Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
January 18 – Twenty-One Demands from Japan to China are made. March unknown date – A tool brand, Makita founded, as predecessor name was Makita Electronics Manufacturing. [page needed] March 25 – 1915 Japanese general election: The Rikken DÅshikai party emerged as the largest party in the House of Representatives, winning 153 of the 381 ...
Group 3 (two demands) gave Japan control of the Han-Ye-Ping (Hanyang, Daye, and Pingxiang) mining and metallurgical complex in central China; it was deep in debt to Japan. Group 4 (one demand) barred China from giving any further coastal or island concessions to foreign powers. Group 5 (seven demands) was the most aggressive. China was to hire ...
Address: 304 N. Adams St., Green Bay. Phone: 920-770-2433. The restaurant will be open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. with its full menu and is offering a Thanksgiving dinner for $32 that includes sliced ...
The history of China–Japan relations spans thousands of years through trade, cultural exchanges, friendships, and conflicts. Japan has deep historical and cultural ties with China; cultural contacts throughout its history have strongly influenced the nation – including its writing system [a] architecture, [b] cuisine, [c] culture, literature, religion, [d] philosophy, and law.
The first boycott of Japanese products in China was started 1915 as a result of public indignation at the Twenty-One Demands which Japan forced China to accept. [1] In 1919, the students and intellectuals involved in the May Fourth Movement called for another boycott of Japanese products, developing into a mass movement across China, including ...
A new restaurant in downtown will indulge you. Asian Fusion Cuisines is open at 213 N. Washington St., the location of the now-closed China Palace in downtown Green Bay. Asian Fusion Cuisines is ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The reading room downstairs has historic Japanese and English newspapers and books. Materials include papers of Ernest Satow, foreign and Japanese newspapers of the Meiji period including, the Japan Daily Herald, the Japan Weekly Mail and Japan Punch. Many of the old newspapers have been copied onto new paper, making them very easy to handle.