Arbor, Mich: Center for Japanese Studies, the Univ. of Michigan. ISBN 978-0-939512-54-6.
  13. ^ Miyauchi, D. Y. (May 1970). "Yokoi Shōnan's Response to the Foreign Intervention in Late Tokugawa Japan, 1853–1862". Modern Asian Studies. 4 (3): 269–290. doi:10.1017/s0026749x00011938. ISSN 0026-749X. S2CID 145055046.
  14. ^ Michael R. Auslin (2006). Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy. Harvard University Press. pp. 17, 44. ISBN 9780674020313.
  15. ^ Totman, Conrad (1966). "Political Succession in The Tokugawa Bakufu: Abe Masahiro's Rise to Power, 1843–1845". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 26: 102–124. doi:10.2307/2718461. JSTOR 2718461.
  16. ^ Preston, Peter Wallace. [1998] (1998). Blackwell Publishing. Pacific Asia in the Global System: An Introduction. ISBN 0-631-20238-2
  17. ^ Duus, Peter (1998). The Abacus and the Sword: The Japanese Penetration of Korea. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 54. ISBN 0-52092-090-2.
  18. ^ "Guide to Incheon's Chinatown". March 3, 2022. Retrieved September 30, 2023.
  19. ^ Fuchs, Eckhardt (2017). A New Modern History of East Asia. V&R unipress GmbH. p. 97. ISBN 978-3-7370-0708-5.
  20. ^ I. H. Nish, "Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties: The Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894," Journal of Oriental Studies (1975) 13#2 pp 137-146.
  21. ^ Auslin, Michael R. (2004) Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy, p. 17., p. 17, at Google Books
  22. ^ Auslin, p. 30., p. 30, at Google Books
  23. ^ Auslin, pp. 1, 7., p. 1, at Google Books
  24. ^ Auslin, p. 71., p. 71, at Google Books
  25. ^ Auslin, Michael R. (2004) Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy, p. 154., p. 154, at Google Books
  26. ^ Howland, Douglas (2016). International Law and Japanese Sovereignty: The Emerging Global Order in the 19th Century. Springer. ISBN 9781137567772.
  27. ^ Dreyer, June Teufel (2016). Middle Kingdom and Empire of the Rising Sun: Sino-Japanese Relations, Past and Present. Oxford University Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-19-537566-4.
  28. ^ Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament, Washington, D.C., 1921–1922. (1922). Korea's Appeal to the Conference on Limitation of Armament, p. 33., p. 33, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty Between Japan and Korea, dated February 26, 1876."
  29. ^ Korean Mission, p. 29., p. 29, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between the United States and Korea. Treaty of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation dated May 22, 1882."
  30. ^ Moon, Myungki. "Korea-China Treaty System in the 1880s and the Opening of Seoul: Review of the Joseon-Qing Communication and Commerce Rules," October 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Journal of Northeast Asian History, Vol. 5, No. 2 (Dec 2008), pp. 85–120.
  31. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Germany and Korea. Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated November 23, 1883."
  32. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Great Britain and Korea ... dated November 26, 1883."
  33. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Russia. Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated June 25, 1884."
  34. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Italy. Treaty of Friendship and Commerce dated June 26, 1884."
  35. ^ Yi, Kwang-gyu and Joseph P. Linskey. (2003). Korean Traditional Culture, p. 63., p. 63, at Google Books; excerpt, "The so-called Hanseong Treaty was concluded between Korea and Japan. Korea paid compensation for Japanese losses. Japan and China worked out the Tien-Tsin Treaty, which ensured that both Japanese and Chinese troops withdraw from Korea."
  36. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and France. Treaty of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation dated June 4, 1886."
  37. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Austria. Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated July 23, 1892."
  38. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Belgium. Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated March 23, 1901."
  39. ^ Korean Mission, p. 32., p. 32, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Denmark. Treaty of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation dated July 15, 1902."
  40. ^ Korean Mission, p. 34., p. 34, at Google Books; excerpt, "Treaty of Alliance Between Japan and Korea, dated February 23, 1904."
  41. ^ Note that the Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament in Washington, D.C., 1921–1922 identified this as "Treaty of Alliance Between Japan and Korea, dated February 23, 1904"
  42. ^ Korean Mission, p. 35., p. 35, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated August 22, 1904."
  43. ^ Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921–1922 identified this as "Alleged Treaty, dated August 22, 1904"
  44. ^ Korean Mission, p. 35., p. 35, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated April 1, 1905."
  45. ^ Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921–1922 identified this as "Alleged Treaty, dated April 1, 1905"
  46. ^ Korean Mission, p. 35., p. 35, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated August 13, 1905."
  47. ^ Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921–1922 identified this as "Alleged Treaty, dated August 13, 1905"
  48. ^ Korean Mission, p. 35., p. 35, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated November 17, 1905."
  49. ^ Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921–1922 identified this as "Alleged Treaty, dated November 17, 1905"
  50. ^ Korean Mission, p. 35., p. 35, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated July 24, 1907."
  51. ^ Korean Mission, p. 36., p. 36, at Google Books; excerpt, "Alleged Treaty, dated August 20, 1910."
  52. ^ Bland, Ben (June 24, 2018). "Malaysian backlash tests China's Belt and Road ambitions". Financial Times. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  53. ^ "Analysis | New Malaysian government steps back from spending, Chinese projects". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  54. ^ Beech, Hannah (August 20, 2018). "'We Cannot Afford This': Malaysia Pushes Back Against China's Vision". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 22, 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Auslin, Michael R. (2004). Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01521-0; OCLC 56493769
  • Hsü, Immanuel Chung-yueh (1970). The Rise of Modern China. New York: Oxford University Press. OCLC 300287988
  • Nish, I. H (1975). "Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties: The Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894". Journal of Oriental Studies. 13 (2): 137–146.
  • Perez, Louis G (1999). Japan Comes of Age: Mutsu Munemitsu & the Revision of the Unequal Treaties. p. 244.
  • Ringmar, Erik (2013). Liberal Barbarism: The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wang, Dong (2003). "The Discourse of Unequal Treaties in Modern China". Pacific Affairs. 76 (3): 399–425.
  • Wang, Dong. (2005). China's Unequal Treaties: Narrating National History. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. ISBN 9780739112083.
  • Fravel, M. Taylor (2008). Strong Borders, Secure Nation: Cooperation and Conflict in China's Territorial Disputes. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-2887-6
  • Halleck, Henry Wager. (1861). International law: or, Rules regulating the intercourse of states in peace and war. New York: D. Van Nostrand. OCLC 852699
  • Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament, Washington, D.C., 1921–1922. (1922). Korea's Appeal to the Conference on Limitation of Armament. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office. OCLC 12923609
  • Fravel, M. Taylor (2005). Regime Insecurity and International Cooperation: Explaining China's Compromises in Territorial Disputes. International Security. 30 (2): 46–83. doi:10.1162/016228805775124534. ISSN 0162-2889.

unequal, treaty, unequal, treaties, refer, series, treaties, signed, during, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, between, china, mostly, qing, dynasty, various, foreign, powers, specifically, united, kingdom, france, germany, united, states, russia, japan, agreement. Unequal treaties refer to a series of treaties signed during the 19th and early 20th centuries between China mostly the Qing dynasty and various foreign powers specifically the United Kingdom France Germany the United States Russia and Japan 1 The agreements often reached after a military defeat or a threat of military invasion contained one sided terms requiring China to cede land pay reparations open treaty ports give up tariff autonomy legalise opium import and grant extraterritorial privileges to foreign citizens 2 Unequal treatyChinese nameTraditional Chinese不平等條約Simplified Chinese不平等条约TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu Pinyinbu pingdeng tiaoyueWade Gilespu1 p ing2 teng3 t iao2 yueh1Yue CantoneseJyutpingbat1 ping4 dang2 tiu4 joek3Korean nameHangul불평등 조약Hanja不平等條約TranscriptionsRevised Romanizationbulpyeongdeung joyakMcCune Reischauerpulp yŏngdŭng choyakJapanese nameKanji不平等条約KanaふびょうどうじょうやくTranscriptionsRomanizationfu byōdō jōyaku With the rise of Chinese nationalism and anti imperialism in the 1920s both the Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party used the concept to characterize the Chinese experience of losing sovereignty between roughly 1840 to 1950 The term unequal treaty became associated with the concept of China s century of humiliation especially the concessions to foreign powers and the loss of tariff autonomy through treaty ports Japanese and Koreans also use the term to refer to several treaties that resulted in the loss of their sovereignty to varying degrees Japan and Qing China also signed treaties with Korea like the Japan Korea Treaty of 1876 and China Korea Treaty of 1882 which granted some extent of privileges to Japan and China respectively Contents 1 China 1 1 Chinese post World War I resentment 1 2 Towards the end of the unequal treaties 2 Japan 3 Korea 4 Selected list of unequal treaties 4 1 Imposed on China 4 2 Imposed on Japan 4 3 Imposed on Korea 5 Modern rhetorical usage 6 See also 7 References 8 BibliographyChina edit nbsp A French political cartoon in 1898 China the cake of Kings and Emperors showing Queen Victoria of Britain Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany Tsar Nicholas II of Russia Marianne of France and Japanese Emperor Meiji dividing China ruled by Emperor Guangxu Kiao Tcheou and Port Arthur written on slices of the cake represent those locations in China a stereotyped mandarin reacts with horror in the background nbsp The Eight Nation Alliance inside the Chinese imperial palace the Forbidden City during a celebration ceremony after the signing of the Boxer Protocol 1901 In China the term unequal treaty first came into use in the early 1920s to describe the historical treaties still imposed on the then Republic of China that were signed through the period of time which the American sinologist John K Fairbank characterized as the treaty century which began in the 1840s 3 The term was popularized by Sun Yat sen 4 53 In assessing the term s usage in rhetorical discourse since the early 20th century American historian Dong Wang notes that while the phrase has long been widely used it nevertheless lacks a clear and unambiguous meaning and that there is no agreement about the actual number of treaties signed between China and foreign countries that should be counted as unequal 3 However within the scope of Chinese historiographical scholarship the phrase has typically been defined to refer to the many cases in which China was effectively forced to pay large amounts of financial reparations open up ports for trade cede or lease territories such as Outer Manchuria and Outer Northwest China including Zhetysu to the Russian Empire Hong Kong and Weihaiwei to the United Kingdom Guangzhouwan to France Kwantung Leased Territory and Taiwan to the Empire of Japan the Jiaozhou Bay concession to the German Empire and concession territory in Tientsin Shamian Hankou Shanghai etc and make various other concessions of sovereignty to foreign spheres of influence following military threats 5 The Chinese American sinologist Immanuel Hsu states that the Chinese viewed the treaties they signed with Western powers and Russia as unequal because they were not negotiated by nations treating each other as equals but were imposed on China after a war and because they encroached upon China s sovereign rights which reduced her to semicolonial status 6 The earliest treaty later referred to as unequal was the 1841 Convention of Chuenpi negotiations during the First Opium War The first treaty between China and the United Kingdom termed unequal was the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 5 Following Qing China s defeat treaties with Britain opened up five ports to foreign trade while also allowing foreign missionaries at least in theory to reside within China Foreign residents in the port cities were afforded trials by their own consular authorities rather than the Chinese legal system a concept termed extraterritoriality 5 Under the treaties the UK and the US established the British Supreme Court for China and Japan and United States Court for China in Shanghai Chinese post World War I resentment edit After World War I patriotic consciousness in China focused on the treaties which now became widely known as unequal treaties The Nationalist Party and the Communist Party competed to convince the public that their approach would be more effective 5 Germany was forced to terminate its rights the Soviet Union surrendered them and the United States organized the Washington Conference to negotiate them 7 After Chiang Kai shek declared a new national government in 1927 the Western powers quickly offered diplomatic recognition arousing anxiety in Japan 7 The new government declared to the Great Powers that China had been exploited for decades under unequal treaties and that the time for such treaties was over demanding they renegotiate all of them on equal terms 8 Towards the end of the unequal treaties edit After the Boxer Rebellion and the signing of the Anglo Japanese Alliance of 1902 Germany began to reassess its policy approach towards China In 1907 Germany suggested a trilateral German Chinese American agreement that never materialised Thus China entered the new era of ending unequal treaties on March 14 1917 when it broke off diplomatic relations with Germany thereby terminating the concessions it had given that country with China declaring war on Germany on August 17 1917 9 As World War I commenced these acts voided the unequal treaty of 1861 resulting in the reinstatement of Chinese control on the concessions of Tianjin and Hankou to China In 1919 the post war peace negotiations failed to return the territories in Shandong previously under German colonial control back to the Republic of China After it was determined that the Japanese forces occupying those territories since 1914 would be allowed to retain them under the Treaty of Versailles the Chinese delegate Wellington Koo refused to sign the peace agreement with China being the only conference member to boycott the signing ceremony Widely perceived in China as a betrayal of the country s wartime contributions by the other conference members the domestic backlash following the failure to restore Shandong would cause the collapse of the cabinet of the Duan Qirui government and lead to the May 4th movement 10 11 On May 20 1921 China secured with the German Chinese peace treaty Deutsch chinesischer Vertrag zur Wiederherstellung des Friedenszustandes a diplomatic accord which was considered the first equal treaty between China and a European nation 9 Many of the other treaties China considers unequal were repealed during the Second Sino Japanese War which started in 1937 and merged into the larger context of World War II Entering the war with the Attack on Pearl Harbor China became a major ally in the war effort and the United States Congress was pressed to end American extraterritoriality in December 1943 Significant examples outlasted World War II treaties regarding Hong Kong remained in place until Hong Kong s 1997 handover though in 1969 to improve Sino Soviet relations in the wake of military skirmishes along their border the People s Republic of China was forced to reconfirm the 1858 Treaty of Aigun and 1860 Treaty of Peking citation needed Japan editWhen the US expeditionary fleet led by Matthew Perry reached Japan in 1854 to force open the island nation for American trade the country was compelled to sign the Convention of Kanagawa under the threat of violence by the American warships 12 This event abruptly terminated Japan s 220 years of seclusion under the Sakoku policy of 1633 under unilateral foreign pressure and consequentially the convention has been seen in a similar light as an unequal treaty 13 Another significant incident was the Tokugawa Shogunate s capitulation to the Harris Treaty of 1858 negotiated by the eponymous U S envoy Townsend Harris which among other concessions established a system of extraterritoriality for foreign residents This agreement would then serve as a model for similar treaties to be further signed by Japan with other foreign Western powers in the weeks to follow 14 The enforcement of these unequal treaties were a tremendous national shock for Japan s leadership as they both curtailed Japanese sovereignty for the first time in its history and also revealed the nation s growing weakness relative to the West through the latter s successful imposition of such agreements upon the island nation An objective towards the recovery of national status and strength would become an overarching priority for Japan with the treaty s domestic consequences being the end of the Bakufu the 700 years of shogunate rule over Japan and the establishment of a new imperial government 15 The unequal treaties ended at various times for the countries involved and Japan s victories in the 1894 95 First Sino Japanese War convinced many in the West that unequal treaties could no longer be enforced on Japan Korea editKorea s first unequal treaty was not with the West but instead with Japan The Ganghwa Island incident in 1875 saw Japan send the warship Un yō led by Captain Inoue Yoshika with the implied threat of military action to coerce the Korean kingdom of Joseon through the show of force After an armed clash ensued around Ganghwa Island where the Japanese force was sent which resulted in its victory the incident subsequently forced Korea to open its doors to Japan by signing the Treaty of Ganghwa Island also known as the Japan Korea Treaty of 1876 16 During this period Korea also signed treaties with Qing China and the West powers such as the United Kingdom and the United States In the case of Qing China it signed the China Korea Treaty of 1882 with Korea stipulating that Korea was a dependency of China and granted the Chinese extraterritoriality and other privileges 17 and in subsequent treaties China also obtained concessions in Korea notably the Chinese concession of Incheon 18 19 However Qing China lost its influence over Korea following the First Sino Japanese War in 1895 As Japanese dominance over the Korean peninsula grew in the following decades with respect to the unequal treaties imposed upon the kingdom by the West powers Korea s diplomatic concessions with those states became largely null and void in 1910 when it was annexed by Japan 20 Selected list of unequal treaties editImposed on China edit Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on English name Chinese name Treaty of Nanking 南京條約 1842 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Qing dynasty Treaty of the Bogue 虎門條約 1843 nbsp United Kingdom Treaty of Wanghia 中美望廈條約 1844 nbsp United States Treaty of Whampoa 黃埔條約 1844 nbsp France Treaty of Canton 中瑞廣州條約 1847 nbsp Sweden Norway Treaty of Kulja 中俄伊犁塔爾巴哈臺通商章程 1851 nbsp Russia Treaty of Aigun 璦琿條約 1858 nbsp Russia Treaty of Tientsin 1858 天津條約 1858 nbsp France nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Russia nbsp United States Convention of Peking 北京條約 1860 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp France nbsp Russia Treaty of Tientsin 1861 中德通商条约 1861 nbsp Prussia also for Deutscher Zollverein Chefoo Convention 煙臺條約 1876 nbsp United Kingdom Treaty of Livadia 里瓦幾亞條約 1879 nbsp Russia Treaty of Saint Petersburg 伊犁條約 1881 nbsp Russia Treaty of Tientsin 1885 中法新約 1885 nbsp France Sino Portuguese Treaty of Peking 中葡北京條約 1887 nbsp Portugal Treaty of Shimonoseki Treaty of Maguan 馬關條約 1895 nbsp Japan Li Lobanov Treaty 中俄密約 1896 nbsp Russia Convention for the Lease of the Liaotung Peninsula 旅大租地条约 1898 nbsp Russia Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory 展拓香港界址專條 1898 nbsp United Kingdom Treaty of Kwangchow Wan fr 廣州灣租界條約 1899 nbsp France Boxer Protocol 辛丑條約 1901 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp United States nbsp Japan nbsp Russia nbsp France nbsp Germany nbsp Italy nbsp Austria Hungary nbsp Belgium nbsp Spain nbsp Netherlands Simla Convention 西姆拉條約 1914 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Republic of China Twenty One Demands 二十一條 1915 nbsp Japan Sino Japanese Joint Defence Agreement 中日共同防敵軍事協定 1918 nbsp Japan Tanggu Truce 塘沽協定 1933 nbsp Japan Imposed on Japan edit Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on English name Japanese name Convention of Kanagawa 日米和親条約 1854 21 nbsp United States nbsp Tokugawa shogunate Anglo Japanese Friendship Treaty 日英和親条約 1854 22 nbsp United Kingdom Treaty of Shimoda 下田条約 1855 nbsp Russia Ansei Treaties Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the United States and Japan Harris Treaty 安政条約 1858 23 nbsp United States Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Japan nbsp Netherlands Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the Russian Empire and Japan nbsp Russia Treaty of Amity and Commerce between British Empire and Japan nbsp United Kingdom Treaty of Amity and Commerce between France and Japan nbsp France Prussian Japanese Treaty of Amity Commerce and Navigation 日普修好通商条約 1861 24 nbsp Prussia Treaty of Amity Commerce and Navigation between Austria and Japan 日墺修好通商航海条約 1868 25 nbsp Austria Hungary nbsp Japan Spanish Japanese Treaty of Amity Commerce and Navigation 日西修好通商航海条約 1868 26 nbsp Spain Retrocession following the Triple InterventionConvention of retrocession of the Liaodong Peninsula ja 遼東還付条約 1895 27 nbsp France nbsp Russia nbsp Germany Imposed on Korea edit Treaty Year Imposer Imposed on English name Korean name Japan Korea Treaty of 1876 Treaty of Ganghwa 강화도 조약 江華島條約 1876 28 nbsp Japan nbsp Joseon dynasty United States Korea Treaty of 1882 조미수호통상조약 朝美修好通商條約 1882 29 nbsp United States Japan Korea Treaty of 1882 Treaty of Chemulpo 제물포 조약 濟物浦條約 1882 nbsp Japan China Korea Treaty of 1882 Joseon Qing Communication and Commerce Rules 조청상민수륙무역장정 朝淸商民水陸貿易章程 1882 30 nbsp Qing dynasty Germany Korea Treaty of 1883 조독수호통상조약 朝獨修好通商條約 1883 31 nbsp Germany United Kingdom Korea Treaty of 1883 조영수호통상조약 朝英修好通商條約 1883 32 nbsp United Kingdom Russia Korea Treaty of 1884 조로수호통상조약 朝露修好通商條約 1884 33 nbsp Russia Italy Korea Treaty of 1884 조이수호통상조약 朝伊修好通商條約 1884 34 nbsp Italy Japan Korea Treaty of 1885 Treaty of Hanseong 한성조약 漢城條約 1885 35 nbsp Japan France Korea Treaty of 1886 조불수호통상조약 朝佛修好通商條約 1886 36 nbsp France Austria Korea Treaty of 1892 조오수호통상조약 朝奧修好通商條約 1892 37 nbsp Austria Hungary Belgium Korea Treaty of 1901 조벨수호통상조약 朝白修好通商條約 1901 38 nbsp Belgium nbsp Korean Empire Denmark Korea Treaty of 1902 조덴수호통상조약 朝丁修好通商條約 1902 39 nbsp Denmark Japan Korea Treaty of 1904 한일의정서 韓日議定書 1904 40 nbsp Japan 41 Japan Korea Agreement of August 1904 제1차 한일협약 第一次韓日協約 1904 42 nbsp Japan 43 Japan Korea Agreement of April 1905 1905 44 nbsp Japan 45 Japan Korea Agreement of August 1905 1905 46 nbsp Japan 47 Japan Korea Treaty of 1905 제2차 한일협약 第二次韓日協約 을사조약 乙巳條約 1905 48 nbsp Japan 49 Japan Korea Treaty of 1907 제3차 한일협약 第三次韓日協約 정미조약 丁未條約 1907 50 nbsp Japan Japan Korea Treaty of 1910 한일병합조약 韓日倂合條約 1910 51 nbsp JapanModern rhetorical usage editIn 2018 Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad criticized the terms of the bilateral infrastructure projects under the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative in Malaysia and urged the Chinese negotiators to reassess them through invoking the historical memory of China s unequal treaties 52 53 Stating that they know that when they lend big sums of money to a poor country in the end they may have to take the project for themselves He appealed by stating that China knows very well that it had to deal with unequal treaties in the past imposed upon China by Western powers So China should be sympathetic toward us They know we cannot afford this 54 See also editCentury of humiliation China Centenary Missionary Conference Client state Foreign concessions in China List of Chinese treaty ports Most favoured nation Normanton incident Puppet state Sick man of Asia Western imperialism in AsiaReferences edit Unequal Treaties with China Encyclopedie d histoire numerique de l Europe Retrieved May 22 2022 Fravel M Taylor October 1 2005 Regime Insecurity and International Cooperation Explaining China s Compromises in Territorial Disputes International Security 30 2 46 83 doi 10 1162 016228805775124534 ISSN 0162 2889 S2CID 56347789 a b Wang Dong 2005 China s Unequal Treaties Narrating National History Lanham Maryland Lexington Books pp 1 2 ISBN 9780739112083 Crean Jeffrey 2024 The Fear of Chinese Power an International History New Approaches to International History series London UK Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 350 23394 2 a b c d Dong Wang China s Unequal Treaties Narrating National History Lanham Md Lexington Books 2005 Hsu Immanuel C Y 1970 The Rise of Modern China New York Oxford University Press p 239 ISBN 0195012402 a b Akira Iriye After Imperialism The Search for a New Order in the Far East 1921 1931 Cambridge Harvard University Press 1965 Reprinted Chicago Imprint Publications 1990 passim CHINA Nationalist Notes TIME June 25 1928 Archived from the original on November 21 2010 Retrieved April 11 2011 a b Andreas Steen Deutsch chinesische Beziehungen 1911 1927 Vom Kolonialismus zur Gleichberechtigung Eine Quellensammlung Berlin Akademie Verlag 2006 S 221 Dreyer June Teufel 2015 China s Political System Routledge p 60 ISBN 978 1 317 34964 8 May Fourth Movement Encyclopaedia Britannica Hall John Whitney Hall John Whitney 1991 Japan from prehistory to modern times Michigan classics in Japanese studies Ann Arbor Mich Center for Japanese Studies the Univ of Michigan ISBN 978 0 939512 54 6 Miyauchi D Y May 1970 Yokoi Shōnan s Response to the Foreign Intervention in Late Tokugawa Japan 1853 1862 Modern Asian Studies 4 3 269 290 doi 10 1017 s0026749x00011938 ISSN 0026 749X S2CID 145055046 Michael R Auslin 2006 Negotiating with Imperialism The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy Harvard University Press pp 17 44 ISBN 9780674020313 Totman Conrad 1966 Political Succession in The Tokugawa Bakufu Abe Masahiro s Rise to Power 1843 1845 Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 26 102 124 doi 10 2307 2718461 JSTOR 2718461 Preston Peter Wallace 1998 1998 Blackwell Publishing Pacific Asia in the Global System An Introduction ISBN 0 631 20238 2 Duus Peter 1998 The Abacus and the Sword The Japanese Penetration of Korea Berkeley University of California Press p 54 ISBN 0 52092 090 2 Guide to Incheon s Chinatown March 3 2022 Retrieved September 30 2023 Fuchs Eckhardt 2017 A New Modern History of East Asia V amp R unipress GmbH p 97 ISBN 978 3 7370 0708 5 I H Nish Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties The Anglo Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894 Journal of Oriental Studies 1975 13 2 pp 137 146 Auslin Michael R 2004 Negotiating with Imperialism The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy p 17 p 17 at Google Books Auslin p 30 p 30 at Google Books Auslin pp 1 7 p 1 at Google Books Auslin p 71 p 71 at Google Books Auslin Michael R 2004 Negotiating with Imperialism The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy p 154 p 154 at Google Books Howland Douglas 2016 International Law and Japanese Sovereignty The Emerging Global Order in the 19th Century Springer ISBN 9781137567772 Dreyer June Teufel 2016 Middle Kingdom and Empire of the Rising Sun Sino Japanese Relations Past and Present Oxford University Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 19 537566 4 Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament Washington D C 1921 1922 1922 Korea s Appeal to the Conference on Limitation of Armament p 33 p 33 at Google Books excerpt Treaty Between Japan and Korea dated February 26 1876 Korean Mission p 29 p 29 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between the United States and Korea Treaty of Friendship Commerce and Navigation dated May 22 1882 Moon Myungki Korea China Treaty System in the 1880s and the Opening of Seoul Review of the Joseon Qing Communication and Commerce Rules Archived October 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Northeast Asian History Vol 5 No 2 Dec 2008 pp 85 120 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Germany and Korea Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated November 23 1883 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Great Britain and Korea dated November 26 1883 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Russia Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated June 25 1884 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Italy Treaty of Friendship and Commerce dated June 26 1884 Yi Kwang gyu and Joseph P Linskey 2003 Korean Traditional Culture p 63 p 63 at Google Books excerpt The so calledHanseong Treatywas concluded between Korea and Japan Korea paid compensation for Japanese losses Japan and China worked out the Tien Tsin Treaty which ensured that both Japanese and Chinese troops withdraw from Korea Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and France Treaty of Friendship Commerce and Navigation dated June 4 1886 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Austria Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated July 23 1892 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Belgium Treaty of Amity and Commerce dated March 23 1901 Korean Mission p 32 p 32 at Google Books excerpt Treaty and Diplomatic Relations Between Korea and Denmark Treaty of Friendship Commerce and Navigation dated July 15 1902 Korean Mission p 34 p 34 at Google Books excerpt Treaty of Alliance Between Japan and Korea dated February 23 1904 Note that the Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament in Washington D C 1921 1922 identified this as Treaty of Alliance Between Japan and Korea dated February 23 1904 Korean Mission p 35 p 35 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated August 22 1904 Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921 1922 identified this as Alleged Treaty dated August 22 1904 Korean Mission p 35 p 35 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated April 1 1905 Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921 1922 identified this as Alleged Treaty dated April 1 1905 Korean Mission p 35 p 35 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated August 13 1905 Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921 1922 identified this as Alleged Treaty dated August 13 1905 Korean Mission p 35 p 35 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated November 17 1905 Note that the Korean diplomats in 1921 1922 identified this as Alleged Treaty dated November 17 1905 Korean Mission p 35 p 35 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated July 24 1907 Korean Mission p 36 p 36 at Google Books excerpt Alleged Treaty dated August 20 1910 Bland Ben June 24 2018 Malaysian backlash tests China s Belt and Road ambitions Financial Times Retrieved March 22 2022 Analysis New Malaysian government steps back from spending Chinese projects Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved March 22 2022 Beech Hannah August 20 2018 We Cannot Afford This Malaysia Pushes Back Against China s Vision The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 22 2022 Bibliography editAuslin Michael R 2004 Negotiating with Imperialism The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01521 0 OCLC 56493769 Hsu Immanuel Chung yueh 1970 The Rise of Modern China New York Oxford University Press OCLC 300287988 Nish I H 1975 Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties The Anglo Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894 Journal of Oriental Studies 13 2 137 146 Perez Louis G 1999 Japan Comes of Age Mutsu Munemitsu amp the Revision of the Unequal Treaties p 244 Ringmar Erik 2013 Liberal Barbarism The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China New York Palgrave Macmillan Wang Dong 2003 The Discourse of Unequal Treaties in Modern China Pacific Affairs 76 3 399 425 Wang Dong 2005 China s Unequal Treaties Narrating National History Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 9780739112083 Fravel M Taylor 2008 Strong Borders Secure Nation Cooperation and Conflict in China s Territorial Disputes Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2887 6 Halleck Henry Wager 1861 International law or Rules regulating the intercourse of states in peace and war New York D Van Nostrand OCLC 852699 Korean Mission to the Conference on the Limitation of Armament Washington D C 1921 1922 1922 Korea s Appeal to the Conference on Limitation of Armament Washington U S Government Printing Office OCLC 12923609 Fravel M Taylor 2005 Regime Insecurity and International Cooperation Explaining China s Compromises in Territorial Disputes International Security 30 2 46 83 doi 10 1162 016228805775124534 ISSN 0162 2889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unequal treaty amp oldid 1221461233, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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