History of the Republic of China·volume 1: 1894-1912 (part 1)

History of the Republic of China·volume 1: 1894-1912 (part 1)

by Chief Editor Li Xin Research Office Of The History Of The Republic Of China, Institute Of Modern History, Chinese Academy Of Social Sciences

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324Kwords35chapters
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Ch. 35Section 2 the General Upsurge in the Rights Recovery Movement
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About This Novel

This volume covers the period from 1894 to 1912. In addition to comprehensively collecting and utilizing the archives of the Republic of China stored in the Second Historical Archives of China, archival materials from relevant local archives, historical materials related to the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and local political consultative conferences, as well as a large number of domestically collected books and newspapers of the Republic of China, the author also made extensive reference to relevant materials, books, and articles published in Taiwan and abroad. On the basis of respecting historical facts, the author restores the true face of the history of the Republic of China.

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Mu Ni2mo ago

Save the country from difficulties, save the country from danger

In the modern Chinese nation's pursuit of independence, countless people with lofty ideals sacrificed their lives and shed their blood, dedicated to saving the country and strengthening it, and saving the nation from danger. After reading this volume, I deeply feel the charm of the saying "A strong young man will make a strong country". When we open this volume, the historical figures who are committed to saving the country and the nation from danger are just young people and students in their twenties. This makes me sigh that the era when the real youth rose up for the country was a new era of ideological enlightenment and progress for young people. In the history of modern China, every person with lofty ideals worked in his or her own way to save China from its decline. For example, the Opium War opened China's modern history and fired the first shot of self-awakening and resistance to foreign aggression; such as the Taiping Rebellion, which tried to use Western religious ideas to overthrow the decadence of the feudal dynasty; such as the reform and self-rescue movement of the Westernizationists in the late Qing Dynasty; Such as Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao's Hundred Days Reform of the Constitutional Monarchy; such as the Three People's Principles and the Revival of China, the Tongmenghui of Sun Yat-sen and other revolutionaries, which aimed at establishing a Republic of China, as well as the national salvation groups established in various places. Every failure and success they have is an attempt to explore the road to national salvation.

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