Imperial Army Essays

  • Korean Comfort Women

    2592 Words  | 6 Pages

    slaves for the Japanese Imperial Army (Chunghee). Some of the women were dragged off with physical force as their families wept, while others were actually sold to the army by their destitute families (Watanabe). Still other were officially drafted by the Japanese Imperial Army and believed they would be factory workers or nurses (Hwang in Schellstede 4). Some Korean village leaders were ordered to send young women to participate in "important business for the Imperial Army" (Watanabe). Many Japanese

  • vietnam conflict

    690 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Vietnam conflict Part of French Indochina, Vietnam was occupied by the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. Ironically, America's first involvement in the region was in support of a Vietnamese patriot named Ho Chi Minh, the leader of a small nationalist movement which had been waging a campaign against the Japanese since 1941. At the end of the War, Ho and his "Viet Minh" movement actively resisted France's attempt to regain control of Vietnam, and turned to the Soviet Union and Communist

  • King George I

    878 Words  | 2 Pages

    George I was born in 1660 at Osnabuuck, the eldest son of Ernest Augustus-Duke of Brunswick-Lunchburg and first Elector of Hanover. Because his father was the Elector of Hanover, George was the Electoral Price of the Empire. He was also in the imperial army, who faced battles against the Dutch, the Turks, Nine Years War, and in the War of Spanish Succession. George soon became a talented and experienced General. He went on to command in many wars. He eventually became lector of Hanover in 1698(2001

  • Battle Of Guadalcanal Battle

    1393 Words  | 3 Pages

    The battle of Guadalcanal was one of the many important battles during World War ll. The Guadalcanal Campaign lasted six months and began on August 7, 1942 when Allied forces, mostly U.S., landed on Guadalcanal, Tulagi, and the Florida Islands. These were pre-war colonial possessions of Great Britain. In this battle, each side lost twenty-six warships, with almost the same amount of tonnage. However, the Japanese could not replace the losses due to decreasing industrial output while the Americans

  • genocide research project

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    When 1937 arrived, Japanese soldiers raided China’s capital of Nanking and began to mass murder citizens. A sole leader of the Japanese Imperial Army was non-existent. There were many of people in power such as generals who allowed these behaviors to occur. Baron Koki Hirota, Foreign minister at the time, proceeded to do nothing while being well aware of the Japanese’s persecution of the Chinese. These unsympathetic murders of those who were thought to be Chinese soldiers as well as woman, children

  • Biography Of Hideki Tojo

    1163 Words  | 3 Pages

    secondary and primary school; then I attended a prestigious military college. I attended Imperial Japanese Army Academy and I graduated at the top of my class. After graduating, I married a well respected woman named Katsuko Ito. I then attended the Military Staff College, and I built my career from there. My early years of adulthood were very well spent because I worked hard to upgrade my ranking in the army. I went from the ranking captain in 1915, to the ranking colonel in 1928. I was also made

  • The Second Sino-Japanese War

    1366 Words  | 3 Pages

    Unit 731 and the American Cover-Up The Second Sino-Japanese war began on July 7th, 1937 and ended on September 9th, 1945. It was a military conflict which was fought between the Republic of China and the Empire of Japan. As part of the struggle against fascism, Japan invaded China. It is clear that, due to the restriction of its natural resources, Japan tried to increase by robbing resources from other countries. Japan used the conquered Manchuria as a launching base for their troops. Manchuria

  • The Japanese Rape of Nanking, China

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    In December of 1937, the Japanese Imperial Army invaded Nanking, China. They killed 300,00 out of the 600,000 people in China’s capital city. The six-week rampage by the Japanese is now known as the Rape of Nanking and the single worst atrocity during WWII era in either the European or Pacific theaters of the war. Before Nanking was invaded a tough battle in Shanghai began the war in the summer of 1937. The Chinese put up a shocking battle against japan. This was slightly embarrassing to Japan because

  • Events Leading up to World War II

    1755 Words  | 4 Pages

    1. Explain the context/ background of the events you are examining? For example: time; place and how it relates to colonization by the nation you are examining or other nations. The Great Depression, which occurred in 1929, devastated the economy of many counties worldwide, including Japan. Thus, many sought for imperialism as the answer, such as the Western power and Japan. Japan targeted China, planning on taking advantage of the turmoil that was taking place inside the country, greatly devastating

  • History of Germany

    1418 Words  | 3 Pages

    gradually came into existence with intellectual, economic and political changes. During the late 1490’s and early 1500’s, Maximilian I put into motion his plan to reform the German Empire by creating an Imperial Supreme Court (Reichskammergericht), levying imperial taxes and increasing the power of the Imperial Diet (Reichstag) (Wikipedia). By the mid 1500’s Germany was a reforming nation with revolts, uprisings and a general division of the empire based on religious beliefs and resentment. This division

  • British Imperial Regulations D

    642 Words  | 2 Pages

    British imperial regulations with the American colonies were closely tied in with the system of mercantilism. Mercantilism controls the relations between the leading power and the colonies under its empire. A nation would want to export more than it imports gaining more money to obtain economic stability. The colonies exist for the profit of the mother country. Trade was a vital part of the economy of both England and the British colonies. The colonies would provide a majority of raw materials that

  • Conditions in Japanese Prisoner of War Camps In World War II

    1601 Words  | 4 Pages

    tied together and used for bayonet practice. “The Japanese commander explained prisoners were likely to drag upon the movement of his troops.” When Japanese troops overrun Hong Kong, Colonel Tanaka told his troops, take no prisoners. At the Royal Army Medical Corps dressing station, staff and wounded offered no resistance. They were led out and executed on a nearby hill. On April 8, 1942, General King summed up the situation of his troops on Bataan. His troops had enough food and ammunition

  • The Story of So-Ha, a Chinese Girl

    982 Words  | 2 Pages

    It was a pitch dark and blustery night in December 1926. The sky was starless and moonless, as dark as coal. The thunder rumbled and reverberated like a furious and wild tiger. The freezing wind was bitter, one could feel the cold biting through one’s skin, and etching every strand of nerve. It was the day she was born. In Tan Chuen (a village in Panyu, China), Peng Xiu Zhi gave birth to an adorable daughter, who glistened with beauty. Her eyes sparkled and twinkled like stars, enthusiastic to discover

  • Napolean's 1812 Invasion of Russia

    709 Words  | 2 Pages

    In 1812, Napoleon invaded the country of Russia. Most of his advisors warned him against this, saying it would be a very bad decision, but Napoleon ignored them. His armies were heavily defeated and there were many reasons for this. I will be talking about some of these reasons in this chapter. At first, both the French and Russians attempted to have peace between their countries, by having a meeting called the “Congress of Erfurt” between Napoleon and the Tsar of Russia, Alexander I. This meeting

  • Summary: The Rape Of Nanking

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Rape of Nanking was a very serious time for the Chinese people of Nanking. The massacre started with the bloody Japanese victory in Shanghai, during the Sino-Japanese war. Chiang-Kai Shek, the Japanese leader at the time, ordered the evacuation of all official Chinese troops and citizens presently residing in Nanking. A lot of people followed the orders and left, but many stayed, unaware of the bloodbath and slaughter that was approaching. On December 13, 1937, the first of the Japanese troops

  • The Era Of Isolation In Japan

    921 Words  | 2 Pages

    Western imperialism. At the time of the Japanese-American treaties China was riddled with social unrest, as the devastating effects of the Taiping rebellion were resulting in huge numbers of deaths and pointed to the weakness and instability of the imperial government. Determined to not meet the same fate as the Chinese and that modernization was the key to survival, a group of mid-level Samurai overthrew the Shogun in 1868 and set Japan on a course of rapid modernization unparalleled in history. This

  • The Sino-Japanese War: Chemical Usage at the Attack of Yichang

    995 Words  | 2 Pages

    This paper is about what chemical agent being employed during the attack of Yichang during the Sin-Japanese war in 1940 and which side of the conflict or both would employ it. What type of agent that was used if any? Employment methods used to disperse the chemical agent in wartime. Finally, I examined situations in which the agent would be employed by military forces to gain maximum effectiveness. A brief description of Unit 731, its commander, and a bit about what the kinds has been explained

  • Boxer Rebellion

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    “open-door policy'; in China were commercial opportunities were equally available to all Western powers and the political and territorial integrity of China stayed intact. The imperial court responded to this foreign threat by giving aid to various secret societies. Traditionally, secret societies had been formed in opposition to imperial government; as such, they were certainly a threat to the Ch’ing government. However, anti-foreign sentiment had risen so greatly in China that the Empress Dowager

  • Imperial Resistance in Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Imperial Resistance in Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone All quotations taken from Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1986. Wilkie Collins’s The Moonstone has been read as an archetypal piece of imperial propaganda, and yet it seems to lend itself to an alternate reading in which it represents a distinct challenge to the colonial mindset. The majority of the tale is set in England but the Indian location of the prologue and epilogue explicitly root The Moonstone within

  • How Did The Japanese Imperial Army Dehumanize Korean Comfort Women

    623 Words  | 2 Pages

    This investigation will explore the question: To what extent did the Japanese Imperial Army dehumanize and sexualize Korean Comfort Women by way of forced prostitution in the 1930’s and 1940’s? The limited 20 year time range allows for a focus on the development of comfort camps, procurement of women and the sexualization of the Korean women’s femininity. The first source to be evaluated, and the most important for the analysis of my central question, is Yuki Tanaka’s book “Japan’s Comfort Women: