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==War==
 
==War==
<!--    1894/7 Battle of Seonghwan
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The war can be said to have begun with the [[Battle of Seonghwan]] in July 1894, with the official declarations of war being made early the following month.
    1894/8/1 Japan officially declares war on China.
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    1894/9 Emperor Meiji takes up temporary residence at Hiroshima.
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    1894/9/15 Japanese First Army (17,000 troops) attacks Pingyang.
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    1894/9/16 Japanese seize and occupy Pingyang. Chinese retreat across the Yalu River.
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    1894/9/17 Battle of the Yalu River - first naval battle in history between steamship fleets.
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    1894/11/6-21 Battle of Lushunkou (Port Arthur) -->
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The nationalist feelings stirred up by the war created a more widespread sense of unity and patriotism, and support for the [[Meiji government]], than the government had ever enjoyed up until then. In other words, the war played an important part in securing a greater stability for the regime, which up until then faced considerable political opposition in elections and political parties & movements.<ref>Schirokauer, et al., 180.</ref>
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The Japanese First Army (17,000 troops) attacked [[Battle of Pingyang|Pingyang]] on September 15, securing the city by the next day, and forcing the Chinese to retreat across the [[Yalu River]]. The day after that, September 17, saw the [[Battle of the Yalu River]], the first naval battle in history fought between steamship fleets.
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The [[Battle of Lushunkou]], or Port Arthur, in November of that year, was also a major part of the conflict.
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In the end, though China had long been considered the great power in the region, to the surprise of the world (read: i.e. the Western powers especially), Japan achieved a decisive victory. This came in large part as a result of superior equipment and organization; China at the time is said to have been struggling with considerable corruption, internal rifts and instability, and inadequate leadership, not to mention an incomplete effort at military modernization. The [[Empress Dowager Cixi]], who wielded ''de facto'' power in China at the time, was rather conservative, and hesitant in her attitudes towards reforms, resulting in a military and industries that were not yet as fully modernized/Westernized as Japan's. Some accounts cite anecdotes of admirals who arranged modern warships as if it were a traditional cavalry charge, and artillery shells filled with sawdust, for want of sufficient supplies of gunpowder. Furthermore, many of the regional governors & generals enjoyed a degree of local autonomy, and dragged their feet in sending troops; while the Beiyang ("Northern Sea") Navy was defeated by the Japanese, the Southern Chinese Navy did not participate in the conflict at all.
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In Japan, the nationalist feelings stirred up by the war created a more widespread sense of unity and patriotism, and support for the [[Meiji government]], than the government had ever enjoyed up until then. In other words, the war played an important part in securing a greater stability for the regime, which up until then faced considerable political opposition in elections and political parties & movements.<ref>Schirokauer, et al., 180.</ref>
    
==Aftermath==
 
==Aftermath==
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