Information about Battle Of Tsingtao
| Siege of Tsingtao | |
The Siege of Tsingtao was the attack on the German-controlled port of Tsingtao (now Qingdao) in China during World War I by Imperial Japan and the United Kingdom.
It took place between October 31 and November 7 1914 and was fought by Imperial Japan and the United Kingdom against Germany. It was the first encounter between Japanese and German forces and the first British-Japanese operation in World War I.
Background
Throughout the late 19th Century the German Empire, like other European countries, became increasingly imperialist and sought to expand its influence across the world, acquiring a number of territories in the process. In China, like many world powers, the Germans began to interfere in local affairs. After two German missionaries were killed in 1897, the Chinese were forced to transfer Kiaochow in Shandong to Germany in 1898 on a 99-year lease. The Germans then began to assert their influence across the rest of the province of Shandong and built the port of Tsingtao. The port became the home base of the Kaiserliche Marine's East Asiatic Squadron, which primarily operated in support of German territories in the Pacific Ocean.The United Kingdom perceived the German presence in China as a threat to British interests and leased Weihaiwei in Shandong in response, while Russia and France leased their own at Port Arthur (now Lüshunkou) and Kwang-Chou-Wan respectively. The British also began to forge close ties with the Japanese.
Imperial Japanese army uniform as worn on the expedition to Kiaochow.
The Suwo was the flagship of the Japanese expeditionary fleet during the Battle of Tsingtao.
The First World War began in early August 1914. Britain soon requested Japanese assistance. The Japanese civil government, led by Prime Minister Okuma Shigenobu, feared growing military power, which was an even greater role in Japanese politics. The Government believed that maintaining a strong alliance with Britain would help maintain control over the military. Pressure also came from the competing Imperial Japanese Navy (whose structure was closely based on the British Royal Navy) and Imperial Japanese Army (which felt that it had lost prestige during the Russo-Japanese War) and growing desires to expand the Japanese Empire.
The Japanese Government decided to side with Britain in the war. On 15 August, Japan issued an ultimatum to Germany, stating that Germany needed to withdraw all their warships from Chinese and Japanese waters and transfer control of Tsingtao to Japan. The following day, Major-General Mitsuomi Kamio, commanding officer (CO) of the 18th Infantry Division, was told to begin preparations for an invasion of Tsingtao. When the ultimatum expired on 23 August, Japan declared war on Germany.
By this time, the East Asiatic Squadron, under the command of Maximilian von Spee, had left Tsingtao for the friendly base of Pagan in the Marianas. From there Von Spee's squadron, with the exception of SMS Emden which headed for the Indian Ocean, made their way to the west coast of South America. There, the squadron destroyed a mostly obsolete Royal Navy squadron at the Battle of Coronel before itself being destroyed at the Battle of the Falkland Islands.
Build-up
The Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) first sent ships under Vice-Admiral Sadakichi Kato, flying his flag in the pre-dreadnought Suwo, to blockade the coast of German-controlled Kiaochow, beginning on 27 August. During the course of the naval operations off Tsingtao, the British Royal Navy (RN) attached the China Station's pre-dreadnought HMS Triumph and the destroyer HMS Usk to the IJN. The British warships were integrated into the Second Squadron with few problems. The Japanese squadron consisted of mostly obsolete warships, though did briefly engage a number of more modern vessels. These included the dreadnoughts Kawachi, Settsu, the battlecruiser Kongō and the seaplane carrier Wakamiya, whose aircraft became the first of its kind in the world to successfully attack land and sea targets. These planes would also take part in another military first: the first night-time bombing raid.The 18th Infantry Division was the primary Japanese Army formation that took part in the initial landings, numbering 23,000 soldiers with support from 142 artillery pieces. They began to land on 2 September at Lungkow, Shandong, which was experiencing heavy floods at the time, and later at Laoshan Bay on 18 September, about 18 miles east of Tsingtao.
The British Government — and the international community as a whole — were concerned about Japanese intentions in the region and decided to send a small symbolic British contingent from Tientsin in an effort to allay their fears. The 1,500-man contingent was commanded by Brigadier-General Nathaniel Walter Barnardiston and consisted of 1,000 soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, The South Wales Borderers later followed by 500 soldiers of the 36th Sikhs.
The Japanese seaplane carrier Wakamiya conducted the world's first naval-launched air raids in September 1914 against German positions in Tsingtao.
The German garrison, commanded by Captain-Governor Alfred Meyer-Waldeck, consisted of 765 German marines (III. Seebatallion) and roughly 3,400 other naval personnel and soldiers (Chinese colonial troops and Austro-Hungarian sailors and soldiers). He also had a small complement of vessels, such as the Austro-Hungarian protected cruiser Kaiserin Elizabeth, whose crew was divided in two; to man the ship and fight as part of the German land forces.
The Attack
As the Japanese approached his position, the German Commander, Captain Mayer-Waldeck, withdrew his forces from the two outer defensive lines and concentrated his troops on the innermost line of defence. On October 31, the Japanese began their bombardment of the fort and began digging parallel lines of trenches just as they had done at the Siege of Port Arthur nine years earlier. The Japanese used very large 11 inch howitzers from land in addition to the firing of their naval guns. The bombardment continued for seven days.On the night of November 6, the Japanese infantry attacked the third line of defences and drove the defenders out of them. The next morning, the Germans forces along with their Austro-Hungarian allies surrendered.
See also
Sources
- Burdick, Charles B. The Japanese Siege of Tsingtao (1976)
- Falls, Cyril The Great War, (1960). pgs. 98-99.
- Hoyt, Edwin P. The Fall of Tsingtao (1975)
- Keegan, John The First World War, (1998). pg 206.
External links
- Tsingtao Campaign
- Tsingtao map of city with its siege works 1914
- The siege of Tsingtao
- German Colonial Uniforms
- Japanese Army uniforms in 1914, and during WW1
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Qingdao (Simplified Chinese: 青岛; Traditional Chinese: 青島
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Clockwise from top: Trenches on the Western Front; a British Mark IV tank crossing a trench; Royal Navy battleship HMS Irresistible sinking after striking a mine at the Battle of the Dardanelles; a Vickers machine gun crew with gas masks, and German Albatros D.
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The Empire of Japan (Kyūjitai: 大日本帝國; Shinjitai: 大日本帝国; pronounced Dai Nippon Teikoku; officially Empire of Greater Japan
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Clockwise from top: Trenches on the Western Front; a British Mark IV tank crossing a trench; Royal Navy battleship HMS Irresistible sinking after striking a mine at the Battle of the Dardanelles; a Vickers machine gun crew with gas masks, and German Albatros D.
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Imperialism is the forceful extension of a nation's authority by territorial conquest establishing economic and political domination of other nations that are not its own colonies.
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The Jiaozhou Bay () was a German colonial concession which existed from 1898 to 1914. With an area of 552km², it was located in the imperial province of Shandong on the southern coast of the Shandong Peninsula in northern China.
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山东省
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Kaiserliche Marine or Imperial Navy was the German Navy created by the formation of the German Empire. It existed between 1871 and 1919, growing out of the Prussian Navy and Norddeutsche Bundesmarine.
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German East Asia Squadron was a German Kaiserliche Marine (naval) cruiser squadron which operated mainly in the Pacific Ocean between the 1870s and 1914.
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Weihai (Chinese: 威海; Pinyin: Wēihǎi); known in the past as the Weihai Garrison (Chinese: 威海衛
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