Oxford University Press has recently published Inventing the Way of The Samurai, by
Oleg Benesch. The book offers a re-evaluation of some of the
longest-standing myths about Japanese thought and culture. Oleg Benesch here
further explains…
One
hundred years ago today, far from the erupting battlefields of Europe, a small
German force in the city of Tsingtau (Qingdao), Germany’s most important
possession in China, was preparing for an impending siege. The small fishing
village of Qingdao and the surrounding area had been reluctantly leased to the
German Empire by the Chinese government for 99 years in 1898, and German colonists
soon set about transforming this minor outpost into a vibrant city boasting
many of the comforts of home, including the forerunner of the now-famous
Tsingtao Brewery. By 1914, Qingdao had over 50,000 residents and was the
primary trading port in the region. Given its further role as the base for the
Far East Fleet of the Imperial German Navy, however, Qingdao was unable to
avoid becoming caught up in the faraway European war.
The forces
that besieged Qingdao in the autumn of 1914 were composed of troops from
Britain and Japan, the latter entering the war against Germany in accord with
the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. The Alliance had been agreed in 1902 amid growing
anxiety in Britain regarding its interests in East Asia, and rapidly
modernizing Japan was seen as a useful ally in the region. For Japanese
leaders, the signing of such an agreement with the most powerful empire of the
day was seen as a major diplomatic accomplishment and an acknowledgement of
Japan’s arrival as one of the world’s great powers. More immediately, the
Alliance effectively guaranteed the neutrality of third parties in Japan’s
looming war with Russia, and Japan’s victory in the Russo-Japanese War of
1904-05 sent shockwaves across the globe as the first defeat of a great European
empire by a non-Western country in a conventional modern war.