Bandits in Republican China
A study of banditry in Republican China, describing the cycles whereby banditry spread from the impoverished margins (geographically and socially) of late Qing society into entire provinces by the 1920s.
|
Contents
Growth of Banditry Under the Republic
|
15 |
A Case Study of Henan Province
|
40 |
Who Became a Bandit?
|
70 |
The Creation and Organization of
|
91 |
6
|
114 |
Bandit Lives and Perspectives
|
123 |
Bandits Power
|
150 |
China Becomes a Bandits World
|
193 |
9
|
199 |
Bandits and the Revolutionary
|
226 |
ΙΟ
|
269 |
287
|
302 |
Common terms and phrases
activities Anhui areas army attack authorities Bai Lang Bai Lang's Bai's band bandit chiefs bandit gangs bandit kingdoms banditry became Beijing BLQY border Cangzhou captives Chen China's Millions Chinese commander Communists DFZZ Feng Feng Yuxiang fighting followers forces foreign gang's Gotō Hankou Henan heroes Howard Hubei Japanese Jiuyu join June kidnapping killed Kohinata Kuchiki Kurushima 1952 Lao Yangren leader Li Zicheng Lincheng lives Lundeen Manchuria military mountains Nagano North China official opium Pawley peasants political poor popular province ransom rebellion rebels recruits Republican revolution revolutionary rich secret societies Shaanxi Shandong Shina Shuihu zhuan Sichuan soldier-bandits soldiers STSB subchiefs suppression Swallow and Lu Tao Juyin tion traditional troops tufei Ueda usually victims village Wang warlord west Henan women Wu Peifu xianzhi Xiya Yao Xueyin Yao Xueyin 1981 Yuan Yuan Shikai ZGNC Zhang Zuolin