1st Edition

Manchurian Railways and the Opening of China: An International History An International History

By Bruce Elleman, Stephen Kotkin Copyright 2010
    235 Pages
    by Routledge

    235 Pages
    by Routledge

    The railways of Manchuria offer an intriguing vantage point for an international history of northeast Asia. Before the completion of the Trans-Siberian railway in 1916, the only rail route from the Imperial Russian capital of St. Petersburg to the Pacific port of Vladivostok transited Manchuria. A spur line from the Manchurian city of Harbin led south to ice-free Port Arthur. Control of these two rail lines gave Imperial Russia military, economic, and political advantages that excited rivalry on the part of Japan and unease on the part of weak and divided China. Meanwhile, the effort to defend and retain that strategic hold against rising Japanese power strained distant Moscow. Control of the Manchurian railways was contested in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-5; Japan's 1931 invasion and establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo; the second Sino-Japanese War and World War II in Asia; and, the Chinese civil war that culminated in the Communist victory over the Nationalists. Today, the railways are critical to plans for development of China's sparsely populated interior. This volume brings together an international group of scholars to explore this fascinating history.

    About the Editors and Contributors; Acknowledgments; Preface, Stephen Kotkin; Maps; Introduction, Bruce A. Elleman, Elisabeth Koll, and Y. Tak Matsusaka; Part I. Competing Railway Imperialisms; 1. The Chinese Eastern Railway: From the First Sino-Japanese War until the Russo-Japanese War, S.C.M. Paine; 2. Japan's South Manchuria Railway Company in Northeast China, 1906-1934, Y. Tak Matsusaka; 3. Sino-Soviet Tensions and Soviet Administrative Control over the Chinese Eastern Railway, 1917-25, Bruce A. Elleman; 4. Railway as Political Catalyst: The Chinese Eastern Railway and the 1929 Sino-Soviet Conflict, Felix Patrikeeff; Part II. Competing Railway Nationalisms; 5. Technology Transfer in Modern China: The Case of Railway Enterprises in Central China and Manchuria, Chang Jui-te; 6. Chinese Railroads, Local Society, and Foreign Presence: The Tianjin-Pukou Line in pre-1949 Shandong, Elisabeth Koll; 7. Railways in Communist Strategy and Operations in Manchuria, 1945-1948, Harold M. Tanner; 8. Return of the Chinese Changchun Railway to China by the USSR, Zhang Shengfa; Epilogue: Rivers of Steel: Manchuria's Railways as a Natural Extension of the Sea Lines of Communication, Bruce A. Elleman; Selected Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Bruce A. Elleman, Stephen Kotkin