J
Japan,
and the Kiaochow campaign, [63];
demands participation in loan, [34];
demands the Kiaochow territory from Germany, [54];
feudal organization of, [57];
first Diet summoned, [58];
forced to revise the Twenty-one Demands, [76];
forecasts result of European War, [95]-[103];
formation of the Shogunate in, [57];
inquires as to the monarchial movement, [161];
militarism in, [57];
receives fugitive President Li Yuan-hung, [266];
recognizes Yuan Shih-kai as Dictator, [65];
socialism in, [58];
the new Far Eastern policy after Russian war, [61];
Japan-China secret alliance proposed, [98]
Japanese,
Constitution first granted, [58];
driven from Tong Kwan Palace, [19];
incident at Chengchiatun, [216]-[224];
intrigues, [35];
Liberalism vs. Imperialism, [58];
merchants and Lun Yat Sen, alleged secret agreement, [105]-[107];
war indemnity, [12] n;
war of 1894, [12];
Japan's,
activities in the Yangtsze Valley, [73];
account of the Chengchiatun incident, [218];
alarm at the Chinese revolution, [62];
animosity towards Yuan Shih-kai, [63];
attitude toward Yuan Shih-kai, [52];
Chinese policy, [54]-[64], [221];
"Continental quadrilateral," [221];
Doctrine of Maximum Pressure, [61];
Far East activities, [281]-[284];
German policy, [284] n;
government foundry at Wakamatsu, [74];
influence in China on European war question, [234];
influence on the monarchial election, [168];
influence over China's war measures, [241];
original Twenty-one Demands, [68]-[70];
Pekin Expeditionary Force, [60];
police rights in Manchuria, [223];
pressure on Yuan Shih-kai, [93];
subterranean activities in China in 1916, [252], [261];
ultimatum to China, [88]-[91]; China's reply, [92];
ultimatum, China's indignation at, [109];
Twenty-four Demands, [77]-[80];
Jehol, mountain palaces of, [2];
Jung Lu, viceroy of Chihli, [22]