Who did Japan defeat in 1894?
3.Course of the fighting : Fall of Pyongyang and the Battle of the Yalu River –Japanese army enters ChinaThe Japanese army's plan of action decidedAfter the fall of Asan, the Chinese army's base at the start of the war, the units commanded by General Ye Zhichao, which had been encamped there, moved north to Pyongyang and the number of Chinese troops in the city gradually increased. Show
When the Japanese became aware of this movement of Chinese forces in early August (Document 1), they made Pyongyang the target of their next attack and proceeded with military preparations. Having declared war on China with the aim of driving out the Chinese army stationed at Asan, in mid August Japan decided on a policy of either expelling all Chinese forces from Korea or attacking China directly depending on how the situation developed (Document 2). If fact, having occupied Pyongyang and other Chinese strongholds in Korea, the Japanese army went on to advance into Chinese territory and carry out a series of campaigns. The Imperial General Headquarters, which had been set up in the General Staff Office in June, was moved to the Imperial Palace on 5 August and then to Hiroshima Castle on 13 September. Two days later on 15 September Emperor Meiji arrived at the Hiroshima Headquarters (Document 3). Hiroshima, with its port at Ujina (later to grow into what is now the Port of Hiroshima), was already a major centre for the transport of soldiers and supplies to the war zone but with the arrival of the Emperor and the relocation of the Imperial Diet and many key national institutions, it came to function as the temporary capital of Japan for the duration of the Sino-Japanese War. The Battle of PyongyangOn 1 September the Japanese 1st Army was created from the 5th Division, including the 5th Mixed Brigade under Major General Ōshima Yoshimasa which had done most of the fighting so far, and the newly dispatched 3rd Division. General Yamagata Aritomo was appointed its commanding officer (Document 4). However, as the main body of the 3rd Division had not reached Korea, the attack on Pyongyang was to be undertaken by the 5th Division and the advance units of the 3rd Division. Since Japanese forces had not yet gained naval supremacy over the Yellow Sea, reinforcements from Japan landed at Wonsan on the east coast of the Korean peninsula or at Busan on the south coast to avoid attack by the Chinese fleet. After disembarking at Busan the main force of the 5th Division advanced by land and reached the Hanseong area by the end of August. On 1 September these units set out for Pyongyang and later joined the main force of the 9th Mixed Brigade, which was ahead of them, the units from Sangnyeong north of Hanseong (Sangnyeong detachment) and the units that had headed west after landing at Wonsan (Wonsan detachment) to surround Pyongyang. On 15 September this combined force launched an all-out attack on the city. Given the considerable numbers of soldiers in these Japanese units and the large force of 13,000 Chinese troops garrisoned in Pyongyang at the time (according to Japanese military estimates) the fighting around Pyongyang was the first large-scale land battle of the Sino-Japanese War. > See Main Feature : 15 September 1894 Fall of Pyongyang The Chinese army mounted a strong defence of Pyongyang and the fighting was fierce on both sides. However, towards evening the Chinese units fighting the Sangnyeong and Wonsan detachments broke of their attack and raised the white flag. During a heavy thunderstorm that followed and on into the night the Chinese forces evacuated Pyongyang. At dawn the following day the Japanese army entered Pyongyang and quickly occupied the city. The Battle of the Yalu RiverSince the start of the way the Yellow Sea/Bohai Sea area had been under the control of China's Beiyang Fleet which had its bases at Port Arthur and Weihaiwei. The Beiyang Fleet, under the command of Admiral Ding Ruchang, had a number of powerful battleships including its flagship the Dingyuan and the Zhenyuan, but, in the light on their experience in the Battle of Pungdo, the Chinese made renewed efforts to strengthen their naval capability by improving the equipment of their ships in readiness for attacks on the Japanese fleet. The Japanese Combined Fleet, under its commander-in-chief Vice Admiral Itō Sukeyuki, realised the necessity of blockading the Beiyang Fleet, but, owing to a lack of information, was unable to pinpoint its location and continued to reconnoître the Yellow Sea for some time in an effort to find it (Document 5). On 17 September, the Beiyang Fleet, which had finished escorting the ships transporting reinforcements and supplies for the troops garrisoned in Pyongyang, and was sailing off Dagushan to the west of the mouth of the Yalu River, and the Japanese Combined Fleet, which was continuing it reconnaissance and heading for an anchorage at Dalu Island off Dagushan, suddenly came upon each other. Both fleets immediately launched a large-scale attack and the battle began for naval control of the Yellow and Bohai Seas. This conflict is variously called the Battle of the Yalu River, the Battle of the Yellow Sea and the Battle of Dagushan. > See Main Feature : 17 September 1894 Battle of the Yalu River Both sides sustained heavy losses in the battle. Four ships of the Japanese Combined Fleet, including its flagship the cruiser Matsushima, suffered severe or intermediate damage while four of the Beiyang Fleet's vessels were sunk and many others were badly damaged. Its capital ships including the Zhenyuan and the Dingyuan caught fire but managed to retreat to Weiheiwei but thereafter Chinese naval power in the Yellow Sea was significantly reduced. The Japanese 1st Army crosses the Yalu RiverWith the loss of Pyongyang, its key base in Korea, and then the retreat of the Beiyang Fleet to Weihaiwei, Chinese military power on the Korean peninsula and in the Yellow Sea declined. This meant that for the Japanese the conditions for moving to an attack on China itself had been fulfilled. From here the Japanese army launched a two-pronged attack on China. The first was for the 1st Army, which had been leading the fighting on the Korean peninsula, to head north, enter China by crossing the Yalu River, which marked the border between Korea and China, and advance on the capital Beijing. The other route was for the newly formed 2nd Army to land directly from the Yellow Sea on the Liaodong and Shandong peninsulas and attack the Chinese fleet's bases at Port Arthur and Weihaiwei from land and sea. Of the units composing the 1st Army, the 5th Division and part of the 3rd Division had carried out the occupation of Pyongyang while the remainder of the 3rd Division had landed at Incheon in mid September then headed via Hanseong to Pyongyang which it reached at the end of the month (Document 6). Once the 3rd Division had caught up, the 1st Army began a phased advance in the direction of the Yalu River. Along the route lay Chongju (Jongju) and Anju where units of the Qing army were garrisoned but in each location the Chinese had retreated towards the border so there was no fighting. However, the Japanese faced problems in securing food and provisions for such a large army and a sufficient number porters and packhorses to transport them. On 24 October the 1st Army constructed temporary bridges at two sites along the Yalu River and began to cross. Meanwhile on the Chinese side, units stationed at Jiuliancheng on the west bank of the Yalu River to defend the border and the forces that had retreated from Pyongyang and elsewhere in Korea based themselves at Hushan on the banks of the river. From there they launched attacks on the Japanese forces as they completed the crossing and fierce fighting ensued. > See Main Feature : 24 October 1894 Japanese forces cross the Yalu River Having crossed the Yalu River and thus the border and fought off the Chinese resistance, at dawn on 26 October the Japanese 1st Army proceeded to surround and attack Jiuliancheng. The Chinese forces guarding the city had suffered losses in the fighting at the Yalu River staged a withdrawal before the attack began. > See Main Feature : 26 October 1894 Fall of Jiuliancheng Having captured Jiuliancheng without having to fight, the Japanese 1st Army divided into two contingents. The first, centred around the 5th Division, marched west to Fenghuangcheng and launched an attack on 29 October. The Chinese forces soon withdrew and the city quickly fell to the Japanese. > See Main Feature : 29 October 1894 Fall of Fenghuangcheng The second contingent, centred around the 3rd Division, headed south along the bank of the Yalu River, captured Dadonggou and pursued the escaping Chinese troops along the coast to Dagushan. On 5 November the Japanese forces began their attack on the Chinese units in the area but as these had already completed their withdrawal the Japanese were able to take Dagushan unopposed. As Dagushan had a port the Japanese army subsequently used it as a base for supplies arriving by sea. The Japanese set up a Civil Administration Bureau (Minseichō) for Andong County, in which Dagushan was located, to take on responsibility for local government and control of crime among the Chinese population of the areas captured by the 1st Army. Komura Jutarō, formerly Japan's interim chargé d'affaires in China, was appointed first director of the Bureau (Document 7). On 11 November the units of the 5th Division which had been marching west from Fenghuangcheng towards Fengtian Prefecture engaged Chinese forces at Lianshanguan and captured the town. > See Main Feature : 11 November 1894 Fall of Lianshanguan In response a large Chinese force sallied from Fentian Prefecture and attacked the Japanese army units based at Motien Pass near Lianshanguan. As a result the Japanese withdrew from Lianshanguan and fell back to Caohekou located to the south-east where fierce fighting between the two sides continued for some time (Document 8). The Japanese 2nd Army lands on the Liaodong Peninsula and the Battle of Port ArthurThe second prong of the Japanese army's attack on China started with the landing of the 2nd Army on the Liaodong Peninsula. On 25 September, following the successes in the Battles of Pyongyang and of the Yalu River, a 2nd Army was formed from the 1st and 2nd Divisions and the 12th Mixed Brigade, and Army Minister Ōyama Iwao was appointed its Commander (Document 9). The 12th Mixed Brigade landed at Incheon at the end of September while the remaining units made their way by sea to the Liaodong Peninsula during mid to late October. Meanwhile the Combined Fleet reconnoitred suitable landing sites for the 2nd Army whose first objective was the attack on Port Arthur, proposing Huayuankou on the south coast of the Liaodong Peninsula halfway between Dagushan and Jinzhou. Initially Commander Ōyama was against the idea, believing it was too far from the 2nd Army's target area (Document 10) but in the end Huayuankou was chosen and the landings took place from 24-27 October (Document 11). On 7 November the 12th Mixed Brigade also landed at Huayuankou. Once the 2nd Army had landed, the 1st Division marched west and on 6 November attacked Jinzhou. Situated on the western tip of the Liaodong Peninsula, Jinzhou was a strategic location but the Chinese garrison withdrew early on in the attack. > See Main Feature : 6 November 1894 Fall of Jinzhou The 1st Division then continued west and, having captured the battery at Dalian Bay on 7 November, began preparations for the attack on Port Arthur. Now joined by the 12th Mixed Brigade they assembled a temporary siege park equipped with heavy artillery and, once they had taken the battery, landed in Dalian Bay and set up camp. For the Chinese army, the defence of Port Arthur, the base for the Beiyang Fleet, had great siginifance for the future course of the war. The size of the Chinese force in Port Arthur had increased with the addition of troops that had retreated from Jinzhou to augment the original garrison (Document 12). Hostilities between the Japanese and Chinese contingents near Port Arthur broke out on 18 November and before dawn on 21st the Japanese launched an all-out attack. After fierce fighting Japanese units captured the entire battery and Port Arthur fell. > See Main Feature : 21 November 1894 Fall of Port Arthur The arrival of winterIn November, the area from the Liaodong Peninsula to Fengtian Prefecture which had been the main focus of ifghting was gripped by severe cold and in places deep snow had fallen, presenting serious difficulties for military operations. The Japanese also foresaw that the conditions would make it even harder to guarantee food supplies, something which had been a problem ever since the theatre of war moved onto Chinese territory. So they considered a temporary cessation of hostilities over the winter and establishing winter quarters. In the 1st Army, the 5th Division was charged with garrisoning the captured cities of Jiuliancheng and Fenghuangcheng, and despite a counterattack by Chinese forces in mid December (Document 13), passed the rest of the winter without any further fighting. On the other hand the 3rd Division had to march towards the capital Beijing and on 13 December attacked Haicheng in Fengtian Prefecture, the Chinese army's base. > See Main Feature : 13 December 1894 Fall of Haicheng Haicheng soon fell to the Japanese but given its importance to the Chinese army as a transport hub, Chinese forces made repeated attacks to win it back and fierce fighting with the defending Japanese continued until the end of February the following year (Document 14). Further rebellion by the Donghak Peasant Army and its destructionThe Donghak Peasant Rebellion, which had been one of the triggers of the Sino-Japanese War, came to an end with the signing of the Treaty of Jeonju between the Peasant Army and the Korean government on 11 June, as Japan and China were both preparing to dispatch troops to Korea. However, once the establishment of the Heungseong Daewongun's regime, which sought to cooperate with Japan, led to the signing of the Japan-Korea Alliance on 26 August, the Donghak Peasant Army denounced the government's collaboration with the Japanese and began to mobilise once more. From October it stepped up attacks on the Korean government and on the Japanese army in Korea (Document 15). The Japanese forces at this stage were initially very small compared to those fighting in China but once the Donghak Rebellion broke out again reinforcements were sent from Japan and, together with Korean government troops, fought a succession of battles against the rebels. On 28 and 29 November a Peasant Army tens of thousands strong attacked Gongju in Chungcheong Province which led to fierce fighting with the combined Japanese and Korean forces. As a result the Peasant Army suffered heavy losses and was practically wiped out (Document 16). Thereafter sporadic clashes continued into the following year between the remnants of the Peasant Army as it continued to flee southwards and the Japanese-Korean army. One by one the rebel leaders were apprehended by the Korean government and the Peasant Army's activities came to an end.
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Return Who defeated China in 1894?The First Sino-Japanese War was the conflict between Japan and China in 1894–95 that marked the emergence of Japan as a major world power and demonstrated the weakness of the Chinese empire. The war grew out of the conflict between the two countries for supremacy in Korea.
Who did Japan defeat in 1904?Russo-Japanese War, (1904–05), military conflict in which a victorious Japan forced Russia to abandon its expansionist policy in East Asia, thereby becoming the first Asian power in modern times to defeat a European power.
Who ruled Japan in 1894?Meiji, in full Meiji Tennō, personal name Mutsuhito, (born Nov. 3, 1852, Kyōto—died July 30, 1912, Tokyo), emperor of Japan from 1867 to 1912, during whose reign Japan was dramatically transformed from a feudal country into one of the great powers of the modern world.
Why did Japan enter the SinoIn 1894, Japan went to war with China over a dispute about political influence in Korea. Much of the world thought that Japan was suicidal for taking on China, but in 1895 they proved the world wrong and emerged victorious.
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