Japan And China Similarities

566 Words2 Pages

Today, Japan and China are considered to be superpowers and have huge influence on the most densely populated continent in the world, Asia. But it wasn't always like that for the two countries. The two Asian countries may seem like they had a similar history but they blaze their own trails in distinct manners. Notably, Japan's quirk of being homogeneous and China being the opposite with numerous languages and ethnicities.
China and Japan may have their own ways but the two retain a good deal of core similarities. For instance, they feared to be a colony from an industrialized nation. The Japanese were pressured by foreign nations to establish diplomatic and commercial relations because of their long period of isolationism that left them behind …show more content…

To illustrate, the British were outraged due to Chinese action against the profit-generating opium thus English commercial agents pressured the Chinese for more open trade, but the government rejected them which created tension in British illicit trade of opium. This ensuing conflict, gets the Opium War (1839-1842) underway. This is where the British demonstrated superiority on the seas with their state of the art naval vessels and it humiliated the Chinese who were equipped with relatively primitive weapons like swords, knives, spears, and the occasional muskets. When in fact, Japan was much more receptive to demands of the powerful and developed countries. In 1853 Commodore Perry was sent by the United States to give an ultimatum to Japan to open its ports, and when he returned the next year the Japanese authorities accepted to negotiate with him. This was a very different attitude to that of the Chinese, whose “view of the non-Chinese world recognized no appreciable difference between merchants and governments. All were barbarians”, and therefore refused to recognize the threat represented by the British officials. In the end, treaties with the West, through which China and Japan’s long-lasting seclusion came to an end, were signed by both nations: the Treaty of Kanagawa by Japan and the Treaty of Nanking by China (Martin, 1968). However, China’s treaty was signed after heavy military losses and under much more unfavorable terms than Japan’s, due to its refusal to acknowledge the superior power of the

Open Document