This document provides a summary of Sun Yat-sen and the 1911 Revolution in China. It discusses how Sun Yat-sen led the revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China, with Sun Yat-sen becoming the first provisional president. However, Yuan Shikai soon seized power and established a military dictatorship. The revolution failed to fundamentally alter China's social and economic systems. Though Sun Yat-sen had many setbacks and disappointments, his revolutionary ideals helped inspire future movements in China.
This document provides a summary of Sun Yat-sen and the 1911 Revolution in China. It discusses how Sun Yat-sen led the revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China, with Sun Yat-sen becoming the first provisional president. However, Yuan Shikai soon seized power and established a military dictatorship. The revolution failed to fundamentally alter China's social and economic systems. Though Sun Yat-sen had many setbacks and disappointments, his revolutionary ideals helped inspire future movements in China.
This document provides a summary of Sun Yat-sen and the 1911 Revolution in China. It discusses how Sun Yat-sen led the revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China, with Sun Yat-sen becoming the first provisional president. However, Yuan Shikai soon seized power and established a military dictatorship. The revolution failed to fundamentally alter China's social and economic systems. Though Sun Yat-sen had many setbacks and disappointments, his revolutionary ideals helped inspire future movements in China.
This document provides a summary of Sun Yat-sen and the 1911 Revolution in China. It discusses how Sun Yat-sen led the revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China, with Sun Yat-sen becoming the first provisional president. However, Yuan Shikai soon seized power and established a military dictatorship. The revolution failed to fundamentally alter China's social and economic systems. Though Sun Yat-sen had many setbacks and disappointments, his revolutionary ideals helped inspire future movements in China.
The first decade of the 20th century witnessed a nation-wide
crisis in China. The surrender of the Ching government to
foreign powers and its merciless plunder of the people
brought China to the brink of national collapse. The internal crisis of the Manchu state and imperialist penetration manifested itself in the occurrence of disturbances in many
places. From 1905 to 1911, numerous anti-tax riots and
revolutionary outbreaks took place in different parts of China. But all these movements failed. Tang Liang li stated that
did keep alive the
despite their failures, these rebellions revolutionary ideas and converted many thousands to the
revolutionary cause.
By then, important developments took place within
the
imperial regime. Alarmed at the growth of the revolutionary
movement, the Ching rulers felt that certain
constitutional
concessions should be made to hold down revolutionary
outbreaks. Thus, on the one hand, the late Ching rulers
attempted to bring the provincial administration under central
control, and, the other carried on constitutional reforms. on
The plan was to move gradualy towards a full-fledged
Parliamentby first developing provincial assemblies, and then
a national assembly. On 27 August 1908, a Nine-Year Programme of Constitutional Reform was promulgated. In Novemeber 1908, both Szu Hsi and the imprisoned emperor Kuang-hsu died, and Pu Yi, an infant surrounded by non-
entities, was on the throne.
The crisis of the Manchu became more serious than ever
before. And Sun Yat-sen had been secretly preparing for the final showdown with the imperial army. In September 1911, a aoe 3 o 7
rising in Sichuan stimulated the revolutionary mood of the
people. Within a month, thirteen provinces had been lost to the empire.
After the revolution of 1911, the defeated Manchu rulers had
stepped down and recalled Yuan Shi-kai as the premier. Yuan favoured a settlement by peace conference. Sun Yat-sen, as expected, took over as the president of the Republic on 1
January 1912 at Nanking. The republicans were in control of
south China with Nanking as th capital and Yuan Shi-kai and his forces of north China wit Peking as the capital.
However, despite gressive haracter, the revolution
also suffered from majoriations. The Tung Meng Hui programmerecognized allthe privleges ofimperialist powers in China. The revolution merely sent the emperor packing without however altering the position of different social classes in the state. As China remained under imperialist and feudal control and oppression, the character of the society did not change, nor did the content of the dictatorship set up by Yuan Shi-kai. Thus the bourgeois-led revolution remained incomplete in the end. Although the Revolution of 1911 led to the end of Manchu rule, Sun Yat-sen could not unite the country. Anxious to bring about the unity of the North and the South, Sun Yat-sen resigned from presidency in favour of Yuan Shi-kai on 14 February 1912.After coming to power, Yuan Shi-kai devoted attention to the building up of a military dictatorship in China. He did not care to get any constitutional support for such steps. By trampling underfoot all democratic norms, he initiated dialogues with the international banking institutions on bank loans.
In1913, when the full depth of Yuan's betrayal became clear,
Sun launched thesecond evolution directed against the dictator and mobl army th China. But this uprising was suppre aftermo fighting. The main reasonbehind this debacleasthat agrarian demands were again not brought up, an peasants, therefore, kept aloof. After gaining victory, Yuan Shi-kai banned the KMT (Kuomintang)-the new party formed by Sun Yat-sen by replacing Tung Meng-hui.
With the outbreak of World War I, China stood face to face
with a new set of problems. Japan joined the allied side in the war. The Japanese ambassador to China, Hioki Eki presented to the president, Yuan Shi-kai the infamous "Twenty-one Demands". To put it briefly, the acceptance of these demands would mean the colonization of vast parts of China by Japan. The Chinese government succumbed to this pressure and accepted all their demands. This led to a social ferment and burst into what came to be known as the May 4 Movement of 1919.
Meanwhile, changes had also come about in the thinking of
Sun Yat-sen. He was much influenced by the October Revolution of Russia, and from 1921, began to study it. Since then,after the formation of the Communist Party of China in 1921, he drastically revised his own views and programme. He then propounded the Three Major Policies" for his KMT
party. These were Alliance with Soviet Russia; Alliance with
the CPC; and Support for the Workers' and Peasants' Movement. In a series of lectures, he also reinterpreted the "Three Principles of the People" in accordance with the changing situation.
On this common basis there began the period of the First
United Front(1924-27) between the KMT and the CPC. A new revolutionary government was set up in Canton. It established the Whampoa Military Academy with the KMT officer Chiang Kai-shek as the dean and the CPC leader Chou En-lai as political director to train commanders for a new type ofnational anti-warlord army to fight against the Northern Warlords. Canton thus became the centre of the revived hopes and activity of everything that was progressive in China.
Sun Yat-sen, however, did not live long after that. On 12
March 1925, he died of canceof the liver. Assessment C.M.Wilbur in his n Yat-sen strated Patriot has called Sun "frusurated a patriot" use most of his career was marked by discourageme in his efforts to achieve patriotic goals. He had two great successes. His first triumph was to have initiated and hurtured a movement that succeeded many years later in overthrowing Manchu despotism and establishing a republic. His second great Success was in leading the KMT's reorganization in 1924 which he, however, did not live to see. The disappointments, on the other hand, were endless. Revolt after revolt against the Manchus failed. To raise money for revolution was painfully difficult. The republic turned out to be a complete disillusionment, stolen by that autocrat, Yuan Shi-kai and corrupted by bureaucrats and militarists. However, nothing grew from his elaborate plans for China's economic transformation. No foreign government recognized any regime Sun Yat-sen headed.
Wilbur has described Sun Yat-sen's life as "a sombre
story of shattered dreams'. But these dreams were not dreamt in
vain. The CPC led by Mae Tse-tung had preserved the
revolutionary core of his teachings and carried his cause and dearest wishes to their logteal conclusion and continued on to lead the people into a phase of istory