<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P399"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapLXIII"></SPAN>LXIII<br/> EUROPEAN AGGRESSION IN ASIA AND THE RISE OF JAPAN</h2>
<p>It is difficult to believe that any large number of people really accepted this
headlong painting of the map of Africa in European colours as a permanent new
settlement of the worlds affairs, but it is the duty of the historian to record
that it was so accepted. There was but a shallow historical background to the
European mind in the nineteenth century, and no habit of penetrating criticism.
The quite temporary advantages that the mechanical revolution in the west had
given the Europeans over the rest of the old world were regarded by people,
blankly ignorant of such events as the great Mongol conquests, as evidences of
a permanent and assured European leadership of mankind. They had no sense of
the transferability of science and its fruits. They did not realize that
Chinamen and Indians could carry on the work of research as ably as Frenchmen
or Englishmen. They believed that there was some innate intellectual drive in
the west, and some innate indolence and conservatism in the east, that assured
the Europeans a world predominance for ever.</p>
<p>The consequence of this infatuation was that the various
European foreign offices set themselves not merely to
scramble with the British for the savage and undeveloped
regions of the world’s surface, but also to carve up
the populous and civilized countries of Asia as though these
people also were no more than raw material for exploitation.
The inwardly precarious but outwardly splendid imperialism of
the British ruling class in India, and the extensive and
profitable possessions of the Dutch in the East Indies,
filled the rival Great Powers with dreams of similar glories
in Persia, in the disintegrating Ottoman Empire, and in
Further India, China and Japan.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P400"></SPAN></span>In 1898
Germany seized Kiau Chau in China. Britain responded by
seizing Wei-hai-wei, and the next year the Russians took
possession of Port Arthur. A flame of hatred for the
Europeans swept through China. There were massacres of
Europeans and Christian converts, and in 1900 an attack upon
and siege of the European legations in Pekin. A combined
force of Europeans made a punitive expedition to Pekin,
rescued the legations, and stole an enormous amount of
valuable property. The Russians then seized Manchuria, and
in 1904, the British invaded Tibet....</p>
<p>But now a new Power appeared in the struggle of the Great
Powers, Japan. Hitherto Japan has played but a small part in
this history; her secluded civilization has not contributed
very largely to the general shaping of human destinies; she
has received much, but she has given little. The Japanese
proper are of the Mongolian race. Their civilization, their
writing and their literary and artistic traditions are
derived from the Chinese. Their history is an interesting
and romantic one; they developed a feudal system and a system
of chivalry in the earlier centuries of the Christian era;
their attacks upon Korea and China are an Eastern equivalent
of the English wars in France. Japan was first brought into
contact with Europe in the sixteenth century; in 1542 some
Portuguese reached it in a Chinese junk, and in 1549 a Jesuit
missionary, Francis Xavier, began his teaching there. For a
time Japan welcomed European intercourse, and the Christian
missionaries made a great number of converts. A certain
William Adams became the most trusted European adviser of the
Japanese, and showed them how to build big ships. There were
voyages in Japanese-built ships to India and Peru. Then
arose complicated quarrels between the Spanish Dominicans,
the Portuguese Jesuits, and the English and Dutch
Protestants, each warning the Japanese against the political
designs of the others. The Jesuits, in a phase of
ascendancy, persecuted and insulted the Buddhists with great
acrimony. In the end the Japanese came to the conclusion
that the Europeans were an intolerable nuisance, and that
Catholic Christianity in particular was a mere cloak for the
political dreams of the Pope and the Spanish
monarchy—already in possession of the Philippine
Islands; there was a great persecution of the Christians, and
in 1638 Japan was absolutely <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P401"></SPAN></span>closed to Europeans, and remained
closed for over 200 years. During those two centuries the
Japanese were as completely cut off from the rest of the
world as though they lived upon another planet. It was
forbidden to build any ship larger than a mere coasting boat.
No Japanese could go abroad, and no European enter the
country.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-401"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-401.jpg" alt="JAPANESE SOLDIER ON THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY" width-obs="250" height-obs="708" /> <p class="caption">
JAPANESE SOLDIER ON THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
<br/>
<small><i>(In the Victoria and Albert Museum)</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>For two centuries Japan remained outside the main current of
history. She lived on in a state of picturesque feudalism in
which about five per cent of the population, the
<i>samurai</i>, or fighting men, and the nobles and their
families, tyrannized without restraint over the rest of the
population. Meanwhile the great world outside went on to
wider visions and new powers. Strange shipping became more
frequent, passing the Japanese headlands; sometimes ships
were wrecked and sailors brought ashore. Through the Dutch
settlement in the island of Deshima, their one link with the
outer universe, came warnings that Japan was not keeping pace
with the power of the Western world. In 1837 a ship sailed
into Yedo Bay flying a strange flag of stripes and stars, and
carrying some Japanese sailors she had picked up far adrift
in the Pacific. She was driven off by cannon shot. This
flag presently reappeared on other ships. One in 1849 came
to demand the liberation <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P402"></SPAN></span>of eighteen shipwrecked American
sailors. Then in 1853 came four American warships under
Commodore Perry, and refused to be driven away. He lay at
anchor in forbidden waters, and sent messages to the two
rulers who at that time shared the control of Japan. In 1854
he returned with ten ships, amazing ships propelled by steam,
and equipped with big guns, and he made proposals for trade
and intercourse that the Japanese had no power to resist. He
landed with a guard of 500 men to sign the treaty.
Incredulous crowds watched this visitation from the outer
world, marching through the streets.</p>
<p>Russia, Holland and Britain followed in the wake of America.
A great nobleman whose estates commanded the Straits of
Shimonoseki saw fit to fire on foreign vessels, and a
bombardment by a fleet of British, French, Dutch and American
warships destroyed his batteries and scattered his swordsmen.
Finally an allied squadron (1865), at anchor off Kioto,
imposed a ratification of the treaties which opened Japan to
the world.</p>
<p>The humiliation of the Japanese by these events was intense.
With astonishing energy and intelligence they set themselves
to bring their culture and organization to the level of the
European Powers. Never in all the history of mankind did a
nation make such a stride as Japan then did. In 1866 she was
a medieval people, a fantastic caricature of the extremest
romantic feudalism; in 1899 hers was a completely Westernized
people, on a level with the most advanced European Powers.
She completely dispelled the persuasion that Asia was in some
irrevocable way hopelessly behind Europe. She made all
European progress seem sluggish by comparison.</p>
<p>We cannot tell here in any detail of Japan’s war with
China in 1894-95. It demonstrated the extent of her
Westernization. She had an efficient Westernized army and a
small but sound fleet. But the significance of her
renascence, though it was appreciated by Britain and the
United States, who were already treating her as if she were a
European state, was not understood by the other Great Powers
engaged in the pursuit of new Indias in Asia. Russia was
pushing down through Manchuria to Korea. France was already
established far to the south in Tonkin and Annam, Germany was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P403"></SPAN></span>prowling
hungrily on the look-out for some settlement. The three
Powers combined to prevent Japan reaping any fruits from the
Chinese war. She was exhausted by the struggle, and they
threatened her with war.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-403"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-403.jpg" alt="A STREET IN TOKIO" width-obs="550" height-obs="429" /> <p class="caption">
A STREET IN TOKIO</p>
</div>
<p>Japan submitted for a time and gathered her forces. Within
ten years she was ready for a struggle with Russia, which
marks an epoch in the history of Asia, the close of the
period of European arrogance. The Russian people were, of
course, innocent and ignorant of this trouble that was being
made for them halfway round the world, and the wiser Russian
statesmen were against these foolish thrusts; but a gang of
financial adventurers, including the Grand Dukes, his
cousins, surrounded the Tsar. They had gambled deeply in the
prospective looting of Manchuria and China, and they would
suffer no withdrawal. So there began a transportation of
great armies of Japanese soldiers across the sea to Port
Arthur and Korea, and the sending of endless trainloads of
Russian peasants along the Siberian railway to die in those
distant battlefields.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P404"></SPAN></span>The
Russians, badly led and dishonestly provided, were beaten on
sea and land alike. The Russian Baltic Fleet sailed round
Africa to be utterly destroyed in the Straits of Tshushima.
A revolutionary movement among the common people of Russia,
infuriated by this remote and reasonless slaughter, obliged
the Tsar to end the war (1905); he returned the southern half
of Saghalien, which had been seized by Russia in 1875,
evacuated Manchuria, resigned Korea to Japan. The European
invasion of Asia was coming to an end and the retraction of
Europe’s tentacles was beginning.</p>
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