POLI 422 Chapter : Failure of the Chinese Republic

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1911 revolution that overthrew the qing dynasty was less a coordinated movement than a snowballing series of regional revolts. Eventually, sun yat-sen was inaugurated as the first president on january 1, 1912. Gentry, whose support was partiality in its locality, could survive the collapse of the state, at least for a time. Some even stood to gain, due to them being free of regulation and taxation. Therefore, they played an active role in the 1911. Revolution, ensuring that the resulting government would have a strong conservative character. In contrast, the bourgeoisie could not bring the qing down by itself, and needed the assistance and cooperation of the gentry. Therefore, the accommodation of both a dying class of landed elites and a sickly new bourgeoisie resulted in sustained and contradictory political crises. This had two tendencies: anarchic warlordism, and fascist authoritarianism/militarism.

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