MANCHURIA

mănchoorˈēə, Mandarin Dongbei sansheng [three northeastern provinces], region, c.600,000 sq mi (1,554,000 sq km), NE China. It is officially known as the Northeast. Manchuria is separated from Russia largely by the Amur, Argun, and Ussuri rivers, from North Korea by the Yalu and Tumen rivers, and from Mongolia by the Da Hinggan (Great Khingan) Mts. It includes the Liaodong peninsula. Until 1860 it included territory now in Siberia and until 1955 territory now in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region. Provincial divisions have changed frequently, but since 1956 Manchuria has comprised Jilin, Heilongjiang, and Liaoning provs. Much of the region is hilly to mountainous. The Da and Xiao Hinggan (Great and Lesser Khingan) in the north and the Changbai in the east are the greatest ranges.

Land and Economy

Manchuria's vast timber reserves have been damaged by excessive cutting. Mineral resources, chiefly coal and iron, are concentrated in the southwest; there is a large colliery at Fushun and a large steel mill at Anshan. Magnesite, copper, lead, and zinc are also important, and there is a large oil field at Daqing, NW of Harbin. Uranium and gold deposits have also been found.

The great Manchurian plain (average elevation c.1,000 ft/300 m), crossed by the Liao and Songhua rivers, is the only extensively level area. Fertile and densely populated, it has been a major manufacturing and agricultural center of China. One of the few areas in the country suitable for large-scale mechanized agriculture, it has numerous collective farms. Long, severe winters limit harvests to one a year, but considerable quantities of soybeans are produced. Sweet potatoes, beans, and cereals (including rice, wheat, millet, and kaoliang) are also grown, and cotton, flax, and sugar beets are raised as industrial crops. The processing of soybeans into oil, animal feed, and fertilizer is centered in cities in or near the plain, notably Changchun, Harbin, and Shenyang. Livestock are raised in the north and the west, and fishing is important off the Yellow Sea coast.

The chief commercial port is Dalian; Lüshun, which is administratively part of Dalian, is a major naval base. All rivers are navigable, but only the Songhua has significant heavy traffic. When the rivers freeze, they are used as roadways. An extensive rail system connects the hinterland with the coastal ports; major lines are the South Liaoning RR and the Northeast RR. The building of the railroads (after 1896) spurred industrial development. Manchuria is a great industrial hub, with huge coal mines, iron- and steelworks, aluminum-reduction plants, paper mills, and factories making heavy machinery, tractors, locomotives, aircraft, and chemicals. Since the 1980s, however, the region's inefficient state-controlled companies have had trouble gearing production to an economy that is increasingly market-oriented.

People

Manchuria is traditionally the homeland of peoples that have invaded and sometimes ruled N China. Among the most important of these tribes were the Tungus, Eastern Turks, Khitan, and Jurchen. It was the home of the Manchu conquerors of China. The Manchus tried to keep Manchuria an imperial preserve by limiting Chinese immigration. In this century, however, emigration to Manchuria from the adjacent provinces has been heavy, and the population is now predominantly Chinese.

History

Japan and Russia long struggled for control of this rich, strategically important region. Japan tried to seize the Liao-tung peninsula in 1895, but was forestalled by the Triple Intervention. From 1898 to 1904 Russia was dominant. As a result of a Russo-Chinese alliance against Japan, the Russians built Harbin, the naval base at Port Arthur, and the Chinese Eastern RR. Japan, after victory in the Russo-Japanese War (1904–5), took control of Port Arthur and the southern half of Manchuria (see Liaoning), limiting Russian influence to the north. Chiefly through the South Manchurian RR, Japan developed the region's economy. From 1918 to 1931 the warlords Chang Tso-lin and Chang Hsüeh-liang controlled Chinese military power in Manchuria.

Japan occupied Manchuria in 1931–32, when Chinese military resistance, sapped by civil war, was weak. The seizure of Manchuria was, in effect, an unofficial declaration of war on China. Manchuria was a base for Japanese aggression in N China and a buffer region for Japanese-controlled Korea. In 1932, under the aegis of Japan, Manchuria with Rehe prov. was constituted Manchukuo, a nominally independent state. During World War II the Japanese developed the Dalian, Anshan, Fushun, Shenyang, and Harbin areas into a huge industrial complex of metallurgical, coal, petroleum, and chemical industries. Soviet forces, which occupied Manchuria from July, 1945, to May, 1946, dismantled and removed over half of the Manchurian industrial plant.

At the end of the war the Chinese Communists were strongly established in Manchuria and by 1948 had captured the major cities and inflicted devastating losses on the Nationalist army. From 1949 to 1954 Manchuria, ruled by Gao Gang, was the most staunch of the Communist areas in China. With the help of Soviet technicians the Communists rapidly restored Manchuria's large industrial capacity. After the Sino-Soviet rift in the 1960s there was a massive Soviet military buildup along the border, and several border incidents occurred. With the breakup of the Soviet Union, these incidents have subsided. China's changing economic policies led to renewed investment in the region in 1978, but the ensuing shift to a market economy resulted in unemployment and stagnant growth in the state-controlled businesses.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Manchuria  - 4591 results

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...firm operates the largest bean mill in Manchuria. Yingkou was formerly the center of bean milling in South Manchuria, but Dairen is now far in the lead...and marketing of soya beans the South Manchuria Railway Company has organized a "mixed...
...Chinese Eastern Railway Through North Manchuria--Its Sig nificance to the People of...Liaotung Peninsula --Building of the South Manchuria Railway--Founding of the City of Harbin...Tied--Russian Promise of Evacuating Manchuria--Passing of Russia from South Manchuria...
...favorable for us to take possession of Manchuria in agreement with Japan," as the Japanese...evidently preparing the annexation of South Manchuria." The Russian Foreign Minister declared...convinced that the annexation of North Manchuria was for us an imperative necessity...
...characteristics of various regions in Manchuria differ as much as the regions geographical...brings the heaviest rains to most of Manchuria. The monsoon drift of moist warm maritime air from the southeast crosses central Manchuria, bringing with it widespread low overcasts...
This autonomy of Manchuria was also shown by the fact that, first...meant that either he or the people of Manchuria wished to be separated from China...wars and periods of "independence," Manchuria remained an integral part of China...
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journal articles on: Manchuria  - 477 results

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...Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria. by Xiaorong Han Two Dreams in One Bed...Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria, by Hyun Ok Park. Asia-Pacific series...northern and southern Korea began to move to Manchuria in the late nineteenth century. By the...
...State, Peasant, and Merchant in Qing Manchuria, 1644-1862. by Marc Andre Matten...interests of the Qing dynasty in its homeland Manchuria, while comparing these interests to...Isetts object of analysis--Qing Manchuria--basically covers the three northeastern...
...Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria. by Michael J. Seth Two Dreams in One...Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria. By Hyun Ok Park. (Durham, N.C...resources and relatively sparsely populated, Manchuria in the first half of the twentieth century...
Memory Maps: The State and Manchuria in Postwar Japan. by Frederick R. Dickinson Memory Maps: The State and Manchuria in Postwar Japan. By Mariko Asano...China and Japan specialists alike: Manchuria. Her analysis of grassroots attitudes...
...The Liberal Alternative in Russian Manchuria, 1898-1914 by Michael Melancon To...The Liberal Alternative in Russian Manchuria, 1898-1914. By David Wolff. (Stanford...Siberian Railroad straight through Manchuria to the port of Vladivostok and, on a...
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...on October 14th, of the last warlord of Manchuria. A romantic image, perhaps bringing to...fall are closely linked to the politics of Manchuria, the region now known as Northeast China. Manchuria was all area fought over by three great...
...a history of the war, the doors into Manchuria were still closed. A recent change of...Japan for the domination of Korea and Manchuria, territory clearly owned by neither...Arthur in 1904. The battlefields of Manchuria have all been affected by a century of...
...a pretext for a full-scale invasion of Northeast China (Manchuria). It began with an explosion on the Japanese-controlled...FURTHER READING Cheng-sik Lee Revolutionary Struggle in Manchuria (University of California Press, 1983); Takehiko Yoshihashi...
...father of Protestant churches in both Manchuria and Korea. He had a grasp of eleven...Williamson was widely traveled and had visited Manchuria several times. During his trips Williamson...excluded foreigners, Williamsons visits to Manchuria and the Corean Gate convinced him of...
...provocative, is the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, which began in 1931 and soon extended...interlude of Japan as an occupying power in Manchuria and later China, however, that poses...long exercised neocolonial control over Manchuria in collaboration with local warlords...
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...people that largely occupied what is now Manchuria and North Korea, were actually Chinese...Project team that purports to prove that Manchuria and North Korea were originally Chinese...the 2 million ethnic Koreans living in Manchuria. In fact, the Yanbian Korean Autonomous...
...Allied troops on the island. Transfer to Manchuria After 1942, the "Tiger of Malaya...to the military wasteland of northern Manchuria without passing Tokyo on the way, giving...of relief. Yamashita went straight to Manchuria via Taiwan (Formosa). The disgraced...
...Nations that examined Japans rape of Manchuria is surely the most neglected report of...Tokyo would have had a free ride into Manchuria and beyond. But it did not. As the...could not force Japan to retreat from Manchuria, although Tokyo found itself isolated...
...Richard Frank who downplayed the role of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria. The book, "Hell to Pay," by D.M. Giangreco, fully...establishes that Japan had withdrawn their best divisions from Manchuria and stationed them on Kyushu and Honshu ready to fight Americans...
...size of Texas, stretches 1,500 miles from the forests of Manchuria in the east to the Altai Mountains in the west, part of Central...century earlier, fell under the domination of overlords from Manchuria. Mongolias modern history begins in 1911 with a break from...
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encyclopedia articles on: Manchuria  - 74 results

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MANCHURIA manchoor e , Mandarin Dongbei sansheng...is officially known as the Northeast. Manchuria is separated from Russia largely by the...have changed frequently, but since 1956 Manchuria has comprised Jilin, Heilongjiang...
...eastern highlands and central plain of Manchuria; and what has been traditionally called...Zhejiang , and, in the northeast (Manchuria), Heilongjiang , Jilin , and Liaoning...the Koreans, who are concentrated in Manchuria. The constitution of the Peoples Republic...
...impetus to set up a puppet government in Manchuria. After the Russo-Japanese War (1904...Russia as the dominant foreign power in S Manchuria. By the late 1920s the Japanese feared...party would imperil Japanese interests in Manchuria. This view was confirmed when the Manchurian...
...also of the Liao-tung peninsula in Manchuria, which the great powers forced it to...territorial foothold had been gained in Manchuria. In 1910, Japan was able to officially...these groups were the Kwantung army in Manchuria, young army and navy officers, and...
...appointment (1918) as inspector general of Manchuria until his death he controlled Manchuria, and from 1920 he constantly warred to extend...unclear) by officers of the Japanese army in Manchuria. His son, Chang Hsueh-liang , succeeded...
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